CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 
135 
Yo 6 U. gibba, L. 
- Pond shores; rare. Breakneck Ponds (F. M. Day); — Somes 
Pond (Band). A form from mud flats, Somes Pond (Rand), 
closely appr,caches U. biflora, Lam., and may perhaps prove to 
be that species. “The flower has the spurs of U. biflora very 
decidedly, but the foliage and the bladders are those of U. gibba. 
The spur here is oblong, narrow, not curved hut projecting 
straightwise, and the perianth is somewhat larger than is gen¬ 
erally the case in U. gibba. Other specimens with foliage and 
bladders better represented might show this to be JJ. biflora, 
hut at present it is safer to call it ‘ U. gibba verging towards 
U. biflora in flowers.’ ” Dr. Thomas Morong in litt. 
Y0 U. intermedia, Hayne. 
Bogs and streams;,common. Usually sterile; but in flower, * 
Breakneck Ponds (R. & R., E. Faxon). 
U. purpurea, Walt. Large Purple Bladderwort. 
Ponds; infrequent. Seal Gove Pond (R. & R.);—Aunt 
Bet^s Pond (Rand). 
U. resupinata, B. D. Greene. Small Purple Bladderwort. 
Pond shores; rare. Breakneck Ponds (F. M. Day); — Rip¬ 
ples Pond (M. L. Fernald). 
® U. cornuta, Mx. Long-spurred Bladderwort. 
Very common on pond shores, in marshes, and sphagnum 
bogs. 
LABIAT.3E. Mint Family. 
TEUCRIUM, L. Germander. 
T. Canadense, L. American Germander. Wood Sage. 
Infrequent on banks and in low ground by the shore, at the 
head of sea beaches. Long Pond (William L. Worcester); — 
Duck Cove (Rand) ; — Seal Harbor (Redfield) ; — Southwest 
Harbor (Annie S. Downs) ; — Otter Creek (R. & R.). 
