REPORT OF THE BOTANIST. 89 
are the Adirondack stations. Indeed inthe Ulster county locality, 
this plant with a northern range meets, on common ground, Asple- 
newm montanum, a fern with a southern range. 
Scirpus pEBiLtis Pwrsh. . 
Long pond near Wading River. Young. 
Scirpus MAaRitTimus L. 
Montezuma marshes. It occurs here in asmall form, about a foot 
high, with the heads all sessile and involucral leaves two, one sub- 
tending the cluster of spikes, the other appearing like a prolonga- 
tion of the stem. Scwrpus pungens growing by its side very much 
surpasses it in hight. 
Scirpus suBTERMINALIS Zorr. — 
Wading River. Miller. 
Awnpropogon Virarinicus ZL. 
Peconic river and Northville. Young. 
ASPIDIUM ACULEATUM var. Braunu Koch. 
Abundant in the “ Deep Notch ” between Shandaken and Lex- 
ington. Eighteen species of ferns were observed in this locality, 
all except three of which had previously been noticed in ‘ Stony 
Clove,” a locality similar to this and but a few miles south of it. 
The three species are Woodsia obtusa, Asplenium Trichomanes, 
and Osmunda cinnamomea. These two localities together pro- 
duce one-half the whole number of species of ferns that occur in 
the State. 
OsMUNDA CINNAMOMEA ZL. 
A form was found on Pine hill, Ulster county, having the fer- 
tile frond leafy above. 
Borrycuium simpLex Witch. 
Riverhead, L. I. filler. 
Fissipens GRANDIFRONS brid. 
Wet rocks. Chittenango Falls. Clinton. This at present is 
our most eastern known station of this interesting but sterile moss. 
Dipymopon turipus Hornsch. 
Wet rocks. Chittenango Falls. As at Niagara Falls we here 
find this rare moss associated with Pissidens grandifrons. 
De.esser1A Leprieuri ont. 
Hudson river at Yonkers. Howe. 
