330 PLANT LIFE OF ALABAMA. 
ALABAMA? Over the State. Marshes, ditches, borders of ponds. Common every- 
where. Flowers July and August. Perennial. 
Type locality: ‘ Habitat in Europae aquosis et ad ripas fluviorum lacuum,” 
Herb. Geol, Surv. Herb. Mohr. 
ECHINODORUS Engel. in Gray, Man. 460. 1848, 
Eight to 10 species, of warmer temperate and tropical America. North America, 
3 species. Perennial aquatie herbs, 
Echinodorus radicans (Nutt.) Engelin, in Gray, Man. 460. 1848, 
CREEPING WATER PLANTAIN. 
Sagittaria radicans Nutt. Trans, Am. Phil. Soc, ser. 2, 5: 159, 1853-37. 
Gray, Man. ed. 6,556. Chap. Fl. 448. Coulter, Contr. Nat. Herb. 2:45. 
SOUTHERN MrExico, 
Carolinian and Louisianian areas. Southern Illinois, Missouri, North Carolina to 
Florida, west to Texas and Arkansas. 
ALABAMA: Coast plain to Central Pine belt. Marshes. Montgomery and Mobile 
counties. Frequent in the river marshes. Flowers May to July. White. 
Type locality not ascertained, Eugelmann’s locality, “Swamps, Illinois and 
southward,” 
Herb, Geol. Sury. Herb. Mohr. 
SAGITTARIA L. Sp. P1. 2:993. 1753. Arnnow1ekap.' 
About 30 species, of warmer temperate regions of both hemispheres, mostly 
American. North America, 20 species. Perenni:l palndial herbs, 
Sagittaria latifolia Willd. Sp. Pl. 4:409. 1806, (Porm S. latifolia proper, J. G 
Smith, Rep, Mo. Bot. Gard. 6:36.) 
CoMMON ARROWHEAD, BROAD-LEAVED ARROWHEAD. 
Sagittaria variabilis Engelm. in Gray, Man. 461, 1848. 
S, sagittaefolia var. variabilis Michel in DC, Monogr. Phan. 3:69, 1881. 
S. hastata Pursh, Fl. 896. 1814, 
El. Sk, 2:589. Gray, Man. ed, 6, 554. Chap. Fl. 449. Wats. Bot. Calif. 2: 201, 
Coulter, Contr. Nat. Herb, 2:455. 
MEXICO. 
Alleghenian to Louisianian area. Nova Scotia to British Columbia and coast of 
California, From Canada to Florida, through the Gulf States to Mexico, 
ALABAMA: Coast plain. Open marshes, swamps. Mobile County. Undoubtedly 
over the State. Flowers white, September, October. Abundant in the river 
marshes about Mobile. 
Type locality: ‘Hab. a Canada ad Carolinam.” 
Herb, Geol. Surv, Herb. Mohr. 
Sagittaria latifolia pubescens (Muhl.) JJ. G. Smith, Mem. Torr, Club, 5:25. 1894, 
(Form ¢, J. G. Smith, Rep. Mo. Bot. Gard. 6:40.) Downy ARROWHEAD, 
Sagiltaria pubescens Muhl, Cat. 86. 1813, 
S. variabilis var, pubescens Engel. Gray, Man. ed. 5, 555, 1856. 
Gray, Man. ed. 6, 555, 
Louisianian area, Georgia, Florida. 
ALABAMA: Central Prairie region to Coast plain, Ingently flowing water. Mobile 
County, Mobile River. Baldwin County, near Daphne, in shaded swamps. Mont- 
gomery County, Cypress Pond. Flowers June to October, 10 to 15 inches high; 
frequent. 
Type locality: “Pensylvania.” 
Sagittaria viscosa Mohr, Bull. Torr. Club, 24:19, #289. 1897, 
CLAMMY ARROWHEAD. 
Monoecious; scape slender, over 2 feet long, branched from the lowest verticil, 
leaves membranaceous, smooth, broadly ovate, rounded toward the slightly apieu- 
late apex; blade 6 to 7 inches wide, 12 to 14 inches long, deeply sagittate, the broad 
lobes acute, about 6 inches long, widely diverging: panicle slender, main branch 
12 to 13 inches long, the branches about half its length; bracts coriaceous, papil- 
lose, rugose, viscid, free at the base, oblong-ovate, obtuse; sepals thick and like 
the bracts papillose, glutinose, ovate-lanceolate; stamens numerous (20 to 25), fila- 
'J.G. Smith, Revision of N. Amer. species of Sagittaria and Lophotocarpus, Sixth 
Annual Report Mo, Bot. Gard, 1895, 
