PLANiTS OF SOUTHERN, NEW JERSEY. 331 



Juncus tenuis Willd. Slender Rush. 



PI. XXXI., Pig. I. 



Juncus tenuis Willdenow, Sp. PI. II. 214. 1799 [North America]. — Willis 

 66. — Britton 250. 



Plentiful throughout, usually in low shady ground, except in 

 the Pine Barrens, where it apparently does not occur except 

 rarely as a weed. 



Pull-grown Capsules. — Mid-May to mid-July. 



Middle District.— AWsirc (NY), Farmingdale (NY), Ortley (NY), Lawn- 

 side (S), Albion, Yorktown (S). 

 Pine Barrens. — Landisville (T). 



Coast Strip. — Manahawkin, Spray Beach (L), West Creek, Palermo (S). 

 Cape A/ay.— Bennett (S). 



Juncus greenei Oakes and Ttickerm. Greene's Rush. 



Juncus Greenei Oakes and Tuckerman, Amer. Jour. Sci. 45. 37. 1843 

 [Tewkesbury, Mass.]. 



Reported from Middlesex and Sussex Counties in Britton's 



Catalogue, and collected at New Egypt by Mr. Norman Taylor, 



August 23, 1 9 10. 



Middlesex District.— 'New Egypt (NY). 



Juncus dichotomus Ell.* Forked Rush. 



Pi. XXXI., Fig. 7- 



Juncus dichotomus Elliott, Bot. S. C. and Ga. I. 406. 1817 [prob. S. C] 

 Willis 66.— Britton 250.— Keller and Brown 95. 



Plentiful throughout our range in moist sandy ground, not 

 reported from the northern counties. 

 ■Full-grown Capsules. — Late June to late July. 



Middle District.— Tarmingdale, Timber Creek (KB), Haddonfield (P), 

 Medford (S), Lindenwold, Sicklerville (S), Swedesboro, Yorktown (S), 

 Elmer (P). 



Pine Barrens.— Toms River (NY), Forked River, Speedwell, Chatsworth 

 (S), Atsion, Quaker Bridge, Landisville, Spring Garden (P), Dennisville 

 (P). 



* Juncus secundus "Beauv."' (Poiret Encycl. Sup. III. 160. 1813), is reported 

 from one station in Warren Co., and given in Britton's Catalogue on author- 

 ity of C. F. Parker as occurring in Gloucester Co. Parker's specimen is 

 preserved in his herbarium at Princeton and is labeled "/. tenuis approaching 

 secundus," which seems to be a very proper disposal of it. 



