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THE FERN BULLETIN 



sterile frond are quite variable in cutting; more so 

 than one would realize without a careful comparison 

 of specimens though several forms are so distinct as 

 to be regarded as varieties if not species. 



Perhaps the most attractive of these varieties is 

 dissectum a fairly constant companion of obliquum 

 and about the same size but with pinnules much di- 

 vided and ending in y shaped segments that give it a 

 lightness and grace lacking in other members of the 

 family. Intermedium has a super-abundance of pin- 

 nules that lap and overlap in the press, while 

 Oneidpise like a middleaged matron (of by-gone 

 time) is plain and severe in outline scorning all sug- 

 gestion of frills. All are interesting and give zest to 

 the excursions of late summer when many ferns are 

 past their prime. 



New Hartford, N. Y. 



OPHIOGLOSSUM VULGATUM IN ONTARIO. 



By F. J. A. Morris. 



In spite of what you have published on the subject. 

 I was, till the middle of July 1909, under the same 

 impression as most amateur botanists that the fern 

 was rare and local. On July first I found by accident 

 about a score of these ferns in the corner of an up- 

 land pasture. Investigation disclosed hundreds up and 

 down both banks of a little brook near Garden Hill 

 ten miles north of Port Hope. About July 20th I was 

 fern hunting with an old Oxford chum near Lanark, 

 Ontario and while examining a fine clump of inter- 

 rupted fern which was surrounded by sterile fronds of 

 the native fern, I once more, by accident spied a group 



