Rbodora 
JOURNAL OF 
THE NEW ENGLAND BOTANICAL CLUB 
Vol. 3 August, Igor No. 32 
NOTES ON THE UMBELLIFERAE OF NEW ENGLAND. 
WALTER DEANE, 
AFTER a lapse of just two years since the publication of the 
Preliminary List of New England Plants,— II. Umbelliferae (RHo- 
DORA, I, pp. 159—160), I have endeavored to revise the list and bring 
the corrections and additions to date. The genera are arranged, as 
before, alphabetically. 
Berula angustifolia, Mert. & Koch. The authority for this species 
was wrongly ascribed to Koch. 
Bifora radians, Bieb. By a typographical error the generic name 
was misspelled in my list. 
Coelopleurum actaeifolium, Coulter & Rose. The Coelopleurum of 
Eastern North America must now be referred to this species. 
C. Gmelini, Ledeb., is confined to Alaska. Our New England plant 
was first described by Michaux, Fl. Bor. Am. I, 1803, p. 166, as Zé- 
gusticum actaeifolium (see North American Umbelliferae, Coulter & 
Rose, Washington, 1900, p. 142). 
Conium maculatum, L. I have seen in the Gray Herbarium a 
specimen of this species collected by Mr. A. W. Driggs, in East 
Hartford, Connecticut, on June 26, 1899. A cross should be placed 
against this in my list. 
Coriandrum sativum, L. Professor E. S. Burgess collected this 
species at Cottage City, Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, in 
August, 1893. Through the kindness of Dr. J. N. Rose I have been 
enabled to see one of Prof. Burgess's specimens deposited in the 
National Museum Herbarium in Washington. On the label I read, 
“Occasionally escaped from cultivation by the Portuguese." It 
should be represented in my list by a cross and I enter it as it is 
desirable to make a record of escapes which may become more or 
less established. 
