MILLER AND STANDLEY—NORTH AMERICAN NYMPHAEA. 67 
Americana. Nuphar americana Provancher, FI. Canad. 1: 28. 1862. 
Although intended merely as a substitute for advena this name is 
available for the Boreal species now better known as variegata. The 
diagnosis clearly refers to the northern plant, and the type locality, 
Lake St. Jean—Georgie, Quebec, is far beyond the range of Nymphaea 
advena. 
Arifolia. Nymphaea arifolia Salisb. Ann. Bot. 2:71. 1806. 
Another substitute for advena. 
Bombycina. See page 102. 
Chartacea. See page 94. 
Erythraea. See page 91. 
Fletcheri. Nymphaea fletcheri Lawson, Proc. & Trans. Royal Soc, Canada 6: 119, 
1888. 
Aname applied to Nymphaea rubrodisca. The author did not, how- 
ever, regard the plant as a distinct species, but as a hybrid between 
N. kalmiana and N. americana (‘‘advena’’). 
Fluviatilis. Nymphaea fluviatilis Harper, Bull. Torrey Club 83: 234, April, 1906. 
The only name based on a certain well-marked species, confined, 
so far as now known, to the State of Georgia. Type locality, near 
Groveland, Bryan County, Georgia. 
Fraterna. See page 82. 
Hastata. Nymphaea hastata Steud. Nom, Bot. ed. 2. 200. 1841. 
The entry is as follows: ‘‘[Nymphaea] hastata Michx. Nuphar 
sagittaefolia.”” 
Hybrida. Nuphar advena var. hybrida Peck, Ann. Rep. N. Y. Mus. Nat. Hist. 
34: 53. 1881. 
This is the earliest name for the peculiar Boreal plant better known 
as rubrodiscum and minor. In accordance with the American Code 
of Botanical Nomenclature it is at present set aside in favor of 
its synonym rubrodiscum. Type locality, Forked Lake, Hamilton 
County, New York. 
Kalmiana. Nymphaea lutea B kalmiana Michx. Fl. Bor. Amer. 1: 311. 1803. 
The first name applied to the smallest of the three eastern Canadian 
species, but for the present displaced by the later microphylla. No 
locality further than ‘‘Canada” mentioned. 
Longifolia. Nymphaea longifolia Michx. Fl. Bor. Amer. 1: 312. 1803. 
A synonym of N. sagittifolia Walt. 1788, as suspected by Michaux 
himself. ‘‘Hab. in amnibus Carolinae sept. et merid.’’ 
Ludoviciana. See page 92. 
Macrophylla. Nymphaea macrophylla Small, Bull. Torrey Club 25: 465. Sep- 
tember, 1898. 
The local race of advena occurring in northern and central Florida. 
Type locality, Eustis, Lake County. 
Microphylla. Nymphaea microphylla Pers. Syn. Pl. 2: 63. 1807. 
Although published later than kalmiana Michx. 1803, this name, 
under the American Code, stands for the plant to which it was 
applied. 
