4o8 REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 



Pine Barrens.— Toms River (NB), Waretown, E. and W. Plains (S), 

 Speedwell (S), Applepie Hill (S), Wliite Horse (S), Bear Swamp (S), 

 Pleasant Mills. 



Coast Strip.— Seaside Park (S), Barnegat City (L). 



Cape May.— Cape. May (S), Bennett. 



Quercus phellos L. Willow Oak. 



Quercus Phellos Linnseus, Sp. PI. 994- I7S3 [North America] .—Michaux 

 Fl. Bor. Am. II. 197. 1803.— Pursh Fl. Am. Sept. II. 625. 1814.— 

 Barton Fl. Phila. II. 167. 1818.— Knieskern 28.— Willis 55.— Britten 

 223. 



Quercus phellos var. humilis Pursh Fl. Am. Sept. II. 625. 1814. — Britton 223. 



Low woods of the Middle, Coast and Cape May districts, from 

 Mercer and Middlesex counties southward, common. 



A typical tree of the coastal plain crossing the Delaware into 

 Pennsylvania, but never passing west of the fall line, and push- 

 ing up the Delaware only a very short distance above Trenton. 



There is a broader-leaved Willow Oak ranging from Salem 

 to western Cape May County, which is perhaps referable to Q. 

 p. laurifolia, although the leaves on some trees at least show a 

 slight tendency to lobing, such as we find in certain hybrids (cf. 

 p. 411). 



Fl. — Early May to mid-May, when the leaves are expanding. 



Fr. — Autumn of the second season. 



Middle District:— Keyport (NB), Farmingdale, Allaire, Belmar (UP), 

 Long Branch (C), Pt. Pleasant (S), New Egypt, Arney's Mt. (S), Birming- 

 ham, Medford, Bridgeport, Oaklyn (S), W. Deptford, Lawnside (S), Sick- 

 lerville (S), Glassboro, Yorktown, Salem (S), Beaver Dam (S), Dividing 

 Creek, Millville. 



Pine Barrens. — Landisville (T), introduced ? 



Coast Strip.— Seaside Park (S), Peermont (S), Anglesea, West Creek (S). 



Cape May. — Bennett, Court House. 



Quercus alba L. White Oak.''' 



Quercus alba Unnaeus Sp. PI. 996. 1753 [Virginia] .—Knieskern 28.— Britton 

 222. 



Common in woodlands throughout the State, except in the 

 Pine Barrens, where it is local and largely in second growth. 



A good deal of variation in leaf form occurs, some trees having 

 exceedingly deep cut lobes, while in others they are very shallow. 



* The record of Q. macrocarpa from Ventnor (Githens) in Keller and 

 Brown's Hst is apparently based on Q. stellata; that from Quaker Bridge in 

 Britton's Preliminary Catalogue was canceled in his later work. 



