')— ■> 



REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 



Middle District.— Freehold (NB), Browns Mills (KB), Wolfcrts Sta. (H). 

 Swedesboro. 

 Cape .l/aj*.— Cape May (OHB\ Cape May Pt. (OHB). 



Scirpus lineatus ^lichx. Reddish Bull-rush. 



PI. XX., Fig. lo. 



Scirpus lineatus Michaux, Fl. Bor. Amer. I. 32. 1803 [Carolina]. — Pursh, 

 Fl. Am Sept. I. 56. 1814. — Long, Bartonia II. 19. 1910. 



Open wet ground; rare; Northern, 'Middle and Pine Barren 

 districts. 



Fr. — A.chenes mature and immediately drop with their scales 

 in regular sequence from mid-June to mid-July. 



Middle District. — New Egypt. 

 Pine Barrens. — iWinslow Jnc. 



Scirpus longii Fevnald. Long's Wool-grass. 



PL XX., Fig. II. 



Scirpus Longii Fernald, Rhodora Jan., 1911. 6 [Andrew's, Camden Co., N. J.]. 



Discovered by the writer in a Pine Barren swamp about two 

 miles north of Speedwell July 9. 1909. Local and restricted to 

 the Pine Barrens, usually growing in water and blooming n:tich 

 earlier than the closely allied 5". atrocinctiis in the Pennsylvania 

 Alleghanies. Named for Mr. Bayard Long, who has made a 

 critical study of the Philadelphia flora for several years past and 

 has rendered valuable assistance in the preparation of the present 

 volume. 



Fr. — Achenes mature and soon drop with their scales in regu- 

 lar secjuence from mid-June to mid-July. 



Pine Barrens. — Two miles north of Speedwell, Andrews, Sicklerville, 

 Winslow Jnc. 



Scirpus cyperinus (L.). Wool-grass. 



PI. XX., Fig. 13. 



Eriophormn cyperinum Linnceus, Sp. PI. Ed. II. 77. 1762 [North America]. 



— Britton 265. 

 Scirpus Eriophornni Willis 68. 



Frecjuent in swamps throughout the State, but less abundant 

 than the following within our limits, especially in the Pine Bar- 

 rens and Coast district. 



Fr. — Mid-Julv into October. 



