274 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 
©. conoidea, Schk. 
In low meadows. Bergen: Closter—Austin; Mahwah— 
Britton. Passaic: Paterson— Leggett; Ringwood — Britton. 
Essex: Verona—Rusby. Morris: Budd’s Lake—Porter. Sus- 
sex: Ogdensburg—Britton. Warren:—Porter. Union: Plain- 
field—T weedy. Hunterdon: Frequent—Best. 
C. oligocarpa, Schk. 
Bergen: Closter—Austin. Hunterdon: Frequent—Best. 
C. laxiflora, Lam. (Including var. intermedia, Boott.) 
In low woods. Common throughout the State. 
Var. styloflexa (Buckley), Boott. 
Bergen: Closter—Austin. Hunterdon: Rosemont—Schuh. 
Var. plantaginea (Schk.), Boott. 
In dry woodlands. Union: Plainfield—Tweedy. Essex: 
Verona—Rusby. Morris: Near Boonton—Britton. Hunter- 
don: Common—Best. 
Var. blanda (Dewey), Boott. 
In woods. Apparently common throughout the State. 
Var. latifolia, Boott. 
Bergen: Palisades—Austin. Hunterdon: Frequent—Best. 
Var. varians, Bailey. 
“‘New Hampshire to New Jersey””—Bailey, Mem. Torr. Club, 
i, 32, 
C. laxiculmis, Schwein. (C. retrocurva, Dewey.) 
Hunterdon: Rosemont—Best. Union: Plainfield—Tweedy. 
Bergen: Closter—Austin. 
C. ptychocarpa, Steud. 
Morris: In woods near Lake Hopatcong, 1884—Britton. 
C. digitalis, Willd. 
In woods. Union: Plainfield—Tweedy. Morris: Boonton 
~—Britton. Hunterdon: Holland Station—Garber; common— 
Best. Warren: Marble Hill—Porter. Monmouth: Squan, 
very rare—Knieskern. 
