172 REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 



Fl. — Late June to late July. 

 Middle District.— WestviWe (KB), Gloucester (KB), Camden. 



Sagittaria graminea Michx. Grass-leaved Sagittaria. 



Sagittaria graminea Michaux, Fl. Bor. Am. II. 190. 1803 [Canada]. — Smith 

 Ext. fr. 6tli Ann. Rcpt. Mo. Bot. Card. 25. 1894.— Britton 256.— Keller 

 and Brown 25. 



Locally distributed in ponds and boggy spots in northern New 

 Jersey, southward along the Delaware and in Cape May Co, 

 and the Pine Barrens. 



Most specimens of this arrowhead have well defined lanceolate 

 leaf blades, but in wholly submerged plants, or notably those 

 from tidal mud and gravel on the borders of the Delaware River, 

 the leaf blades are partly or entirely absent, being represented by 

 nearly linear '(or the basal ones lanceolate) phyllodia. The 

 specimens from the tidal mud I have never seen fruiting, but the 

 flowers are much reduced and on very short pedicels, sometimes 

 nearly sessile. 



Mr. J. G. Smith records a specimen of Sagittaria teres, "N. 

 J. Pine Barrens, Torrey, 1833,"* but in view of the fact that we 

 have no other evidence of the occurrence of this species in 

 southern New Jersey, it seems at least possible that the specimen 

 referred to may have belonged to S. graminea. 



Fl. — Late May to early Septemiber. Fr. — Late July into 

 September. 



Middle District. — Delanco, Delair, Fish House, Camden. 

 Pine Barrens.— P\tz.s3.ni Mills, Main Road Sta. (T). 

 Cape May. — Bennett. 



Sagittaria subulata (L). Subulate Sagittaria. 



Alisma subulata Linnaeus, Sp. PI. 343- I753 [Virginia]. 



Sagittaria pusilla Willis 60. 



Sagittaria natans Britton 256. 



Sagittaria subulata Keller and Brown 25. 



Muddy or gravelly river shores, northern New^ Jersey and 

 south along the Delaware. 



A low plant with club-shaped phyllodia, growing on the 

 muddy flats along the Delaware, associated with Isoetes, Brio- 



* Ext. Sixth Ann. Rep. Mo. Bot. Card. 28. 1894. 



