Contributions to Canadian Botany. 87 



Stachys ciliata, Dongl. var. pubens, Gray. 



New Westminster, B.C., 1892. {Law.) Fishery Bay, 

 Nasse Eiver, B.C. (Jas. McEvoy, Herb. No. 1096.) Our 

 only other specimen is from Queen Charlotte Islands. 



Mentha viridis, L. 



Growing in the streets of Victoria, Vancouver Island, 

 1893. Naturalized. (John Macoun, Herb. No. 1052.) 



Asarum caudatum, Lindl. 



Common at Eevelstoke, B.C. (John Macoun.) Eastern 

 limit in Canada. 



Epipactis Helleborine, Crantz. 



First found in Canada in 1890 at Lambton Mills, Humber 

 Eiver, Ont., by W. & O. White, and more recently (1892) 

 on Mount Royal, Montreal, Que., by N. D. Keith. 



The only stations given for this species in the last edition 

 of Gray's Manual are Syracuse and Buffalo, N.Y. 



Epipactis gigantea, Dougl. 



Collected by Dr. G. M. Dawson in 187T- at Osoyoos Lake, 

 B.C., but not again until 1890, when it was found by Prof. 

 Macoun at Lower Arrow Lake, Columbia Eiver, and Hot 

 Springs, Kootanie Lake, B.C. 



Allium Nevii, Watson. 



Found growing on gravelly banks at Botanie near 

 Spence's Bridge, B.C., by Jas. McEvoy. Pound on Vancou- 

 ver Island, but not before on the mainland. 



Juncus Gerardi, Lois. 



This rush, though common on the Atlantic Coast, had 

 not been found on the Pacific Coast until it was discovered 

 in 188^7 by Prof Macoun near Victoria, Vancouver Island. 

 It was again collected by him at Nanaimo, V. I. in 1893. 

 As in the east it was found growing in salt marshes and is 

 without doubt indigenous. 



