108 



different names, but in other cases the specimens upon which 

 the records were based are either inconclusive or unavailable. 



1. C. alpestris (reported as C. rangiferina var. alpestris); 



2. C. cariosa (see C. mitrula f. imbricatula) ; 



3. C. cornucopioides (see C. pleurota); 



4. C. cornuta; 



5. C. degenerans (see C. pityrea); 



6. C. gracilis (see C. verticillata f. evoluta) ; 



7. C. leporina; 



8. C. lepidota (see C. piedmontensis) ; 



9. C. symphicarpa (see C. subcariosa f. evoluta) ; 

 10. C turgida (see C. apodocarpa). 



Such species as C alpestris, C. cariosa, C. cornuta, C. degene- 

 rans, C. gracilis, C. lepidota, and C. turgida are predominantly 

 northern in their distribution and would hardly be expected in 

 New Jersey, although one or two of them have been found in 

 the higher Alleghanies. Such a species as C. leporina, on the other 

 hand, which has a southern range, might well be expected. 



Literature cited 



1. Blake, S. F. Cladonia floridana in New Jersey. Rhodora 

 31: 56. 1929. 



2. Britton, N. L. A preliminary catalogue of the flora of 

 New Jersey. Geological Survey of New Jersey, xi, 233. New 

 Brunswick, 1881. 



3. . Catalogue of plants found in New Jersey. Final 



Rept. State Geologist 2: 27-649. 1889. 



4. Evans, A. W. The Cladoniae of Connecticut. Trans. Con- 

 necticut Acad. 30: 357-510. 1930. 



5. . Notes on the Cladoniae of Connecticut. Rhodora 



34: 121-142, 153-164. 1932. 



6. . Notes on the Cladoniae of Connecticut. II. Rhod- 

 ora 37: 33-57. 1935. 



7. Fink, B. Further notes on Cladonias. — IV. Bryologist 7: 

 85-88. pi. 11. 1904. 



8. Lutz, H. J. Ecological relations in the Pitch Pine Plains 

 of Southern New Jersey. Yale University, School of Forestry, 

 Bull. 38. ix, 80, 18 figs. New Haven, 1934. 



