238 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 
BELAMCANDA, Adans. 
Blackberry Lily. 
B. Cutnensis (L.), Red. (Pardanthus Chinensis, Ker.) 
Escaped from gardens. Monmouth: Along Crosswicks Creek: 
near Walnford—Lockwood. Mercer: Princeton—Peters. Som- 
erset: Along the canal at Rocky Hill—Lighthipe; Peapack— 
Apgar. Morris: Near Morristown—Miss R. C. Perry. War- 
ren: Bridgeville—Miss M. E. Campbell.. Sussex: Woodruff’s 
Gap and Franklin Furnace—Britton. Passaic: Preakness— 
W. 1. Fischer. Adventive from Asia. 
SISYRINCHIUM, L. 
Blue-eyed Grass. 
8S. angustifolium, Mill. (S. Bermudiana, Gray, not L.) 
In fields. Common throughout the State; most abundant near 
the coast. 
Forma albiflorum (Raf.), Britt. 
Ocean: ‘Point Pleasant—E. H. Day. Monmouth: Freehold 
—Lockwood. 
8. mucronatum, Michx. 
Sussex: High Point—Britton. Hunterdon: Frequent— 
Best. Perhaps more common than is now apparent. I am not 
fully satisfied that we have more than one species. 
AMARYLLIDEZ.* 
HYPOXYS, L. 
Star-grass. Yellow-syed Grass. 
In dry woods and fields. Common throughout the State. 
DIOSCOREACEZE. 
DIOSCOREA, L. 
Yam-root. 
D. villosa, L. 
Damp thickets. Frequent throughout the State. 
*Narcissus pseudo-narcissus, the Daffodil, has maintained itself for several yeara in 
the meadows below Trenton.—A bbott. 
