REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I916 9I 



Cabombaceae A. Gray. 

 Brasenia schreberi Gmel. " Stagnant pools in Verona," Kneiskern. 



Nymphaceae DC. 



Nymphaea microphylla Pers. (X. kalmiana Sims). Shallow water 



of Oneida lake. Also reported from here by Paine. 

 Nymphaea rubrodisca (Morong.) Greene (N. hybrida Peck). Fish 



creek, mouth of Black creek and shallow water of shores of Oneida 



lake. 

 Nymphaea americana {Prov.) Miller & Standley (N. variegata 



(Eiigelm.) G. S. Miller). Common in streams and lakes. (N. 



advena of Floras, in part). 

 Castalia odorata (Dryand.) ]]'oodv. & Wood. Ponds, streams and 



shallow water of Oneida lake. 

 Castalia tuberosa (Paine) Greene. Shallow water near South Bav. 



" In Oneida lake, where it is abundant near its head a little west 



of South Bay, in marshes of Dianthera americana and 



Scirpus lacustris," Paine (type loc). 



Magnoliaceae J. St. Hil. 



Liriodendron tulipifera L. A common tree in the low woods around 

 Oneida lake. Absent, however, from the shale and limestone 

 formations on the hills to the south. 



Ranunculaceae Juss. 

 Caltha palustris L. 

 Coptis trifolia (L.) Salisb. 

 Actaea rubra (Ait.) Willd. 

 Actaea alba (L.) Mill. 

 Aquilegia canadensis L. 

 Anemone cylindrica .4. Gray. Sandy woods and clearings about the 



east end of Oneida lake. 

 Anemone virginiana L. 

 Anemone canadensis L. 



Anemone quinquefolia L. Moist woodlands. Common. 

 Hepatica acutiloba DC. 

 Hepatica triloba Chaix. More abundant around Oneida lake than 



the preceding, which is the prevailing species on the hills to the 



south. Both species are almost entirely absent from the sandy 



plains east of Oneida lake. 



