958 W rORB ■ \irsi:r.M 



Meibomia paniculata (L.) Kuntze 



In rockj places at Bolton a form occurs in which the midrib 

 and, i<> some extent, the principal veins arc bordered by a pale 



stripe. 



Viburnum pauciflorum Pylaie 



In our state i liis Bpecies is apparently limited to the xYdiron- 



dack region and is Bcarce even there. It occurs sparingly along 



some of the cool shaded streams, i hat flow down the steep rocky 



sides of Mt ftfarcy, Ml Mclntyre and Mt Clinton. It is in flower 



in the latter pari of June, but the fruit is not ripe before 



August. 



Ludwigia alternifolia L. 



Abundant in a swampy place about a mile west of Menands. 



Tin- persistent colored foliaceous lobes of the calyx give it the 



appearance of being in flower late in the season, even when its 



fruit is mature. 



Chamaenerion angustifolium (L.) Scop. 



A pale flowered form occurs near Loon lake. It is interme- 

 diate between the common form and the white flowered form. 



Galinsoga parviflora hispida DC. 

 Waste places. Bolton. August. Escaped from cultivation. 

 More hairy or hispid than the common form and having the 

 pappus narrowed above into a bristle. The upper part of the 

 branches and specially the peduncles are glandular hairy in our 

 sp. « iiii- i,>. These characters and the coarsely toothed margin 

 of iic thicker Leaves give the plant a peculiar appearance and 

 would seem to make it worthy of specific distinction. 



Rudbeckia triloba L. 

 Bast Schodack, Rensselaer co. Angnst. Neither the Manual 

 nor ih<- lilustrated /font credits this species to New York, but 

 it li d fonnd growing wild in Dutchess and Ulster counties. 



The station in Rensselaer co. i» the most northern one in which 

 I have fonnd it. 



Gaylussacia resinosa glaucocarpa Robinson 

 Port Ann. W ;i>!iiiiL r ion co. and < Hen lake, Warren co. August. 

 B. H. Burnham. 



