PLANTS OF SOUTHERN NEW JERSEY. 293 



should take the name greeni, as argued by Prof. Femald,* and 

 prefer tO' hold to the familiar name for the present. 

 Pr. — Mid-Jime into September. 



Middle District. — Lindenwold (S), Lawnside (S), Mickleton (H), Re- 

 paupo, Yorktown. 



Pine Barrens. — Farmingdale, Allaire, Asbury Park, Lakehurst, Toms River, 

 Browns Mills, Speedwell, Sumner, Cedar Brook, Penbryn (S), lona (S), 

 Andrews, Folsom, Pancoast, Egg Harbor City, Tuckahoe (S). 



Carex lurida Wahl. Sallow Sedge. 



PI. XXIIL, Fig. I. 



C[arex] lurida Wahlenberg, Kongl. Acad. Handl. (II.) 24. 153. 1803 



[North America]. — Britton 270. 

 Carex tentaculata Knieskern 37. — Willis 71. 



Common in swamps throughout the State except in the Pine 

 Berrens, where it is rare and for the most part close to the border. 

 Fr. — Mid-June to late July. 



Middle District. — Seabright, Farmingdale, New Egypt, Riverside, Browns 

 Mills, Haddonfield (S), Sharpstown, Swedesboro. 



Pine Barrens. — Allaire (S), Forked River, Winslow (S), Albion, Pen- 

 bryn (S), Landisville, Hammonton, Egg Harbor City. 



Coast Strip. — Piermont. 



Cape May. — Cape May, Cold Spring. 



Carex hysteric! na Muhl. Porcupine Sedge. 



Carex hystericina "Muhl," Willdenow Sp. PI. IV. 282. 1805 [Pennsylvania]. 

 Carex hystricina Knieskern 37. — Willis 71. — Britton 270. 



Swampy ground in the Northern and Middle districts ; appar- 

 ently not commlon within our limits. 

 Fr. — Late May to late June. 



Middle District. — New Egypt, five mi. S. of Mickleton, Lindenwold (S). 



Carex comosa Boott. Bottle-brush Sedge. 



PL XXIIL, Fig. 2. 



Carex comosa Boott, Trans. Linn. Soc XX. 117. 1846 [Boston, Mass.] 

 Carex Pseudo-cyperus Britton 270. 



Frequent in swamps of the Northern and Middle districts and 

 Coastal Strip. Not reported from the Pines. 



Fr. — Early June to mid-July, and more rarely through the 

 summer. 



♦Rhodora 1906, p. 202. 



