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REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST IQI3 25 
collected near Lansingburg many years ago by E. C. Howe and 
more recently in the Adirondacks by Doctor Peck. 
Ilex montana Torr. & Gray 
(Ilex monticola A. Gray) 
Mountain Lake. No. 195. In flower. Also collected at the same 
place in 1912 by Mr C. P. Alexander. This station for the species 
is unique in being far north of the previously known range which 
was from the Catskills southward through the Appalachians. 
Juncus dudleyi Wiegand 
Gloversville, June 29, 1912. No. 249. Not an uncommon species 
in the calcareous districts of the State farther west, and formerly 
regarded as a variety of Juncus tenuis. The Fulton county 
station appears to form the eastern limit of its range so far as 
known. 
Juncus torreyi Coville 
(J. nodosus var. megacephalus Torrey) 
Rather local, but not especially rare throughout the State. The 
Johnstown locality seems to be the only known station in Fulton 
station. It is common at some places about Oneida lake and in 
marshes along the shores of Lake Ontario. 
Juncus pelocarpus E. Meyer 
Sacandaga river, 1913. No. 329. 
Myriophyllum farwellii Morong. 
Sacandaga river, August 6, 1913. No. 348. 
Myriophyllum tenellum Bigelow 
Sacandaga river, August 6, 1913. No. 354. 
Lobularia maritima (L.) Desv. 
(Alyssum maritima Lam., Koniga maritima R. Br.) 
Gloversville, 1913. No. 118. The sweet alyssum, the common 
name under which this is usually known and cultivated, occasion- 
ally becomes established as a weed in waste places. 
Nardus stricta Linn. 
An adventive species coming from Europe. Said to have been 
introduced into Newfoundland and to have become established at 
Amherst, Mass. How the species reached Canada lake in Fulton 
