26 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



county, where it was found by Mr Olsson, is difficult to imagine, 

 as that locality is not close to any main lines of travel or transporta- 

 tion. 



Oenothera oakesiana Robbins 



Collected near Gloversville by Mr Olsson. This species was 

 formerly considered to be a variety of O . biennis by Dr Asa 

 Gray, but recent books have given it specific rank. Its range is 

 given as " sandy fields, etc., eastern Mass. to Conn." In 1902 

 Professor Peck collected it at Port Jefferson, Long Island, but 

 made no report of it, and with the Fulton county station extends 

 considerably the known range of the species. 



Ophrys australis (Lindl.) House 

 (Listera australis Lindl.) 



This is a common but inconspicuous member of the orchid family 

 throughout the southern states and has been found as far north- 

 ward as near Camden, N. J. (reported by Barton in 1818), and 

 near North Hammonton, N. J., where it was collected in 1908 by 

 G. W. Bassett. 



From here its distribution takes a broad jump and the species 

 reappears at several widely separated localities in central New York 

 and northward to Ottawa, Canada, which is the most northerly 

 station known for the species. It was recently collected at Fine, 

 St Lawrence county, by Dr C. H. Peck, and was found many years 

 ago in the Lily marsh near Oswego, by Rev. J. H. Wibbe, where 

 it still occurs abundantly. In Onondaga county it has been found 

 near Baldwinsville by Doctor Beauchamp and by Prof. L. M. Under- 

 wood, in Cicerp swamp by Mrs L. L. Goodrich, author of the 

 " Flora of Onondaga County." In Fulton county it was collected 

 by Mr C. P. Alexander in 1912, and by Mr A. Olsson in 1913 

 (No. 287) at Canada lake. 



Panicum subvillosum Ashe 



Berkshire, June 19, 1912. No. 394. Only one other collection 

 of this species in New York outside of Long Island, where several 

 collections of it were made by Bicknell, is cited by Hitchcock and 

 Chase in the Revision of North American Panicums. That col- 

 lection was made at Verona, Oneida county, by Dr J. V. Haberer 

 in 1900. 



Panicum tennesseense Ashe 



Sacandaga Park, July 5, 1912. No. 98. The Tennessee Panicum 

 ranges from Maine to Ontario, Minnesota, Mississippi and Georgia. 



