192 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 
U. fibrosa, Walt. (U. striata, Le Conte.) 
U 
U 
U 
U 
Uz 
In swamps on the Yellow Drift. Gloucester: Malaga and 
Franklinville— Parker. Atlantic: Hammonton—J. Stokes ; 
Mays Landing—Peters; Egg Harbor City—Redfield. Cam- 
den :— Martindale. Salem: Elmer—Parker. Burlington: 
Quaker Bridge—Leggett; Brown’s Mills—J. Stokes; Atsion 
meadows—H. A. Green. Ocean: Manchester— Chickering. 
Monmouth: Upper Squankum— Willis. 
gibba, L. 
In bogs. Bergen: Closter—Austin; along the Passaic near 
Woodside—Leggett. Monmouth: Freehold —O. E. Pearce ; 
Bay Head—Lighthipe. 
purpurea, Walt. 
In ponds in the pine barrens; frequent. 
cornuta, Michx. 
Sandy borders of swamps in the southern counties. Burling- 
ton: New Lisbon—Lighthipe; and common in the pine barrens. 
subulata, L. 
In wet sand. Gloucester; Near Woodbury—C. E. Smith. 
Burlington: Between New Lisbon and Pemberton—Lighthipe ; 
and frequent in the pine barrens. 
cleistogama (Gray), Britt. (U. subulata, var. cleistogama, Gray.) 
Burlington: Wet ground along Atsion River below Atsion, 
1881—Prof. J. A. Allen. Ocean: Forked River, 1889— 
Britton. Reported also from the pine barrens in Gray’s Manual, 
p- 320, collected by J. A. Paine, Jr. 
BIGNONIACEZ. 
CATALPA, Juss. 
Indian Bean. Catalpa. 
GC. bignonioides, Walt. 
Mercer: Banks of Crosswicks Creek, “where it must be 
native, as it figures in a deed for land bearing date of 1684, as 
Indian Bean Tree, which is certainly before these trees were 
brought from the South for shade and ornamental purposes ”— 
C. C. Abbott. Burlington: Along Rancocas Creek, Pemberton 
