CATALOGUE OP CANADIAN PLANTS. 217 



specimens are generally shorter and mostly with entire leaves, being 

 var. ft. Torr. & Gray. 



Yar. incana, Gray. 



S. incana, Torr. & Gray Fl. II., 221. 



Dry, sterile soil from Wood Mountain westward, especially north 

 and west of the Cypress Hills, N". W. T. (Macoun.) Wood Mountain 

 and westward along the 49th parallel. (Burgess?) 



(1006.) S. rigida, Linn. 



On dry or sandy soil. Islands in the Detroit Eiver. (Maclagan) 

 Dry sandy soil, edge of a field, near Fairmount, London, Ont. 

 (Burgess?) Yery common in the western prairie region extending 

 northward to Peace River, and west to the Rocky Mountains. 

 (Macoun.) 



(1007.) S. Ohioensis, Riddell. 

 Wet grassy places along the shore of Red Bay, Lake Huron. 



(Macoun.) 



(1008.) S. Houghtonii, Torr. & Gray. 



Swampy shores of Lake Huron around Chicken and Red Bays, and 

 on the Fishing Islands. (Macoun.) 



(1009.) S. occidentalis, Nutt. 



S- lanceolata, Hook. Fl. II., 6, in part. 

 To be looked for along the southern boundary of British Columbia. 



(1010.) S. lanceolata, Linn. 



Yery abundant along the shores of lakes and rivers from the Atlantic 

 provinces and the islands in the Gulf of St. Lawrence to the Rocky 

 Mountains and north to Lat. 64. Quite common on the prairies near 

 pools of water and in the beds of coule'es. (Macoun.) Western, prairie, 

 specimens have broad lanceolate five-nerved obtuse leaves, and seem to 

 run into S. occidentalis. 



272. BELLIS, Linn. DAISY. 



(1011.) B. perennis, Linn. Garden Daisy. 



Introduced. On ballast heaps North Sydney, Cape Breton. (Macoun.) 

 In lawns at Clifton, Ont. (David F. Day.} Apparently at home in 

 meadows and pastures around Victoria, Vancouver Island. (Macoun 

 & Fletcher.) 



