CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 265 
S. fluviatilis (Torr.), Gray. River Club-rush. 
Camden: Swampy borders of the Delaware—Parker. Salem: 
In similar situations—Commons. 
S$. sylvaticus, L. 
In swamps. Bergen: Closter—Austin. Sussex: Montague 
township— Britton. Hunterdon: Along the Delaware near 
Stockton—Best ; Lambertville—Apgar. 
S. atrovirens, Muhl. 
In wet meadows. Monmouth: Freehold—Britton. Hudson: 
Bergen Point, and common on the Newark marshes—Leggett. 
“Gloucester: Near Wolferth’s Station—B. Heritage; and com- 
mon in the northern counties. 
S. polyphyllus, Vahl. 
In wet places. Bergen: Closter—Austin. Hunterdon: 
Rosemont—Best ; Lambertville—Apgar. Morris: Cranetown, 
along roadside—Britton. Evidently uncommon. 
S. lineatus, Michx. 
Bergen: Closter—Austin. Hudson: Bergen Point—Leg- 
gett. Apparently very rare in the State. 
BRIOPHORUM, L. 
Cotton-grass. 
EH. cyperinum, L. (Scirpus Eriophorum, Michx.) Wool-grass. 
In swamps. Common throughout the State. 
Var. laxum (Gray), B.S. P. 
Hudson: Bergen Point—Leggett. Hunterdon: Frequent 
—Best. 
E. Virginicum, L. 
Swamps. Frequent in most sections of the State; very 
abundant in the pine barrens. 
BE. polystachyon, L. 
In bogs. Monmouth and Ocean: Not common—Knieskern. 
Morris: Budd’s Lake—Porter; Near Nolan’s Point, Lake 
Hopatcong — Britton. Bergen: Closter— Austin. Sussex: 
Ogdensburg—Britton. 
