46 _TWENTY-EIGHTH REPORT ON THE STAFE MUSEUM. 
C. C. Parry, Davenport, Iowa. 
AKcidium biforme Pk. | Calyptospora Goeppertiana 
Kuhn. 
J. M. Conapon, East Greenwich, R. I. 
[By exchange.] 
Acer macrophyllum Pd. Eleocharis rostellata Torr. 
Desmodium sessilifolium 7.¢G | Rhynchospora scirpoides Gr. 
Hedysarum boreale JVuwte. Scirpus sylvaticus L. 
Garrya Fremontii Don. Scleria reticularis Wz. 
Plectritis congesta DC. Carex salina Wahl. 
Q 
Galium verum Z. maritima Vahl. — 
Aster graminifolius Ph. C polymorpha A/whl. 
Solidago elliptica Adz. C. muricata L. 
Primula suffruticosa Gr. C. paludosa Good. 
Sarcodes sanguinea Don. C preecox Jacq. 
©. 
Mimulus rubellus Gr. Novee-Angliz Schw. 
Gilia pungens Gr. Calamagrostis stricta 77rin. 
Castanea chrysophylla Dowg. |C. Lapponica 77in. 
Lacnanthes tinctoria 71. Oryzopsis Canadensis Don. 
Listera convallarioides Hook. | Poa ceesia Sm. 
(4.) 
PLANTS, INDIGENOUS AND INTRODUCED, NOT 
BEFORE REPORTED. 
NEGUNDO ACEROIDES Moench. 
Inlet Valley, near Ithaca. Prof. A. WV. Prentiss. The 
credit of the discovery of these trees in the locality given is 
attributed to Wr. J. C. Branner, a student of Cornell Uni- 
versity. 
PyYRUS SAMBUCIFOLIA Cham. & Schl. 
Adirondack Mountains. Not common. 
SEDUM REFLEXUM J. 
Near Burden’s lake, Rensselaer county. ev. H. Wibbe. 
Tam informed by Mr. Wibbe that the plants grow on a bank 
by the road-side, in a reddish soil of clay and shale and that 
they appear to be thoroughly naturalized. He was unable to 
learn upon inquiry that the plant is now or ever had been in 
cultivation any where in the vicinity. 
