CATALOGUE OF CANADIAN PLANTS. 39 



Chester, N.S. ; Whycocogmah, Cape Breton. (Sommers, Cat.} Low 

 meadows between New Glasgow and Port Mulgrave, N.S. ; in low in- 

 tervales at Whycocogmah, Cape .Breton. (Macoun.) Common in 

 meadows at Caledonia, Guysboro Co., N S. (Faribault.) Bathurst, 

 N.B. (Me Gill Coll. If erb.) Common on intervales and moist meadows, 

 New Brunswick. (Fowler, Cat.) On the flats along the lower part of 

 the Metapedia Kiver, Q. (Macoun.) St. Anne de la Parade, Q. 

 (St. Cyr.) Beauport, near Quebec. (Thomas.) Laprairie, near Mon- 

 treal, 1821. (Dr. Holmes.) In meadows along the Grand Trunk 

 Eailway, between Cobourg and Port Hope, Ont. (Macoun.) Low 

 shady place at London and Blenheim, Ont. j very common. (Burgess.) 

 Right bank of Eainy Kiver, below Fort Francis, 1872. (Macoun.) 



(2315) L. Carolinianum, Michx. Fl. L, 197. 



L. Canadense, var. superbum, Elwes., Mon. Lil. t. 21. 



L. superbum, Linn. Hook., Fl. II., 181 ; Pursh, Fl. L, 230; Macoun Cat, 



No. 1853. 



Eich low grounds, western Ontario. Yicinity of Hamilton, Ont. 

 (Logie.) Moist grounds half a mile west of London, Ont. (Saunders.) 

 A specimen in our herbarium, collected by Dr. Burgess, near London, 

 in 1879, approaches this species very closely, both in its revolute 

 perianth and almost perfectly smooth leaves. Mr. James Fletcher, 

 botanist to the Experimental Farm at Ottawa, has grown Lilium Caro- 

 linianum from bulbs purchased in the United States, together with 

 the form here referred to, L. Carolinianum. He believes that our own 

 form is different from both L. Carolinianum and L. Canadense and sug- 

 gests that Elwes' name should belong to it. It is extremely probable 

 that his view is the correct one. 



(2316.) L. Columbian urn, Hanson. Baker, Linn. Soc. Journ., 

 XIV., 243. 



L. Canadense, var. parviftorum, Hook., Fl. IT., 181. 

 L.parvum, Kell. Macoun, Cat. No. 1854. 

 L. Philadelphicum,vax.p. Hook.,Fl. II., 181. 



Abundant in some localities ; generally on dry gravelly soil. Whipsaw 

 Creek, B.C. (Dawson.) Very common at Victoria, Vancouver Island, 

 (J. Richardson. Fletcher.) On gravelly soil throughout the oak openings 

 in the southern part of Vancouver Island ; common at Nanaimo and 

 near the Wellington Mines ; on old sea beaches of gravel and shells at 

 Qualicum, at Home Lake, in the interior, and Alberni on the west 

 coast. (Macoun.) 



