PLANiTS OF SOUTHERN NEW JERSEY. 331 



Juncus tenuis Willcl. Slender Rush. 



PI. XXXI., Fig. I. 



Juncus tenuis Willdcnow, Sp. PI. II. 214. 1799 [North America].— Willis 

 66. — Britton 250. 



Plentiful throughout, usually in low shady ground, except in 

 the Pine Barrens, where it apparently does not occur except 

 rarely as a weed. 



Fiill-grozvn Capsules. — Mid-May to mid-July. 



Middle District.— AWmtq (NY), Farmingdale (NY), Ortley (NY), Lawn- 

 side (S), Albion, Yorktown (S). 

 Pine Barrens. — Landisville (T). 



Coast Strip. — Manahawkin, Spray Beach (L), West Creek, Palermo (S). 

 Cape if ay.— Bennett (S). 



Juncus greenei Oakes and Ttickerm. Greene's Rush. 



Juncus Greenei Oakes and Tuckerman, Amer. Jour. Sci. 45. 2>7- 1843 

 [Tewkesbury, Mass.]. 



Reported from Middlesex and Sussex Counties in Britton's 



Catalogue, and collected at New Egypt by Mr. Norman Taylor, 



August 23, 1910. 



Middlesex District. — New Egypt (NY). 



Juncus dichotonnus Ell.* Forked Rush. 



PI. XXXI., Fig. 7. 



Juncus dichotomus Elliott, Bot. S. C. and Ga. I. 406. 1817 [prob. S. C] 

 Willis 66. — Britton 250. — Keller and Brown 95. 



Plentiful throughout our range in moist sandy ground, not 

 reported from the northern counties. 



Pull- grown Capsules. — Late June to late July. 



Middle i:'ufr2Vf.— Farmingdale, Timber Creek (KB), Haddonfield (P), 

 Medford (S), Lindenwold, Sicklerville (S), Swedesboro, Yorktown (S), 

 Elmer (P). 



Pine Barrens. — Toms River (NY), Forked River, Speedwell, Chatsworth 

 (S), Atsion, Quaker Bridge, Landisville, Spring Garden (P), Dennisville 

 (P). 



* Juncus secundus "Beauv." (Poiret Encycl. Sup. III. 160. 1813), is reported 

 from one station in Warren Co., and given in Britton's Catalogue on author- 

 ity of C. F. Parker as occurring in Gloucester Co. Parker's specimen is 

 preserved in his herbarium at Princeton and is labeled "/. tenuis approaching 

 secundus," which seems to be a very proper disposal of it. 



