REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I9Q13 oF 
Lycopodium sabinaefolium Willd. 
Hinckley, valley of the West Canada creek, Oneida county. Dr 
J. V. Haberer, October 28, 1911. No. 2550. 
Scarcely glaucous; rootstocks close to the surface but buried in 
the leaf mold; stems erect, divided from near the base into numer- 
ous erect subsimple lax branches, 5-7 cm long, equally leafy all 
round; leaves equal, few-ranked, ascending, about 2 mm long, 
slender, very acute, appearing as though the tips were incurved: 
spikes solitary on few-scaled peduncles scarcely exceeding the leafy 
branches by more than the length of the spikes; sporophyls green 
with very thin scarious margins, crenulate with age, the tips spread- 
ing. 
This rare club moss ranges from Prince Edward island to north- 
ern New England, Quebec and Ontario, usually in cold, mountain 
woods. Figured and described in Britton and Brown’s Illustrated 
Flora, second edition, 1: 47, figure 110. 1913. According to Gray’s 
Manual, this species has also been collected on Staten Island by 
Buchheister. 
Lycopodium tristachyum Pursh 
An abundant and easily recognized species in the sandy oak woods 
about the head of Oneida lake, where it has been collected by 
Haberer and by House. Also reported by Doctor Haberer from 
Grant, Ohio, Trenton and Grand View (no. 2547) in Herkimer 
county, and from Remsen, Hinckley (no. 2547) and Forestport 
(no. 1543) in Oneida county. 
Panicum addisonii Nash 
Sandy fields at Sylvan Beach, head of Oneida lake. Dr J. V. 
Haberer, June 22, 1906. No. 3293. 
Panicum huachucae silvicola Hitche. & Chase 
Near Utica, Dr J. V. Haberer, June 1899. No. 1735. Deer- 
field. Dr J. V. Haberer, June 1907. No. 1743. Dutch hill, June 24, 
1907. No. 1741. 
Panicum tsugetorum Nash 
In the shade of sumachs near Whitesboro. Dr J. V. Haberer, 
July 8, 1905. No. 3282. 
Pentstemon laevigatus Ait. 
Well established but probably adventive from the west and south, 
its natural range being from Pennsylvania to Florida and westward. 
