﻿THE FERN BULLETIN 



70 



LYCOPODIACEAE 



Lycopodium alopecuroides (L.) Fox-tail. Moist 

 wastes. Rare and local. In Delaware and Bucks 

 counties in die southeast. Porter's List credits it to 

 Erie county in the extreme northeastern corner of the 

 State, but there is good reason to doubt the record. 

 Mr. Harry D. Bailey of Lafayette College writes me 

 that (the specimens on which this record apparently 

 rests, are accompanied by an unsigned note, stating 

 in part, "There is some doubt as to this being an Erie 

 specimen, but I think it is." 



Lycopodium annotinum (L.) Stiff Club-moss. 

 Very local. Confined to the mountains and reaching 

 its southern limit in Somerset county. Monroe, Tioga, 

 Sullivan, Centre, Huntingdon, Cambria, Bradford and 

 Somerset counties. 



Lycopodium Chapmani Lloyd and Underwood. 

 Chapman's Club-moss. Rare. Bucks and probably 

 Delaware county. 



Lycopodium clavatum (L.) Common Club-moss. 

 Woods. Locally abundant in the northern portion of 

 the mountain belt. Infrequent or rare elsewhere. 



Lycopodium complanatum flabelliforme. 

 Throughout, though most abundant in the mountain 

 counties. 



Lycopodium inundatum (L.) Bog Club-moss. 

 Borders of swamps and wet wastes. Rare. Monroe, 

 Tioga, Sullivan, Centre, Huntingdon, Cambria and 

 Somerset counties in the mountain belt. Not recorded 

 south of Pennsylvania. 



Lycopodium inundatum Bigelovii. Tuckerman. 

 Reported from Delaware county in the southeastern 

 corner. I am inclined to doubt this record as speci- 

 mens examined seem better referred to L. Chapmani. 



