é 
XEROPHILE AND MESOPHILE HERBACEOUS VEGETATION. 73 
the former, many ferns peculiar to the mountain region take root in 
the chinks of the bare rocks. Such are: 
Cheilanthes tomentose. Asplenium montanum. 
Cheilanthes lanosa. Asplenium ruta-muraria, 
Cheilanthes alabamensis. Asplenium pinnatifidumn. 
Pellaea atropurpurea. 
In similar situations are found the following flowering plants: 
Silene rotundifolia, Arenaria stricta, 
Silene caroliniana. Lacinaria graminifolia, 
Savifraga rirginica, Senecio obovratus. 
Other species of ferns on the border line of xerophile and meso- 
phile associations prefer the more sheltered rocky ledges, as: 
Asplenium parvuluin. Dicksonia punctilobula. 
Woodsia obtusa. Camptosorus rhizophyllus. 
Polypodium vulgare. Cystopteris fragilis. 
Carex picta (C. boottiana) covers in dense tufts the rocky shelves on 
the banks of the head waters of the eastern Sipsey fork, in Winston 
County, where this pretty and rare plant was collected by the late 
Judge T. M. Peters. 
Associated with Carex picta are C. nigro-marginata, C. virescens, 
and (. digitalis, Tipularia unifolia (of a widely disrupted distri- 
bution from the Gulf coast to Lake Huron in the Alleghenian area), 
and the northern Peranium (Goodyera) repens. Therafon (Boykrnia) 
aconitifolium inhabits the bare rocks forming the brink of streams, 
and Diamorpha pusilla is found in similar localities—both extend- 
ing hither from the lower mountains of South Carolina and 
Georgia. Heuchera americana grows in more open, and /7. rugeli?, 
Viola multicaulis, and Iepatica hepatica in deeply shaded situations; 
and where the rocky walls are constantly kept moist by the dripping 
water, Thalictrum clavatum, Viola rostrata, V. blanda, and V. striata 
are found. 
In the open woods of a light dry soil where. pines are mingled with 
the hardwood trees, and in the openings of old fields and pastures, 
where the progeny of the pine is apt to take possession of the ground, 
there are present numerous xerophile species, which are character- 
istic of the mountain region in general. Of these, the following glu- 
maceous plants (grasses and sedges—Poaceae and Cyperaceae) are 
scantily diffused throughout woods and fields having a thin thirsty soil: 
Erianthus alopecuroides. Eragrostis pectinacea. | 
Andropogon scoparius. | Poa chapmaniana. ' 
Andropogon furcatus, | Curex laxiflora. * 
Chrysopogon avenaceus. | Carex laxiflora varians. 
Sieglingia seslerioides. | Carex cephalophora. 
Melica mutica. * Carex leavenworthii. 
1QOceurs also in the Louisianian area. 
