﻿24 
  TWENTY-FIRST 
  REPORT 
  ON 
  THE 
  STATE 
  CABINET. 
  

  

  These, 
  as 
  well 
  as 
  my 
  own 
  additions 
  of 
  Phaenogamia, 
  have 
  been 
  

   laid 
  upon 
  sheets 
  preparatory 
  to 
  mounting 
  and 
  poisoning, 
  which 
  

   work 
  I 
  have 
  not 
  yet 
  had 
  time 
  to 
  do. 
  

  

  Specimens 
  of 
  seventy-eight 
  species 
  of 
  Mosses 
  have 
  been 
  

   mounted. 
  This 
  work 
  is 
  now 
  in 
  progress. 
  

  

  Six 
  species 
  of 
  Flowering 
  plants 
  and 
  thirteen 
  of 
  Mosses 
  and 
  

   Liverworts, 
  new* 
  to 
  the 
  State, 
  have 
  been 
  detected 
  by 
  me. 
  All 
  

   except 
  four 
  of 
  these 
  were 
  discovered 
  in 
  the 
  Adirondack 
  region. 
  

   These, 
  with 
  other 
  discoveries 
  both 
  by 
  myself 
  and 
  others, 
  are 
  more 
  

   fully 
  noticed 
  in 
  a 
  paper 
  entitled 
  " 
  Facts 
  and 
  Observations 
  touch- 
  

   ing 
  the 
  Flora 
  of 
  the 
  State 
  of 
  New 
  York." 
  

  

  A 
  series 
  of 
  ninety-eight 
  specimens 
  of 
  Algas 
  collected 
  in 
  Peconic 
  

   Bay, 
  Long 
  Island, 
  and 
  comprising 
  about 
  twenty 
  species, 
  were 
  

   presented 
  to 
  the 
  State 
  Cabinet 
  by 
  Mrs. 
  M. 
  A. 
  Bush. 
  These 
  were 
  

   undetermined. 
  About 
  half 
  of 
  them 
  have 
  been 
  microscopically 
  

   examined 
  and 
  identified. 
  Others 
  being 
  without 
  fruit 
  cannot 
  be 
  

   satisfactorily 
  determined 
  until 
  further 
  collections 
  are 
  made. 
  

  

  CHARLES 
  H. 
  PECK. 
  

  

  Albany, 
  January 
  1, 
  1868. 
  

  

  * 
  That 
  is 
  s 
  they 
  are 
  not 
  contained 
  in 
  the 
  official 
  Reports 
  of 
  Dr. 
  Torrey 
  and 
  Judge 
  Clinton, 
  

   nor 
  in 
  my 
  list 
  of 
  Mosses 
  in 
  the 
  Nineteenth 
  Cabinet 
  Eeport. 
  

  

  