CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 
10.3 
E. strictum, Muhl. 
Bogs and wet ground; frequent. Near Sea Wall; High Head; 
Southwest Harbor; Great Cranberry Isle (Band); — Salisbury 
Cove (Clara L. Walley). A form said by Prof. Trelease to be 
“perhaps crossed with E. lineare,” bog, north of Beech Hill 
(Rand). 
E. coloratum, Muhl. 
Apparently rare on the Island. Bog, north of Beech Hill; 
Southwest Harbor (Rand). 
A hybrid, E. ooloratum X E. adenooaulon, roadside, south of 
Bubble Pond (Rand). 
( Z-^ E. adenocaulon, Hausskn. 
Common in low ground. -C.'h.JnZM- ^du id, S, ’k, ^ 
CENOTHERA, L. Evening Primrose. 
^ V-- • T ' 
^ CE. Dienuis, L. Common Evening Primrose. ^ ^ 
» I' - - ^ -Tk O 
Fields, waysides, and sea beaches; common. Variable. A***^, 
very pubescent form with long white hairs, Hadlock farm,-jp. ^ ^ 
near Seal Harbor (Redfiol'^''•— -.‘^oqI TTai-Lr.,. ^801.0 IT'. Ti^n-gs). 
(E. pumila, L. 
Common in dry soil. 
(E. pumila, L. 
Common in dry soil. Often much dwarfed. 
CIRC^, L. Enchanter’s Nightshade. 
C. alpina, L. fjtuufd) ■ , 4(t 
/fpc. alpina, L. 
Common in damp, shady woods. 
CUCURBITACE^. Gourd Family. 
ECHINOCYSTIS, T. & G. Wild Balsam Apple. 
( E. lobata (Mx.), T. & G. 
Extensively cultivated throughout the Island, and often spon-"^^ 
taneous and persistent in waste places and by waysides. Bar 
Harbor; Southwest Harbor, etc. (R. & R.) Adventive from 
the West. ' 
