CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 41 



Lanning; Somerset: Rocky Hill Lighthipe. Middlesex: 

 Chesquakes Creek R. W. Brown ; New Brunswick Lock- 

 wood ; and frequent in woods in the middle counties, apparently 

 less common in the northern parts of the State. 



MAGNOLIACE.E. 



MAGNOLIA, L. 



Magnolia. 



M. glauca, L. Sweet Bay. Laurel Magnolia. 



Bergen : Woodridge Schuh. Hudson : New Durham 

 Austin. Essex: Short Hills W. M. Wolfe. Middlesex: 

 Near New Brooklyn Tweedy ; Woodbridge Lighthipe ; Me- 

 tuchen Miss L. N. Estabrook ; and common in swamps in the 

 southern parts of that county, as in Monmouth ; and in all the 

 southern counties. 



LIRIODBNDRON, L. 



Tulip Tree. 



L. Tulipifera, L. Tulip Tree. Whitewood. White Poplar. Yellow 

 Poplar. 



Common in woods throughout the State. Our largest forest 

 tree. 



ANONACEJE. 



ASIMINA, Adans. 

 North American Papaw. 



-A. triloba (L.), Dunal. Common Papaw.* 



Mercer : Abundant along Crosswicks Creek C. C. Abbott. 

 Hunterdon : Ridge's Island, Delaware River Best. Atlantic: 

 Thompson town, near Mays Landing F. L. Bassett ; these 

 points mark its most northeastern natural habitat. 



*The plant from Bridgeton, noted in the Preliminary Catalogue as the papaw on 

 the authority of Mr. Martindale, proves to be Chionanthus Virginica, the determi- 

 aiation being first from leaf specimens only. 



