Z AMERICAN FERN JOURNAL 
sen follows, is explained as erroneous by Eaton,* who 
states that the specimens actually came from La Cuesta, 
New Mexico. 
A WESTERN EXTENSION oF RANGE FOR FILIx BUL-- 
BIFERA.—There are apparently no records of the occur- 
rence of Filix bulbifera from the territory west of Iowa, 
Missouri, and Arkansas. It has been, therefore, a 
matter of much interest to the writer to find in a collec- 
tion of southwestern plants brought back to Washing ~ 
ton by Mr. E. A. Goldman, of the Biological Survey, an 
excellent, fully matured specimen of this species from 
Arizona. The plant in question is not only heavil 
soriated, but bears also half a dozen characteristic 
*“bulblets”’ at the apex of one of its fronds. It was 
collected at Oak Creek, eighteen miles southeast of 
Flagstaff, Arizona, altitude 1,625 meters, July 24, 1913, 
and bears Mr. Goldman’s original number, 2188. 
In discussing the new record with Dr. P. A. Rydberg, 
who was in Washington at the time the Arizona speci- 
men was received, the writer learned of the occurrence 
of this species in Utah also. The specimens, which 
were so determined by Miss Margaret Slosson, were 
collected in the Elk Mountains of southeastern Utah, 
altitude 2,500 meters, August 1 and 2, 1911, by Dr. P. 
A. Rydberg and Mr. A. O. Garrett (No. 9343). They 
are less characteristic examples of the species than is 
the Arizona plant. Specimens of this collection are in 
the Underwood Fern Herbarium of the New York 
Botanical Garden and have lately been received also at 
the United States National Herbarium. 
LycoropIuM INUNDATUM IN OrEGON.—So far as the 
writer can ascertain this species has never been known 
farther south than Washington, on the Pacific Coast. 
6 Ferns N. Amer. 2: 28. 1880. 
