246 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



OSWEGO COUNTY 



Rosa gallica L. 



Established along roadsides near Oswego. C. S. Sheldon, June 23, 

 1 88 1. Professor Sheldon also collected Rosa pimpinelli- 

 folia L. near Oswego, where it is established in one or two localities. 



Ilex vertlcillata (L.) A. Gray 



Lily marsh. South New Haven. C. S. Sheldon, June 22, 1880. 

 Mud lake, near North Hannibal. H. D. House, June 27, 1914. 

 The last a form approaching var. cyclophylla Robinson. 



This species, which is given a southern range in the second edition 

 of Britton and Brown's Illustrated Flora (1913), has also been 

 collected at Brant lake, Warren county (Peck), Van Louven lake, 

 Greene county (House), and Sylvan Beach, Oneida county, the 

 var. padifolia (House). What appears to be the typical form 

 of var. cyclophylla Robinson, has been collected at Round 

 lake, Saratoga CDunty (Peck), and at Forestport, Oneida county 

 (Haberer) . 



Ilex bronxensis Britton (L. verticillata var. 

 tenuifolia Torrey), is frequent in northern swamps. Bona- 

 parte swamp, Lewis county (Peck), and Lake Pleasant, Hamilton 

 county (Peck). 



Scirpus subterminalis Torrey 

 Mud lake near Hannibal. Florence Beckwith, July 21, 19 18. 

 A frequent species in the pine-barren streams of Long Island (Taylor) 

 and in the lakes, ponds and slow streams of the Adirondack region 

 (Paine, Peck, Haberer etc.). Outside of these two sections of the 

 State it is a very rare species. 



WAYNE COUNTY 



Cassia marilandica L. 



Near Savannah. Mr and Mrs Edward A. Eames, August 14, 1918. 

 The wild senna has been reported from Wayne county by Hankenson, 

 and from Rochester by Streeter (Proc. Roch. Acad., 3:59. 1896). 

 These constitute the only records for this region of the State. 

 Farther east it occurs rarely in Madison county and more frequently 

 in Herkimer county along the West Canada creek and down the 

 Mohawk to the Hudson along which river, south of Albany, it is 

 frequently seen. It has also been reported from several localities in 

 the Upper Susquehanna valley. 



