REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST II 9 
Admitting* the specific value of this plant and of S'. velutipes and 
substituting for 5 . Havida the earlier name 6'. clavata Schseff., which is 
adopted in Sylloge, we have three New York species. In the an¬ 
nexed table their differentiation is indicated. 
Stem whitish or pallid... i 
Stem bay or bay-brown. S. velutipes. 
I Club even or wavy. S. clavata. 
I Club rugose . S. rugosa. 
Cenangium Abietis (Pers.) Rehm. 
Dead bark of white pine, Pinus Strobus. Delmar, Albany county. 
August. 
Diaporthe decipiens Pace. 
Dead branches of water beech, Carpinus Caroliniana. New Balti¬ 
more, Greene county. June. 
Phyllachora Junci ( Fr .) Fckl. 
Dead stems of slender rush, Juncus tenuis. Cedarville, Herkimer 
county. June. 
Xylaria castorea Berk. 
Prostrate trunks of beech, Fagus Americana. Adirondack moun¬ 
tains. September. 
(D.) 
REMARKS AND OBSERVATIONS. 
Nymphsea reniformis DC. 
Great South Bay, near the head of Lake Champlain. N. H. Burn¬ 
ham. This station extends the known range of the species northeast¬ 
ward. 
Corydalis glauca Pursh. 
A white-flowered form was found growing with the common form 
on the summit of Altar or Cobble mountain, near Lake Placid. 
Nasturtium sylvestre R . Br. 
Banks of the Genesee river near the southern and also near the 
northern boundary of the city of Rochester. Collected by Mrs. J. H. 
