656 REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 



Middle District. — Pemberton (KB), Camden, Laurel Springs (KB), 

 Westville (KB), Delaiico (S), Medford (S), Swedesboro (CDL), Woods- 

 town (KB). 



Pine Barrens. — Toms River (P), Whitings (S), Barnegat, New Ger- 

 many (KB), Hammonton (KB), Weymouth, Egg Harbor City (NB), Mays 

 Landing (KB), Tuckahoe (S). 



Family POLEMONIACE^. Phloxes. 

 Key to the Species. 



a. Corolla salver-form, leaves opposite, entire, flowers pink. 



b. Leaves subulate, stems creeping. Phlox subulafa, p. 657 



bb. Leaves flat. 



c. Stems glabrous or nearly so, spotted with purple. 



P. macnlata, p. 656 

 cc. Stems soft, downy. P. pilosa, p. 656 



aa. Corolla tubular, bright scarlet. [Gilia rubra L.]* 



aaa. Corolla open, bell-shaped, blue ; leaves pinnate. 



Polemonium rcptans, p. 657 



PHLOX L. 



Phlox maculata L. Spotted-stemmed Phlox. 



PL LIV, Fig. I. 



Phlox maculata Linnaeus, Sp. PL 152. 1753 [Virginia]. — Barton, Fl. Phila. L 

 107. 1818. — Britton 174. 



Moist open ground; frequent or occasional in the Middle and 

 Cape May districts and up the Delaware to Hunterdon County. 

 Fl. — Mid-May to late June. 



Middle District. — New Egypt, Bordentown (C), Burlington, Birmingham 

 (C), Vincentown (C), Griffith's Swamp, Linden wold, Medford (S), Mickle- 

 ton, Sewell (S), Swedesboro, Salem (C). 



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



Phlox pilosa L. Downy Phlox. 



Phlox pilosa Linnaeus, Sp. PL 152. 1753 [Virginia]. — Knieskern 24. — 

 Willis 47. — Britton 174. — Keller and Brown 266. 



Open sandy ground; mainly in the northern counties and at 

 several stations in the Middle district ; always local. 



Middle District. — Burlington, Moorestown (C), Woodbury (C), "Ocean 

 Co." (Kn). 



* Scarlet Gilia, escaped from cultivation about Manumuskin, its gorgeous 

 scarlet spikes standing out brilliantly against the green of the pines. 



