﻿Report 
  of 
  the 
  State 
  Botanist. 
  143 
  

  

  plant 
  as 
  var. 
  subtomentosus. 
  Unlike 
  the 
  typical 
  form 
  our 
  

   plant 
  grew 
  in 
  thin 
  dry 
  soil 
  covering 
  rocks. 
  It 
  was 
  partly 
  

   shaded 
  by 
  trees. 
  

  

  Hieraeium 
  Marianum 
  Willd. 
  

   Highland 
  lake, 
  Sullivan 
  county. 
  July. 
  Kare. 
  

  

  Polygonum 
  Douglassii 
  Greene. 
  

  

  Kocky 
  summit 
  of 
  Cobble 
  hill 
  near 
  Elizabethtown, 
  Essex 
  

   county. 
  September. 
  

  

  This 
  was 
  formerly 
  referred 
  to 
  P. 
  tenue, 
  but 
  it 
  is 
  easily 
  distin- 
  

   guished 
  from 
  that 
  species 
  by 
  its 
  drooping 
  fruit. 
  

  

  Potamogeton 
  Vaseyi 
  Bobbins. 
  

  

  Thompson's 
  lake, 
  Albany 
  county. 
  August. 
  Dr. 
  Morong 
  finds 
  

   it 
  in 
  Greenwood 
  lake, 
  Orange 
  county. 
  

  

  In 
  general 
  appearance 
  it 
  resembles 
  P. 
  diversifoliiis, 
  from 
  

   which 
  it 
  is 
  easily 
  separated 
  by 
  its 
  larger 
  fruit 
  with 
  the 
  middle 
  

   keel 
  rounded. 
  

  

  Potamogeton 
  pulcher 
  Tackm. 
  

  

  Kiverhead, 
  Suffolk 
  county. 
  K 
  S. 
  Miller. 
  Kare. 
  < 
  

  

  Potamogeton 
  major 
  {Fr.) 
  Morong. 
  

  

  Cayuga 
  and 
  Seneca 
  lakes. 
  August. 
  This 
  isP.pusillus 
  of 
  the 
  

  

  State 
  Flora 
  where 
  it 
  is 
  credited 
  to 
  Crooked 
  lake 
  on 
  the 
  authority 
  

  

  of 
  Dr. 
  Sartwell. 
  In 
  the 
  Manuals 
  it 
  stands 
  as 
  P.pusillus 
  var. 
  

  

  major 
  and 
  P. 
  mucronatus. 
  I 
  follow 
  Dr. 
  Morong 
  in 
  considering 
  

  

  it 
  a 
  good 
  species 
  and 
  I 
  have 
  adopted 
  the 
  name 
  under 
  which 
  he 
  

  

  publishes 
  it. 
  

  

  Carex 
  glabra 
  Boott. 
  

  

  Taberg, 
  Oneida 
  county, 
  and 
  Cooperstown 
  Junction, 
  Otsego 
  

  

  county. 
  June. 
  In 
  the 
  Taberg 
  station 
  it 
  was 
  growing 
  in 
  the 
  

  

  midst 
  of 
  a 
  patch 
  of 
  C. 
  debilis. 
  Its 
  heavier 
  spikes 
  and 
  different 
  

  

  appearance 
  at 
  once 
  attracted 
  attention. 
  

  

  Carex 
  albursina 
  Sheldon. 
  

   This 
  plant 
  has 
  been 
  considered 
  a 
  variety 
  of 
  C. 
  laxiflora 
  and 
  is 
  

   subjoined 
  to 
  that 
  species 
  as 
  var. 
  latifolia 
  in 
  the 
  Manual. 
  But 
  it 
  

  

  