4-22 CONNECTICUT GEOL. AND NAT. HIST. SURVEY. [Bull. 



Rare. Guilford, a few plants in a field (G. H. Bartlett). 

 May — June. Fugitive from Europe. 



Page 202, under Brassica alba, add: Hartford (Bissell). 



Page 242, under Rosa setigera, add : Middlefield (Bissell) . 



Page 242, under Rosa spinosissima, add: Cornwall 

 (Miss :M. J. Whitney). 



Page 292, under Epilohium adenocaulon, add: Monroe 

 (Harger). 



Page 347, after Lycium halimifolium, insert : 

 HYOSCYAMUS L. Henbane. 

 Hyoscyamus niger L. (black). 

 Black Henbane. 



Rare. Middletown, in waste ground (J. Barratt). June — 

 July. Fugitive from Europe. 



The plant is medicinal, the leaves of the second year's 

 growth oflficinal. 



Page 396, after Bidens conwsa, insert: 

 Bidens connata Muhl. (united). 



Rare. Swamps and borders of streams : Lyme (Graves 

 & Bissell), Huntington and Milford (Harger). Aug. — Sept. 



NATIVE PLANTS NOT FOUND IN RECENT YEARS. 



The species named below were found growing in Connecticut 

 by former collectors whose specimens have been preserved, but 

 none of them have been seen within the last twenty years, and 

 most of them have not been found for a much longer period. 

 They are listed here to call special attention to them that it may 

 be ascertained whether they can at present be found growing in 

 the state or not. 



Lycopodium Selago L. 

 Isoetes foveolata A. A. Eaton. 

 Sparganium angustifolium Michx. 



