No. 14.] FLOWERING PLANTS AND FERNS. lOQ 



Carex rostrata Stokes (beaked). 



Carex utriculata Boott, var. minor Boott. 



Swamps and wet meadows or in shallow water. Rare 

 over most of the state: Waterford (Graves), Plainville, Wood- 

 bridge and Oxford (Harger), Monroe (Eames). Occasional 

 in Litchfield County (Bissell). June — July. 

 Carex rostrata Stokes, var. utriculata (Boott) Bailey (bottle- 

 like). 

 Carex utriculata Boott. 



Peat bogs and wet meadows. Rare in most districts : 

 Stratford (Eames), New Haven and Monroe (Harger), East 

 Granby and Putnam (Weatherby), Glastonbury and Thomp- 

 son (Bissell). Occasional in New London County (Graves). 

 June — July. 

 Carex bullata Schk. (having bubbles or blisters). 

 Carex bullata Schk., var. Olneyi Bailey. 



Rare. Voluntown, in Great Cedar Swamp (Graves). June^ 

 -July. 

 Carex bullata Schk., var. Greenii (Boeckl.) Fernald. 

 Carex bullata of Manuals. 



Local. In swamps : Voluntown, Stonington and Colchester 

 (Graves), Columbia (Weatherby), Ellington (F. N. Pease). 

 June —July. 



Carex Tuckermani Dewey. 



Rare or local. Moist alluvial soil on banks of rivers and 

 coves: Windsor (A. W. Driggs), Hartford (C. Wright), 

 Southington (Andrews, Bissell), Southbury (Harger), Tor- 

 rington and Salisbury (Bissell), Canaan (J. W. Robbins, 

 1828). June — July. 



ARACEAE. ARUM FAMILY. 



ARISAEMA Martius. Dragon Arum. Indian Turnip. 



Arisaema triphyllum (L.) Schott (three-leaved). 

 Arisaema triphyllum Schott, var. pusillum Peck. 

 Arisaema pusillum Nash. 

 Jack-in-the-Pulpit. Indian or Wild Turnip. 



Common. Rich or moist woods. Late April — May ; fruit 

 late Aug. — Nov. 



