504 (SEOLOOirAL survey ok CANADA. 



N ai . laevigatuSy Toir. iV Graj*. On slopes along the Flathoad 

 J\ivor, iluiky Mountains, B.C. (Bauson.) 



121. RHAMNUS. 



(405.) R. ainifolia, Ti llor. Flalheatl liivej-, Kock3' Mountains, 

 B.C. ( Dnirson.') 



(40»i.) R. Purshiana, (Ti-ay's Landing, near the mouth of the 

 Kramer, B.C., 18S3. Cadl.oio' Bay and Saanich, B.C., 1885. (Fletcher.) 



122. VITIS. 



Page '.C 



(408.) V. Labrusca, Linn. Foi- this substitute F. <rstivalis, as 

 all the sjieiimons Doni Pttiut Pelee are of this species. Climbing high 

 over tree.'? at. Foster's Flats below the Whirl}»ool, Niagara River, also in 

 thickets around Queonston Heights. (Macoun.) 



(410.) V. riparia, Michx. All references in Part J, under No. 

 400, belong hero. I'p to the present we have no authentic record of 

 the occurrence of t^-pical V. cordifolia in any part of Canada. The 

 Vitis found on the island of Orleans is this species, and Dr. Burgess 

 writes that the vine found at Emerson, Man., is the same. The one 

 seen b}^ myself from the deck of a steamboat along the Assiniboine 

 must be it likewise. 1 allow V. cordifoliaio stand as it is barely possible 

 it ma}' yet be found along Lake Krie. V. Labrusca must be excluded. 

 (Macoun.) 



125. ACER. 



Page 99. 



(418.) A. glabrum, Torre}-. On mountain slopes from Ka- 

 nanaskis through the Rocky and Selkirk Mountains, Lat. 51°. It 

 seldom attains an elevation of 6,000 feet, and is always a mere shrub 

 in damp ravines. 



126. NECUNDO. 



Page 100. 



(422.) N. aceroides, Mocnch. Within the last ten years this 

 tree has been extensively planted in Ontario and grows with great 

 rapidity, but is not very ornamental. There are a number of tine trees 

 up the valley of the Don at Toronto. (Burgess.) Three trees in a 

 clump, between Cooksville and Port Credit, Ont. (./. Ades Fowler,) 



