PLANTS OF SOUTHERN NEW JERSEY. 713 



served no specimen, he does not see how he could have mistaken 

 anything else for it He was visiting- the station for Chionanthiis 

 and found the Diervilla growing- with it. The plant is frequent 

 in the northern counties, but this is our only evidence of its 

 occurrence on the coastal plain. 



Order VALERIANALES 



Family VALERIANACEiE. Valerians. 



Valerianella radiata (L.). Beaked Corn Salad. 



Valeriana Locusta var. radiata Linnaeus, Sp. PI. 34. 1753 [Maryland]. 



Mr. O. H. Brown assures me that this plant is native about 

 Cape May in sandy woods, associated with Myosotis znrginica. 

 It also occurs rarely in the Middle district. 

 PL — Late April tO' early June. 



Middle District. — Washington Park. 

 Cape May. — Cold Spring. 



Order CAIVIPANULALES. 



Family CUCURBITACE^. Gourds, Melons and Cucumbers. 

 Key to the Species. 



a. Leaves 3-7 lobed. 



b. Fruit ovoid, fleshy, densely spiny. Micrampelis, p. 713 



bb. Fruits smaller, spiny, 3-10, together in a pedicelled head. 



Sicyos, p. 714 



MICRAMPELIS Rafinesque. 

 Micrampelis lobata (Mich.). Wild Balsam Apple. 



Sicyos lobata Michx., Fl. Bor. Am. IL 217. 1803 [W. Penna., on the Ohio 



River]. 

 Micrampelis echinata Britton iii. 



Occasional in the Middle district and rarely on the Cape May 

 peninsula, usually near the Delaware. To some extent escaped 

 fromi cultivation, possibly entirely so. 



Fl. — Late July to late September. Fr. — Early September into 

 October. 



Middle District. — New Egypt, Burlington, Four miles south Swedesboro*. - 

 Cape May. — Cape May. 



