REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST 1901 957 



Lachnella corticalis (Pers.) Fr. 

 Dry naked bark or among mosses on the base of living aspens, 

 Populus tremuloides. North Elba. July. 



Orbilia luteo-rubella (Nyl.) Karst. 

 Damp decaying wood, specially of deciduous trees. North 

 Elba. July. A common species, usually becoming more highly 

 colored in drying. 



Anthostoma dryophilum (Curr.) Sacc. 



Dead branches of chestnut. Lyndonville, Orleans co. C. E. 



Fair man. 



Mycenastrum spinulosum Pk. 



Grassy ground about the ruins of the old fort on Crown Point, 

 September. Three young specimens and two fragments of an 

 old specimen were found. This material is scarcely sufficient for 

 a satisfactory identification of the species, but the peculiar 

 threads of the capillitium and the character of the spores indi- 

 cate this species. The locality, however, is very distant from 

 that of the original specimens. It is desirable that mature 

 specimens in good condition may yet be found. 



D 



REMARKS AND OBSERVATIONS 



Hepatica acuta (Pursh) Britton 



Vaughns, Washington co. April. S. H. Burnham. The speci- 

 mens represent a variety in which each of the three lobes of 

 the leaf is itself three lobed. 



Castalia tuberosa (Paine) Greene 

 Abundant in the sloughs and still waters about Fort Ann, 

 Washington co. In deep water the leaves float on the surface, 

 but in shallow water they stand erect above the surface, sup- 

 ported by their stout firm petioles. 



Draba incana arabisans (Mx.) Wats. 

 Precipices of Mt Wallface. This is the only locality in the 

 state, so far as known to me, where this plant is found. It 

 flowers in June or early in July. Specimens collected July 19' 

 were past flowering. 



