124 Forty-sixth Report on the State Museum. 



Galium pilosum Ait. 



A small form six to nine inches high, with short internodes, 

 leaves about half an inch long and flowers crowded in small 

 dense clusters was collected on the north slope of Skylight 

 mountain, one of the Adirondacks. It might be called variety 

 parvum. 



Galium circsezans Mx. var. glabrum Britton, 



Leaves and stems nearly glabrous ; corolla glabrous. White- 

 hall, ISTew Scotland and Sandlake. July. 



Solidago bicolor L. 



A branching form, both of this and its variety Goncolor, is 

 quite common. Each branch is terminated by a spike-like 

 panicle of flowers. 



Solidago hum.ilis Fursh. 



Top of Bald mountain, near Third lake, Herkimer county. 

 Four distinct forms of this species occur in this limited station. 

 First, a very leafy dwarf form, four to six inches high with a 

 short dense panicle one to two inches long. Second, a very 

 leafy form eight to twelve inches high, with an oblong leafy 

 interrupted but dense panicle. The margins of the lower leaves 

 are often wavy toward the base. These forms make a very close 

 approach to the Western var. nana. Third, a still taller form 

 in which the stem is less leafy, the leaves are smaller, more nar- 

 row and scattered, and the panicle is elongated, narrow and 

 spike-like, but commonly interrupted either in its entire length 

 or toward the base only. This is one to two feet high. The 

 upper leaves are entire, the lower and radical ones more or less 

 bluntly serrate. The stem is either green or purple and is gla- 

 brous below. This is the most abundant form. The fourth 

 form is like this in all respects except that it has a broader, more 

 branched panicle. The panicles in all the forms are so glutinous 

 that they adhere to the drying papers when placed in press. 



It is a little remarkable that this species should exhibit such 

 a variety of forms in such a limited locality. All the forms 

 appeared to be growing under the same conditions of soil, tem- 

 perature, moisture and exposure. I suspect this is the plant 

 which in Paine' s Catalogue is referred to Solidago speciosa var. 

 angustata. It is separable from that species by its glutinous 



