TAYLor: LOCAL FLORA NOTES 433 
15. Blephariglottis psychodes (L.) Rydb. This has the same 
general range as the preceding, and, so far as the local collections 
show, is restricted in our area to the same region as that species. 
16. Blephariglottis peramoena (A. Gray) Rydb. The only 
specimen is from Chester Co., Pa. It is credited to New Jersey 
in the Manual but specimens are lacking to show its true distri- 
bution in that state. Has it been collected in the Cape May 
region? 
17. Pogonia divaricata (L.) R. Br. The only specimen from 
the range is from Quaker Bridge, N. J. It does not seem credible 
that a species that is supposed to grow throughout southern Jersey 
is so localized as our specimens show. How far north in the pine- 
barren region may the plant be looked for? 
18. Isotria affinis (Austin) Rydb. This plant is described as 
rare and local, and is supposed to grow from Connecticut to 
southern New York, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. Our only 
specimen is from Closter, N. J., its type locality. According to 
‘the Connecticut botanists it is known only from New Haven and 
Stratford in that state. From where is it known in Pennsylvania? 
19. Triphora trianthophora (Sw.) Rydb. With a general dis- 
tribution from Vermont to Florida, our specimens from Palisades, 
New Jersey, and Elm Station, near Philadelphia, are grotesquely 
inadequate, as far as representing the distribution in the area is 
concerned. Any extension of the range will be welcome. 
20. Arethusa bulbosa L. The specimens and all the books 
show that this plant becomes increasingly scarce northwards. 
The lower counties of Pennsylvania and New Jersey are well 
represented. All the counties in the former state above Chester, 
except one station in Wayne, are apparently lacking the plant. 
North of the New Jersey state line, New York is also not represented 
by specimens. The Connecticut botanists say that it is rare or 
local, but not a word as to its state distribution. What is the 
true distribution of this plant above the line of the coastal plain? 
21. Epipactis viridiflora (Hoffm.) Reich. The only station 
for this in the range is the recently discovered one at Plainfield, 
N. J. This is a marked southerly extension of its range, and it 
should be expected in the mountains of Pennsylvania and in the 
Catskills. It is otherwise known from Syracuse and Niagara 
Falls. 
