130 Rhodora [JULY 
the coast. Discussion of this and the two preceding species will be 
found in Ruopora, xii. 157-162. 
SAGINA DECUMBENS (EIl.) Torr. & Gray. Portland (A. E. Blewitt). 
* STELLARIA BOREALIS Bigel., var. ISOPHYLLA Fernald. RHODORA, 
xvi. 150 (1914). Cromwell and Winchester (Bissell), Guilford (G. H. 
Bartlett & Harger), Southington (Andrews), Oxford (Harger). 
S. BOREALIS Bigel., var. FLORIBUNDA Fernald. Raopora, xvi. 151 
(1914). Orange (Weatherby), Oxford (Harger). 
TS.. GRAMINEA L., var. LATIFOLIA Peterm. East Hartford 
(Weatherby), Southington (Andrews), Salisbury (Bissell), Milford 
and Bridgeport (Eames). Introduced from Europe. 
7S. aquatica L. Rare. Moist banks of the Housatonic River 
below highwater mark, sparingly at two stations (Harger). Fugitive 
or adventive from Europe. 
* SILENE ANTIRRHINA L., forma DEANEANA Fernald. RHODORA, 
xvii. 96 (1915). Occasional in dry soil. Differs from the typical 
form in the entire absence of the glutinous band on the internodes. 
+S. GALLICA L., var. QUINQUEVULNERA Koch. Rare. Cultivated 
fields, Southington (Andrews). Fugitive from Europe. 
GYPSOPHILA MURALIS L. Roadside, Chester (Graves). 
NupHar ADVENA (Ait.) R. Br. Occasional in the coastal region of 
southwestern Connecticut (Eames). 
N. vaRIEGATUM Engelm. Common or occasional throughout. 
Recent studies have shown that the name Nuphar advena should 
be restricted to the larger plant having mostly emersed leaves with 
open sinus. 
N. MICROPHYLLUM (Pers.) Fernald. Ruopora, xix. 111 (1917). 
Guilford (W. R. Dudley; specimen in Herb. Yale University), Ply- 
mouth (H. J. Bassett, 1861), Stamford (Eames & C. C. Godfrey). 
In the Catalogue not reported from Fairfield Co. 
NYMPHAEA TUBEROSA Paine. Rogers Pond, Old Lyme (Graves). 
(To be continued.) 
E. B. HARGER, 
C. B. GRAVES: 
E. H. Eames, 
C. H. BrssDLI; 
L. ANDREWS, 
C. A. WEATHERBY. 
