65 NINETEENTH ANNUAL REPORT ON THE STATE CABINET. 



PELLIA, Raddi. 

 P. epiphtlla, Bees.* 



Wet ground, borders of ditches. Frequent. April, May. 



BLASIA, Mich. 



B. PUSILLA, L. 



Wet gravelly or sandy banks. Albany. Not common. Sterile. 



GEOCALYX, Nees. 

 G. graveolens, Nees. 



Ground and old logs; common, C. F. Austin. 



CHILOSCYPHUS, Corda. 



C. polyanthus, Corda. 



Sticks and stones in streams and swamps; often submerged. Com- 

 mon but sterile. 



LOPHOCOLEA, Nees. 



L. HETEROPHYLLA, Nees. 



Ground and old logs. Common and variable. June. 



SPHAGN(ECETIS, Nees. 

 S. communis, Nees. 



Rotten wood and old logs. Common but rarely fruits. 

 JUNGERMAXNIA, L. 



J. TRICOPHTLLA, L. 



Wet ground, damp rocks, among moss, etc. Common. 

 J. setacea, Web. 



With the last and as common, C. F. Austin. 

 J. connivens, Dicks. 



Decayed wood and damp places on the ground Frequent. 



J. CURVIFOLIA, Dicks. 



Old logs. Frequent and variable in color. 

 J. bicuspidata, L. 



Rotten wood and among moss. Sand Lake. Catskill mountains. 



J. CATENULATA, Hub. 



Ground and old logs in swamps; very common, C. F. Austin. 



Stems prostrate, rarely suberect, slightly compressed or subjula- 

 ceous. Leaves suborbicular, concave, obliquely clasping, nearly 

 twice as wide as the stem, bifid, with an obtuse sinus and acute 

 straight orponnivent and more or less incurved lobes; amphigastria 

 none; involucral leaves subovate, 2 - 3-cleft, the lobes spinulose- 

 dentate; perianth on a very short lateral branch, elongated, subcy- 

 lyndrical, the apex trigonal, sub-acute, whitish, the mouth ciliate- 

 lobed, the lobes spinulose-dentate. Forms extensive olive-green 

 patches. 



J. SULLIVANTIANA. (n. S.) 



Cold shaded ground, Orange county, C. F. Austin. 



u Amphigastria minute, ovate or sub-quadrate, sometimes emar- 



