Report of the State Botanist, 17 



F. L. Henderson, Olympia, Wash. 



Mycena strobilinoidea Pk. I Nidularia Candida Pk. 



Exobasidium Cassiopes Pk. \ 



M. E. Jones, Salt Lake City, Utah. 



Septoria Peraphylli PA;. | Uromyces deciduiis Pk. 



F. L. Harvey, Orono, Maine. 

 Clavaria H^rveyi Pk. 



C. F. Millspaugh, Morganstown, W. Va. 



Septosporium Equiseti Pk. 



Prof. W. R. Dudley, Ithaca, N. Y. 



Pentstemon laevigatus Sol. 



Arthur M. Peck, Sandlake, N. Y. 



Populus balsamifera L. 



(C.) 

 PLANTS NOT BEFORE REPORTED. 

 Cardamine rotundifolia Mx. 

 Springy and wet places. CarroUton, Cattaraugus county. June. 

 New Jersey and Pennsylvania have heretofore been considered 

 the northern limit of this plant, but it is plentiful in at least two 

 localities near CarroUton. 



Stellaria graminea L. 

 Roadsides. Sandlake, Rensselaer county ; New Scotland, 

 Albany county. June and ^i\\y. A pretty little species intro- 

 duced from Europe and resembling somewhat the native species, 

 S. longifolia and S. longipes., but distinct from both by its leaves 

 and rough seeds. 



Ailanthus glandulosus Desf. 

 Roadsides and waste places. Long Island ; Cold Spiing, Put- 

 nam county; Marlborough, Ulster county. This rapid-growing 

 tree, introduced from China, often springs up spontaneously by 

 roadsides and in waste places about cities and villages. It has 

 been represented to me as spreading so rapidly in some places 

 that it is troublesome. 



Aster Herveyi Gray. 

 Borders of woods. Salamanca, Cattaraugus county. September. 

 This species might easily be taken for a bright violet-rayed 

 form of A. macrophyllus, but it differs from that species in its 

 glandular pubescent floral branches and peduncles. 

 3 



