CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 83 
ROBINIA, L. 
Locust. 
R. Pseupacacia, L.’ Common Locust. 
Extensively planted and escaped from cultivation. Natural- 
ized from the West.* 
R. viscosa, Vent. Clammy Locust. 
Escaped from cultivation. Hunterdon: Sparingly—Best. 
Morris: Chatham—Leggett ; near Dover—Britton ; Mt. Free- 
dom and Madison—Schuh. Essex: Franklin—Rusby ; Belle- 
ville—Schuh. Somerset: Black Swamp—Tweedy. Mercer: 
Princeton—Willis. Ocean: Toms River—Britton. Salem: 
About Salem—Mrs. M. A. Lawrence. Adventive or natural- 
ized from the Southwest. 
R. uisprpa, L. Rose Acacia. 
Atlantic: Mays Landing, and between Elwood and Pleasant 
Mills, naturalized. in woods and along roadsides—Peters. 
Adventive from the southern mountains. 
CORONILLA, L. 
Coronilla. 
Cc. varia, L. 
Sparingly escaped from cultivation. Essex: Bloomfield— 
Rusby. Union: Plainfield—Tweedy. Somerset: Somerville— 
Apgar. Hunterdon: Lambertville—Apgar. Hudson—Gut- 
tenburg—Wilbur; in ballast, Communipaw—Rudkin. Cam- 
den: In ballast—Martindale. Ocean: Near Waretown—ZJ. 
Stokes. Naturalized from Europe. 
ABSCHYNOMENSH, L. 
Sensitive Joint Vetch. 
Al. Virginica (L.), B.S. P. (4. hispida, Willd.) 
Camden: “Banks of the Delaware, below Kaighn’s Ferry, 
very rare”—Barton. Gloucester: Near Bridgeport—Wra. 
Trimble, 1882. Salem: Tidal muddy banks of the Delaware 
—Commons, 1882. 
*Dr. C. C. Abbott thinks that some of the large, ‘old trees below Trenton could not 
have been brought from any great distance. 
