74 



46. C. strepsilis (Ach.) Vainio. Received by Dr. Evans, from Buckfield, Me., 



from Parlin; not listed in other papers cited; may be looked for north- 

 ward not far from coast, perhaps. 



47. C. ochrochlora Vainio. Received from Vreeland, South Pond, Adirondacks, 



and Thomson, Harrison, Me.; received from Dr. Evans from Maine, 

 also from New Hampshire. 



48. C. botrytes (Hag.) Hoffm. Found by writer on bark of dead spruce, beside 



road to Federal Mine, Matane Township, Gaspe National Forest, 48 

 miles north of New Richmond on the Bay of Chaleur. Listed by Fink in 

 Minnesota and by Tuckerman from British Columbia; not in Allen's 

 or Dodge's Gaspe lists; probably to be looked for northward on bark of 

 dead conifers. Found by J. L. Lowe on Mt. Marcy in the Adirondacks. 

 (PI. 2,f.3.) 



Since making up the above lists, the writer has received a 

 very interesting collection of lichens, collected from above tim- 

 ber line on Mount Marcy, in the Adirondacks, from Mr. J. L. 

 Lowe, of the State College of Forestry, Syracuse University, 

 who is revising the Cladoniae for Prof. Fink's posthumous Man- 

 ual of North American Lichens. Among them are two Cladoniae 

 of note. One is C. amaurocrea, No. 20 in the above lists; the other 

 C. cyanipes, which is described by Tuckerman, as C. carneola, 

 b. cyanipes, with podetia "membranaceous-corticate soon be- 

 coming powdery, slender, fragile, from simple soon sparingly 

 and irregularly short-branched; the cups disappearing in subu- 

 late branchlets." 



Note : There is some question as to the exact identity of Fig. 

 4 and Fig. 7, on Plate 3. Dr. Evans first thought Fig. 4, C. 

 cornuta, but it lacked soredia. Dr. Sandstede named it C. 

 gracilis, var. elongata, but Dr. Evans now thinks it more like 

 C. gracilis, var. chordalis. On his advice we follow Sandstede for 

 the present. It may be an immature specimen, with char- 

 acter indeterminate. Fig. 7 is called C. fimbriata, f. major here, 

 although Dr. Evans is calling a like plant C. major, in a second 

 series of Notes on the Cladoniae of Connecticut, to appear in 

 Rhodora, but admits difficulty in distinguishing C. major from 

 C. fimbriata, "the only morphological difference being in size." 



