Annual Report of the State Botanist. 15 



Lycium vulgare Dunal. 

 Castilleia sessilifolia Pursh. 

 Penstemon gracilis Nutt. 

 P, grandiflorus Nutt. 



Verbena bracteosa Mx. 

 V. stricta Vent. 



Hedeoma hispida Pursh. 

 Monarda punctata L. 

 Plantago Patagonica Jacq. 



Chenopodium glaucum L. 

 Polygonum ramosissimum Mx. 

 Euphorbia marginata Pursh. 

 Parietaria Pennsylvanica Muhl. 

 Cypripedium candidum Muhl. 

 Liparis Lceselii Richard. 

 Leucocrinum montanum Nutt. 

 Streptopus roseus 3Ix. 

 Vilfa cuspidata Toi^r. 



(C.) 



SPECIES NOT BEFORE REPORTED. 



Aconitum Noveboracense, Gr. 



Banks of Chenango river, Oxford, Chenango county. July. F. V. 

 Gomlle. The plant doubtfully referred to A. Napellus, Twenty-seventh 

 Report, p. 89, belongs to this species, but in it as well as in the 

 Chenango specimen, the racemes are somewhat hairy, contrary to the 

 requirements of the description of the species. 



Hieracium praealtum, Vill 



Light sandy soil, near Harrisville, Lewis county. Also, along the 

 road between Great Bend and Le Rayville, Jefferson county. July. 

 This is an introduced species, but it is apparently well established in 

 the localities mentioned. In the Synoptical Flora of North America 

 it is said to grow near Carthage and Evans Mills, but I failed to find 

 it in these localities. It is said in Science to have spread extensively 

 in St. Lawrence county, where, in one place, it had taken complete 

 possession of a thirty-acre field and had received the local name 

 " king devil," in allusion to its character as a noxious weed. 



Lactuca integrifolia, Bigel. 

 Cornwall, Orange county. This plant occurs in many parts of the 

 State, but it has been considered a variety of Lactuca Canadensis, and 

 as such has been recorded. But in the Synoptical Flora it has been 

 raised to specific rank and it is now recorded as a species. 



Penstemon Isevigatus, Soland. 

 Near the canal, two miles west of Rome. June. Probably intro- 

 duced from the west. 



Lycopus sessilifolius, Gi: 



Riverhead, Long Island. Formerly regarded as a variety of 

 L. Europceus, but now raised to specific rank. 



