54 THIRTY-SECOND REPORT ON THE STATE MUSEUM. 
Pints mitis Mz. 
Specimens of this pine and of the scrub-pine, Pinas inops, have been received 
from Mr. N. L. Britton, who found them growing on Staten Island. This 
makes six species of pine known to belong to the State. Unfortunately neither 
of the specimens was accompanied by flowers or cones, from which I infer that 
they do not fruit, and that the existence of these two species within our limits 
will not be long continued. PP. inops is also said to occur on Long Island, 
but [ have seen no specimens from that locality. 
Juncus CANADENSIS Gay, var. suBcAUDATUS Hngelm. 
Ditches along the railroad. South Corinth. Aug. ‘ 
The weak stems and spreading panicles give this variety an appearance 
quite unlike that of the more common one, var. coarctatus. 
TRISETUM MOLLE Auwnth. 
Cliffs near Central Bridge. June. 
ASPIDIUM SPINULOSUM Swartz. 
Fertile specimens of the dwarf form known as var. dumetorum were found 
on the Catskill Mountains. They are glandular-hairy and therefore should 
be referred to the recently-proposed species, A. Americanum Day. The 
typical A. spinulosum, as limited by Ir. Davenport, occurs on the Adiron- 
dack Mountains. 
BorryCcHIUM TERNATUM Swartz, var. OBLIQUUM Haton. 
The dwarf form of this variety with the sterile frond about one inch broad 
and long and the whole plant three or four inches high was found at South 
Corinth. 
BorrycHIuM SIMPLEX Hitch, var. suBcomMPposituM Lasch. 
Lewis’s Bluff near Oswego. Rev. H. Wibbe. 
BryuM ELONGATUM Dicks. 
This rare moss occurs on Slide Mountain, one of the highest peaks of the 
Catskills. 
AGARICUS CHSAREUS Scop. 
This species was found at Gansevoort growing in a circle about forty feet in 
diameter. About one-fourth of the circumference of the circle was unoccu- 
pied by the fungus in consequence of the encroachment of a cleared ficld. In 
the American form of the species the stem is rather slender and equal or 
slightly tapering upward, I have not seen it ‘“subventricose”’ as required 
by the description. 
AGARICUS AMERICANUS PA. 
This Agaric usually grows in grassy places or on lawns, but fine specimens 
were found the past season growing in a large tuft on an old stump. The 
lamellze are much narrowed behind and somewhat reticulately connected. In 
the fresh state the whole plant is white with the exception of the scales of the 
pileus. 
