CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 159 
V. Pennsylvanicum, Lam. Dwarf Blueberry. 
Salem: Elsinboro—Mrs. Lawrence. Gloucester: Common 
about Mickleton—B. Heritage. Camden: Atco, rare—H. A. 
Green. Burlington: Pemberton—Miss Willmarth. Ocean and 
Monmouth: Dry hills and woods, common—Knieskern; and 
frequent or occasional in the middle and northern counties, espe- 
cially abundant on the Kittatinny Mountains.* 
V. vacillans, Soland. Low Blueberry. 
Dry woods. Common throughout the State. 
V. corymbosum, L. Swamp or High-bush Blueberry. 
In swamps. Common throughout the State. With white 
fruit at Mays Landing—Peters. 
Var. amoenum (Ait.), Gray. 
Hudson: New Durham and Secaucus Swamps—Leggett. 
V. disomorphum, Bigel. (V. corymbosum, var. atrococcum, Gray.) 
Bergen: Carlstadt—Britton. Hudson: Abundant at Secau- 
cus— Leggett. Burlington: Burlington— Martindale; Pem- 
berton— Miss Willmarth. Camden:—Parker. Hunterdon: 
Rosemont—Best. Ocean: Forked River and Toms River— 
Britton. 
CHIOGENHS, Salisb. 
Creeping Snowberry. 
C. hispidula (L.), T. & G. 
Hudson: In the cedar swamp at New Durham—Cooper in 
Torrey Catalogue; Austin. Not recently collected, and prob- 
ably extinct at this station. 
ERICACEZ. 
ARCTOSTAPHYLOS, Adans. 
Bearberry. 
A. Uva-ursi (L.), Spreng. “ Uversa.” 
Bergen: Palisades, scaree—Austin. Passaic: Paterson Falls 
—Cooper in Torrey Catalogue; Bearfort Mt., near Uttertown, a 
*YV. Canadense, Kalm, reported in the Preliminary Catalogue from Budd’s Lake on 
the authority of Dr. Porter, is probably correct, but the specimens have been lost, and 
as the plant has turned up nowhere else [ think it best to omit it, and this is Dr. Por- 
ter’s conclusion as well. 
