18 Thirty-third Annual Keport op the 



Mentha rotundifolia, L. Richmond, Staten Island. Britton. 

 Jamesville, Onondaga county. Aug:, and Sept. Introduced. 



Salvia sclarea, L. Jamesville. Aug. Introduced. 



Heliotropium Europseurn, L. New York city, along Eighth ave- 

 nue and Harlem railroad. Britton. Oct. Introduced. 



Rumex maritimus, L. Montauk Point. Miller. 



Alnus glutinosa, Gcert. College Point, Long Island. Schrenk. 

 Contributed by E. 8. Miller. Introduced. 



Epipactis helleborine var. viridans, Irm. Woods, near Syracuse. 

 Mrs. 8. M. Rust. July. This is a very interesting and important 

 addition to our flora. It is at present the only known representative 

 of the genus in the eastern part of the country as E. gigantea is in the 

 western part. It is remarkable that it should be limited to a single 

 locality, but that locality had already been rendered famous by its pos- 

 session of two ferns, Botrychium Lunaria and Scolopendrium vulgar e, 

 that, so far as our State is concerned, scarcely pass beyond its limits. 

 Mrs. M. P. Church, a member of the Syracuse Botanical Club, has 

 the credit of making this discovery, which has been favorably noticed 

 by Prof. Gray and Prof. Hooker, and has already been published in 

 the botanical journals. 



Spiranthes simplex, Gray. Wading river, where it had previously 

 been detected by Mr. Miller. Also Tottenville. Britton. Aug. and 

 Sept. It is not probable that this species occurs much to the north of 

 New York city. 



Glyceria obtusa, Trin. Riverhead, Long Island. Sept. 



Tripsacum dactyloides, L. Long Bridge, Staten Island. Rollick. 

 Aug. 



Asplenium Bradleyi, Eaton. Near Newburgh. D. 0. Eaton. Sept. 

 This fern was discovered and the specimens collected, in the locality 

 mentioned, by Prof. Eaton, in the year 1864. In September last I 

 visited the locality and searched carefully for the plant, but without 

 success. The top of the rocky hill on which the fern had occurred had 

 recently been cleared and it is possible that its station has already been 

 destroyed. 



Cladonia Boreri. Tuckm. (filadonia lacunoso Delise.) Wading River. 

 Sept. 



Vaucheria velutina, Ag. Wet springy places. Albany. June. 

 The specimens are not fertile and are, therefore, to some extent, doubt- 

 ful. 



Agaricus solitarius, Bull. Thin woods and open places, Wading 

 River. Sept. A form with the bulb and lower part of the stem merely 

 floccose-squamulose, or clothed with white mealy particles. 



Agaricus strobiliformis, Vitt. Open bushy places, Catskill mount- 

 ains. Oct. 



Agaricus Frostiauus, Pk. Woods and bushy places, Sandlake and 

 Adirondack mountains. 



Agaricus rhagadiosus, Fr. Woods. Wading River. Sept. 



Agaricus candicans, Pers. Among fallen leaves in woods. Center. 

 Oct. 



Agaricus (Clitocybe) compressipes, n. sp. Pileus thin, convex or 

 expanded, umbilicate, glabrous, hygrophanous, brownish when moist, 

 whitish or pale-alutaceous when dry, margin thin ; lamellae close, 



