PLANTS OF SOUTHERN NEW JERSEY. 691 



Shallow sandy ponds in the Pine Barrens ; common. 

 Fl. — Late May into September. 



Middle District.— Zlmer (C). 



Pine Barrens. — Upper Squankum (Willis), Manchester (C), Lakehurst, 

 Toms River, Whitings, Brindletown, Brown's Mills (C), Double Trouble, 

 Dover Forge, Forked River, Barnegat (KB), Tuckerton, Speedwell (S), 

 High Bridge (S), Bear Swamp, Clementon, Tomlinson's, Jackson, Atco, 

 Cedar jBrook, Franklinville (C), Malaga (C), Landisville, Inslip, Hammon- 

 ton, Atsion (C), Pomona (KB), Quaker Bridge, Egg Harbor City (KB), 

 Pancoast, Mays Landing. 



Utricularia subulata L. Zig-zag Bladderwort. 

 PI. CXHL, Fig. 3. 



Utricularia subulata Linnaeus, Sp. PI. i8. 1753 [Virginia]. — Knieskern 22.— 



Britton 192. — Keller and Brown 294. 



tUtricularia minor Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept. L 15. 1814. — Barton, Fl. Phila. L 



II. 1818. 



Shallow sandy ponds or wet sand; common in the Pine Barrens 

 and Cape May peninsula, locally on the coast islands and very 

 rare in the Middle district. 



Fl. — Late May into September. 



Middle District. — Woodbury. 



Pine Barrens. — Island Hts., Toms River (S), Whitings, Brown's Mills 

 (KB), Hanover (KB), Manchester (P), Bamber, Forked River, Waretown, 

 Chatsworth, Speedwell (S), Parkdale (S), Blue Anchor, Bear Swamp; Taun- 

 ton, Clementon, Sumner, Atco (KB), Hammonton (KB), Atsion, Quaker 

 Bridge, Pleasant Mills, Egg Harbor City, Mays Landing, Pancoast, Absecon. 



Coast Strip. — Spray Beach (L), Beach Haven (L). 



Cape Ma/y.— Cape May (S). 



Utricularia cleistogama L. Pin-like Bladderwort. 



PI. CXHL, Fig. 4- 



Utricularia subulata var. cleistogama A. Gray, Syn. Fl. H. Pt. i. 317. 1878 



[Pine Barrens of New Jersey]. 

 Utricularia cleistogama Britton 192. — Keller and Brown 294. 



Wet sand in the Pine Barrens and occasionally on the coast 

 and Cape May peninsula; locally frequent. 



Discovered September, 1866, in the New Jersey Pine Barrens 

 by Mr. J. A. Paine, Jr. 



This little plant is probably the smallest terrestrial species of 

 our district, consisting of a filiform stem, often not more than 

 an inch in height, with one or two supposedly cleistogamous 



