314 Ivl'.roRT ()]' Xl-:\\ JI'.KSl""/^ STATI-: Ml'SEUM. 



b. Spatlie fuiiiicl-likc, open down the side, clear of the spadix all 

 around, tup forming a flap which usually hangs over the tip of 

 the spadix. Leaves three-parted. 

 (•. Top of spathe always drooping over, inside green or dark 

 purplish or striped. Leaves glaucous beneath. 



.Irisacma tripliyllum, p. 314 



IT. Top of spathe often erect, always uniform, dark ])urple within. 



Leaves not glaucous beneath. Averages nnich smaller than 



the preceding. A. pusUlum, p. 314 



bh. Spadix long attenuate, reaching far beyond the tip of the spathe 



which is narrow and closely wrapped about it. Leaves 5-15 



parted. A. dracontium, p. 315 



ARIS>€:iV1A Martens. 



Arissema triphyllum (L.).* Jack-in-the-Pulpit. 



XXXIX., Fig. 2. 



Arum triphyllniit Linnaeus, Sp. PI. 965. 1753 [Virginia]. 

 Arisccma triphylluui Knieskern 29. — Willis 58. — Britton 252. 



Common in (lam]> woods in the .\ortliern and Middle districts, 

 and locally in the Cape May peninsula. 



The familiar Jack-in-the-Pulpit is one of those plants that 

 disappears as soon as we enter the Pine Barrens. In northern 

 and western Jersey we find it in damp woods associated with the 

 Skunk Cabbage. Dog-toothed Violet, Spring Beauty and May 

 ,\pple. liut in the swamps of the Pine region not one of the 

 group is to be found. 



Fl. — ^Late April to mid-May. 



Middle District. — Farmingdale, New Egypt, Bordentown. Kinkora, Delanco, 

 Pemberton, Delair, Camden (S), Gloucester (P), Springdale (S), Medford, 

 Washington Park, Woodbury, Sewell (S), Pensauken, Salem (C). 



Cape May.— Cold Spring (S), Cape May. 



Arisaema pusillum Peck. Dwarf Jack-in-the-Pulpit. 



Arisccnw pusillum Peck, Rep. N. Y. State Museum, 51. 2^)7. [Alillbrook, 

 Dutchess Co., N. Y.]. — Stone, Torreya, 1903. 171. — Keller and Brown 89. 



This little ''Jack'' occurs with the preceding, blooming a couple 

 of weeks later. It is easily distinguished Ijy its smaller size, 

 more erect "flap" to the spathe, which is always deep purplish 

 inside, and by the shiny green (not glaucous) under surface to 

 the leaves. It was first noted in our district by Mr. Stewardson 

 Brown at Clementon. 



Fl. — Early ^lay to late June. 



