No. 14.] FLOWERING PLANTS AND FERNS. lOQ 



Carex rostrata Stokes (beaked). 



Carex utriculata Boott, var. minor Boott. 



Swamps and wet meadows or in shallow water. Rare 

 over most of the state : Water ford (Graves), Plainville, Wood- 

 bridge and Oxford (Harger), Monroe (Eames). Occasional 

 in Litchfield County (Bissell). June — July. 

 Carex rostrata Stokes, var. utriculata (Boott) Bailey (bottle- 

 like). 

 Carex utriculata Boott. 



Peat bogs and wet meadows. Rare in most districts : 

 Stratford (Eames), New Haven and Monroe (Harger), East 

 Granby and Putnam (Weatherby), Glastonbury and Thomp- 

 son (Bissell). Occasional in New London County (Graves). 

 June —July. 

 Carex buUata Schk. (having bubbles or blisters). 

 Carex bullata Schk., var. Olneyi Bailey. 



Rare. Voluntown, in Great Cedar Swamp (Graves). June 

 -July. 

 Carex bullata Schk., var. Greenii (Boeckl.) Fernald. 

 Carex bullata of Manuals. 



Local. In swamps : Voluntown, Stonington and Colchester 

 (Graves), Columbia (Weatherby), Ellington (F. N. Pease). 

 June — ^July. 



Carex Tuckermani Dewey. 



Rare or local. Moist alluvial soil on banks of rivers and 



coves: Windsor (A. W. Driggs), Hartford (C. Wright), 



Southington (Andrews, Bissell), Southbury (Harger), Tor- 



' rington and Salisbury (Bissell), Canaan (J. W. Robbins, 



1828). June — July. 



ARACEAE. ARUM FAMILY. 



ARISAEMA Martius. Dragon Arum. Indian Turnip. 



Arisaema triphyllum (L.) Schott (three-leaved). 

 Arisaema triphyllum Schott, var. pusillum Peck. 

 Arisaema pusillum Nash. 

 Jack-in-the-Pulpit. Indian or Wild Turnip. 



Common. Rich or moist woods. Late April — May ; fruit 

 late Aug. — Nov. 



