PLANTS OF ONEIDA COUNTY AND VICINITY. 55 



y. repens, foliis inferioribus lineari-multipartitis, superioribus reniformibus 

 palmato-multifidis. In marshes, "Watertown, Jeflferson county:" Gray in 

 Rare plants of Northern N.Y. 



Brandy brook, three miles north of Yerona, Knieskern. Seneca lake, Sart^ 

 well. Scarce. May- July. 



ALISM^FOLIUS, Geyer. Water-Plantain-haved Crovifoot. 



Greater Spearwort. 

 Overflowed banks. Western counties. Knieskern in herb. Vasey . Crooked 

 lake, Sartwell. Rare. June - August. 



FLAMMULA, L. Flame Crowfoot. Lesser Spearwort. 



Shore of Lake Ontario, Gray hot. Lake Erie, Gray in herb. Ham. Coll. 



Rare. June - August. 



var. REPTANS, Gray. Creeping Spearwort. 



Sandy shores. At the water-line along the shores of the Eight lakes, north 

 Herkimer county. Shore of Lake Ontario, Vasey. Sackett's-harbor; mouth 

 of Oneida creek on the Lake shore; Chenango county, Knieskern. Marshy 

 edge of Owasco lake outlet, /. H.Hall. Uncommon. July- September. 



CYMBALARIA, Pursh. Seaside, Cymbal-leaved Crowfoot, 



Salt-marshes and shores. On the borders of Onondaga lake, about the head 

 at Saliua and along the eastern sides. Abundant there: the only habitat given 

 by Pursh. A very singular plant, first detected by Pursh near the salt-works 

 of Onondaga, New-York, Hooker. Local. June - September. 



ABORTivus, L. Abortive Buttercup, 



Damp woods, wet places. Common. May, June. 



SCELERATUS, L. Noxious Buttercup. 



Ditches, muddy grounds. Mud creek west of Rome. Salina. 



Infrequent. May- July. 



RECURVATus, Poiret. Hook fruited Buttercup. 



Shady wet woods. Frequent. May - July. 



PENNSYLVANicus, L. Bristly Buttercup, 



Brook-sides, ditches. Abundant. July - September. 



FASCicuLARis, Muhl. Early, Bundle-rooted Buttercup. 



Dry hillsides. Gravelly banks of the Black river below Watertown. Gorham, 

 Sartwell in herb. Ham. Coll. Not common. April - June. 



REPENS, L. Running Buttercup, 



Overflowed places, along ditches, brooks, rivers. Common. May- August. 



CLiNTONii, Beck. Dedicated to G. W. Clinton. 



*^ Leaves ternate, 3-cleft, hairy, hairs close-pressed; extreme upper leaflets 

 lanceolate : stem entirely prostrate, creeping, zigzag : petals obovate, sub- 

 retuse : calyx caducous; seed compressed, margined: beak hooked. Flowers 

 large, resembling those of the repens. In Oneida county, between Rome and 

 Oriskany, near the Erie canal, patches of ground, several yards in extent, 

 are often covered with this species. The flowers are rarely elevated more than 

 8 or 10 inches above the ground, though the stem creeps more than a yard 

 from the root. I discovered this plant in the summer of 1824." Eaton bot. 



" Somewhat hairy; stems creeping and rooting at each of the joints; lower 

 leaves on long petioles, ternate; leaflets toothed and incised, cuneate, ter- 

 minal one petioled; floral leaves incised or linear; peduncle 1 -3-flowered; 

 petals rounded; calyx spreading; carpels margined, with a short uincinate 

 style. Banks of the canal, near Rome, Oneida county, N.Y. Much smaller 

 than R. repens, in all its parts except the flower, which is of a bright yuUow 

 and about as large as that of R. acris. Leaves seldom more than 1^ inches- 

 in length, and about the same in breadth. Stems distinctly creeping like those 

 of R. reptans : flowering ones 6-8 inches high. Style short and hooked." 

 Beck bot. 



