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NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



Panicum minus (Mukl.) Nash 

 Dry hilly woods and pastures. Rosendale. September. 



Sporobolus neglectus Nash 



Dry soil. Whitehall, Sandlake and Catskill mountains. Septem- 

 ber. This species differs from its near relative, S. vaginaeflorus, 

 by its shorter spikelets. 



Hordeum jubatum L. 



Along the railroad and in yards. Apalachin. July. F. E. Fenno. 

 Watkins. D. Beach. Introduced from the west. 



Lycopodium chamaecyparissus A. Br. 



Light sandy or gravely soil, specially under or near evergreens. 

 North Elba. August. This club moss has generally been classed as 

 a mere form or variety of L. complanatum L., but it is doubtless 

 worthy of specific distinction as indicated in Torrey Bulletin 26: 

 559-67- 



Dicranum sauteri B. & S. 



Dead branches of spruce and balsam fir. North Elba. Mrs E. G. 

 Britton. 



Physcia tribacia (Ac/i.) Tuckm. 



Bark of trees. Montezuma, Cayuga co. October. Not rare but 

 frequently sterile even when forming extensive patches. It has been 

 reported as a variety of P . s t e 1 1 a r i s. 



Cladonia floerkeana Fr. 



Thin soil on rocks or in their crevices. Fulton Chain. July. 



Cladonia bellidiflora (Ac/i.) Schaer. 



Thin soil on rocks or in their crevices. Jayville, St Lawrence co. 

 July. Our specimens belong to the rock lichen form, which Prof. 

 Tuckerman mentions as approaching closely to C, cornuco- 

 p i o i d e s. The podetia vary much in size and shape. 



Cladonia digitata (Z.) Hoffm. 



Much decayed wood. Denning, Ulster co. August. Our speci- 

 mens are remarkable for the large squamules of the thallus and the 



