171 



Species 



Waldsteinia fragarioides 



(Michx.) Tratt. 

 Agrimonia pumila Muhl. 

 A. Brittoniana Bicknell. 

 A. parviflora Soland. 

 Rosa hlanda Ait. 



R. canina L. 



R. humilis Marsh. 



Specimens wanted from 



Orange, Sullivan and Delaware 



counties, N. Y. 

 Chester Co., Pa. 

 Below 1,000 ft. elevation. 

 Anywhere in the mountains. 

 The south shore of L. I. and 



from N. J. 

 Anywhere in the range. How 



extensively naturalized? 

 See footnote.* 



POMACEAE 



Below 1,000 ft. elevation. 



Is it anywhere an established 

 escape? 



From the Hudson and Dela- 

 ware valleys. 



Anywhere in the range. 



Is the apple an established 

 escape? 



The coastal plain region. 



See footnote. t 



Northern New Jersey and the 

 mountains of Pennsylvania. 



Species from the limestone re- 

 gions of New York and New 

 Jersey. Also from the ser- 

 pentines of Pennsylvania. 



* A form of Rosa humilis obviously not the variety villosa merits attention from 

 local flora enthusiasts. It has very much larger flowers than the typical form, and 

 its petals are extremely fugacious. Specimens have been collected near Farming- 

 dale, N. J., and recently from near Spring Valley, N. Y. Otherwise the plant is 

 unknown, at least in herbaria. 



fA somewhat critical species, said to differ from our common A. arbutifolia 

 in having oval to globose, purple-black fruits rather than short-pyriform, bright 

 red ones. The difficulty of distinguishing such characters in dried specimens is 

 obvious. Material is needed, particularly with accurate notes on color and form 

 of fruit, from anywhere in the range. 



Sorbus americana Marsh. 

 Pyrus communis L. 



Malus coronaria (L.) Mill. 



M. angustifolia (Ait.) Michx. 

 M. Malus (L.) Britton. 



Aronia nigra (Willd.) Britton. 

 A. atropurpurea Britton. 

 Amelanchier sanguinea (Pursh) 



Lindl. {A. rotundifolia) . 

 Crataegi 



