MES 
1900] Harger, — Some less usual plants of Connecticut — 125 
STATIONS FOR SOME OF THE LESS USUAL PLANTS 
OF CONNECTICUT: 
E. B. HaRGER. 
I wisH to place on record the following station for the rarer plants 
of this region. Most of these, so far, I know, are hitherto unrecorded. 
Nuphar minimum, Smith. Reynolds Bridge. 
Sisymbrium Thaliaum, Gay. Oxford. Abundant in sandy fields 
near the Housatonic River. 
Stellaria borealis, Bigel. Two stations in Oxford. 
Geranium pusillum, Burm. f. New Haven. 
Acer saccharinum, L. and A. Negundo, L. occur sparingly along 
the Housatonic in Oxford and Southbury. 
Desmodium canescens, D.C. West bank of the Housatonic, four 
miles below Derby. 
Cuphea viscossissima, Jacq. Oxford. 
Epilobium palustre, L.  Botsford's Station. 
Gaura biennis, L. Frequent along the Housatonic in Oxford and 
Southbury. 
Circaea alpina, L. Oxford and Reynolds Bridge. 
Hydrocotyle umbellata, L. Banks of the Housatonic at Oxford, 
sparingly. 
Viburnum cassinoides, L. Oxford and Middlebury. 
Chrysopsis falcata, Ell. Milford Point. 
Heliopsis scabra, Dunal. At two stations in Oxford, where it per- 
sists but does not increase. 
Helianthus rigidus, Desf. and H. grosse-serratus, Martens. These 
two species are well established in an old field at Oxford. Probably 
both these and the preceding species were introduced with western 
grain. 
Lactuca Scariola, L. New Haven. 
Lobelia Dortmanna, L. Quassapaug Lake, Middlebury. 
Andromeda polifolia, L. Litchfield. 
Leucothoé racemosa, Gray. Huntington. 
Kalmia glauca, Ait. In a bog called Cranberry Swamp. Wood- 
bury. 
Hottonia inflata, El. East Haven. 
Onosmodium Virginianum, D.C. Abundant near the Housatonic 
in Southbury. 
