228 Rhodora [OCTOBER 
R. PHOENICOLASIUS Maxim. Plainville (Andrews). Several addi- 
tional stations have been observed in the southwestern part of the 
state, where, no doubt, it has been partly distributed by birds. 
+ R. RosAEFOLIUS Smith. Rare. Ata time said to have been more 
than twenty years ago, introduced into a garden in Huntington, where 
it became a nuisance. Efforts have been made to eradicate it, but a 
small colony persists in a rocky waste on the premises. The flowers 
are single and it is said to form some fruit. (Eames and C. C. Godfrey). 
Native of the Orient. 
* R. cANADENSIS L. Most of the material referred in the Catalogue 
to R. Randii belongs under this species, which occurs through northern 
Connecticut as far east as Union (Graves) and as far south as Danbury 
(A. E. Blewitt). One specimen collected at Salisbury by Bissell agrees 
well with authentic material of R. Randii; but R. Randii is probably 
only a weak form of R. canadensis. 
AGRIMONIA PARVIFLORA Ait. Stamford (W. H. Hoyt). 
A. ROSTELLATA Wallr. Kent (Eames). 
Rosa sprnosissimA L. Prospect (A. E. Blewitt), Brookfield 
(Eames). 
R. cantna L. Portland (Mrs. F. W. Starmer, Ruopora, xiii. 31), 
Fairfield (Eames), Salisbury (Mrs. C. S. Phelps, Ruopora, l. c.), 
Stamford (W. H. Hoyt). 
R. nitiwa Willd. Plainfield (Bissell, RHopora, xiii. 31). 
* PRUNUS VIRGINIANA L., var. LEUCOCARPA Wats. Rare. Fence- 
rows: Southington (Andrews), Seymour (Harger). 
P. wstititi1a L. Redding (M. L. Fernald, Eames & C. C. Godfrey). 
P. ntcra Ait. River-bank and fields: Salisbury (A. E. Blewitt & 
Harger), Sharon (Weatherby). Apparently native at the former 
station. 
+ P. AMERICANA Marsh., var. Motus Torr. & Gray. Roadsides and 
fence-rows: Thompson (Weatherby), Lyme (Harger), East Granby 
(Bissell, H. S. Clark & Weatherby, Ruopora, xiii. 31), Oxford 
(Harger), Woodbury (Eames & C. C. Godfrey). Introduced from the 
central United States. The Oxford station known to be an introduc- 
tion from Iowa. 
+ Gymnociapus prorca (L.) Koch. Kentucky Coffee Tree. Hill- 
side at Norwalk where no parent tree exists at present (Eames). 
Introduced from the central United States. 
t TRIFOLIUM DUBIUM Sibth. Rare. Three stations, one abundant, 
