124 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 



L. glauca, Hill. (L. parviflora, Lam.) 



Burlington : In sandy soil near Birmingham Lighthipe. 

 Union: Swamp at Plainfield Tweedy. Essex: Rusby. Hud- 

 son : Secaucus Britton ; and frequent in damp, rocky places 

 in the northern counties.* 



L. ciliata, Muhl. 



Warren : F. Knighton in Willis Catalogue. Not seen by 

 me from the State and not recently collected. 



L. TATARICA, L. Tartarian or Bush Honeysuckle. 



Occasionally escaped from cultivation. Warren : Remote 

 from habitations, on a limestone bluff below Phillipsburg 

 Porter. Passaic: Schuh. Ad ventive from Asia. 



L. JAPONICA, Thunb. Chinese or Japanese Honeysuckle. 



Frequently escaped from planting and remaining persistent 

 for many years. Hudson : Schuyler's Hill Rusby. Cape 

 May : Commons. Cumberland : Very abundant about Bridge- 

 ton Britton; near Taunton Commons. Adventive from 

 Eastern Asia. 



DIERVILLA, Tourn. 



Bush Honeysuckle. 

 D. triflda, Moench. "Specific." 



In rocky woods. Union : Near Plainfield, in one locality 

 Tweedy. Hunterdon : Lambertville Apgar ; Pittstown, fre- 

 quent Henry Race ; Rosemont Best. Somerset : Peapaek 

 and Bernardsville Miss R. C. Perry. Essex : Verona and 

 Montclair Rusby ; and frequent in the northern counties. 



EUBIACE^E. 



CBPHALANTHUS, L. 



Button Bush. 



C. occidentalis, L. 



In swamps. Common throughout the State. 



*The L. grata, Ait., admitted into the Preliminary Catalogue, proves to be this 

 species. The real L. grata is in all probability nothing but L. Caprifolium, L., of 

 Europe, occasionally planted. 



