CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 179 
CONVOLVULACE. 
IPOMGA, L. 
Morning Glory. 
I. coccinga, L. (Quamoelit coccinea, Mcench.) Scarlet Morning Glory. 
In waste places. Camden: In river dredgings and on ballast 
—Parker. Burlington: Occasional along roadsides near Moores- 
town—J. Stokes. Hudson: In ballast at Communipaw—A. 
Brown. Mercer: Trenton—Apgar. Adventive from the South. 
I. purpurea (L.), Lam. Common Morning Glory. 
In waste places. Escaped from cultivation. Frequent. 
Fugitive from Tropical America. 
I. Ni (L.), Pursh. 
In waste places. Essex: Bank of Passaic River near Belle- 
ville—Britton. Monmouth: Near Union—R. W. Brown. 
Camden: In ballast—Parker. Gloucester: One mile south of 
Swedesboro—B. Heritage. Adventive from the South. 
I. tacunosa, L. 
Monmouth: Abundant in a field at Cliffwood, 1888—Britton. 
Fugitive from the South. 
I, pandurata (L.), Meyer. Wild Potato-Vine. Man-of-the-Earth. 
In sandy soil. Sussex: Swartswood—Rudkin. Warren: 
Blairstown—Rusby; Belvidere and Delaware Water Gap, and 
along the Pequest near Butzville—Britton. Bergen: Closter 
—Austin; Rutherfurd—Schuh. Morris: Summit and New 
Providence—Leggett. Hunterdon: Frequent towards the Dela- 
ware—Best ; and frequent in the middle and southern counties. 
The great root sometimes weighs over thirty pounds. 
CONVOLVULUOUS, L. 
Bindweed. 
C. aRVENSIS, L. Bindweed. 
In cultivated fields and waste places. Frequent or occasional. 
Adventive from Europe. 
C. sepium, L. (Cualystegia sepium, R. Br.) Hedge Bindweed. 
Low grounds along streams, and along fences and hedges. 
Common throughout the State. 
