WATER-PLANTAIN FAMILY. 331 
ments two-thirds longer than the anthers, strongly villous near the base; ovary nar- 
rowly winged, with a slender erect style; flowers fully three-fourths inch across. 
Resembling form b (J. G. Smith) of S, latifolia; at once distinguished, however, by 
the characters given above. 
Louisianian area, 
ALABAMA: Lower Pine region, deep ditches. Mobile, June, 1896. On a second 
visit to the same locality to get specimens with mature achenia the plants were 
found to have been destroved by the cleaning of the ditch. 
Type locality: “Deep muddy borders of marsh on the Mobile River.” 
Herb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 
Sagittaria montevidensis Cham, & Schlecht. Linnaea, 2:156, 1827. 
LA PLaTa RIVER ARROWHEAD. 
J.G. Smith, Rep. Mo, Bot. Gard. 6:97, t..27. 
“Monoecious; petioles stout, rigid, erect, ascending; leaves sagittate, acute or 
obtuse, 4 to 20 inehes long and broad, basal lobes acate, acuminate, widely divergent, 
glabrous above, sparsely scabrous on the nerves below; scape usually simple, stout, 
often 24 to 3 inches in diameter at the base; verticils numerous, more or less approxi- 
raate, 2to 4 lower ones fertile; bracts connate at the base, lanceolate, long-acuminate, 
the upper undeveloped portion of the scape appearing comose with their projecting 
tips; staminate pedicels slender, ascending, } to 14 inches long, longer than the fer- 
tile; flowers large, the sepals broadly ovate, obtuse, % inch wide, inch long; petals 
obovate, larger than the sepals; stamens very many, the narrow glandular filaments 
longer than the linear-oblong anthers; achenia ,'; to“, inch long, narrowly quadrate, 
obovate, winged on both margins, with a short, slender, oblique beak, and a promi- 
nent sub-epidermal resin passage on each side above; fruiting head large, ~ to 14 
inches in diameter.” Established as a ballast plaut in California, 
SouTH AMERICA. 
Louisianian area. Coast of North Carolina, 
ALABAMA: Coast plain. Marshesand ditches. Mobile County, river marshes and 
ditches about the city. Flowers July to September. Frequent. 
Type locality: “ Montevideo et Rio grande do Sul,” 
Herb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 
Sagittaria longirostra (Micheli) J.G. Smith, Mem. Torr, Club, 5:26. 1898. 
LONG-BEAKED ARROWHEAD. 
Sagittaria sagittifolia var. (?) longirostra Micheli in DC. Monogr. Phan. 3: 69. 1881. 
Britt. & Brown, [1]. Fl. 1:88. 
Carolinian area. Southern Delaware, Pennsylvania, and Kentucky. 
ALABAMA: Lower hills. Coosa County, Stewardsville (Dr. FE. A. Smith). July. 
Rare. 
Type locality: ‘In Alabama (Drummond, 1832).” 
Sagittaria longirostra australis J. G. Sinith, Bull. Torr. Club, 24: 20, 4.297. 1897. 
SOUTHERN LONG-BEAKED ARROWHEAD. 
Plant 6 to 8 inches high, the scape abont 20 inches long; leaves ovate-elliptical, 
obtuse, 3 to 4 inches long, basal lobes obtuse; fertile pedicels about 4 inch long, 
exceeding the bracts; achenium less than 4 inch long. PuateE II. 
Carolinian area. 
ALABAMA: Mountain region. Shaded swampy creek banks. Cullman County. 
Type locality: ‘‘ Collected by Dr. Charles Mohr, Cullman, Ala., August 4, 1896.” 
Type in Herb. Mo, Bot. Gard. 
Herb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 
Sagittaria subulata (L.) Buchenan, Abh. Nat. Ver. Brem. 2: 49. 1871. 
Alisma subulata L. Sp. Pl. 2: 848. 1755. 
Sagittaria pusilla Nutt. Gen. P1215, I8ts, 
S. natans var. lorata Gray, Man, ed, 6,555. 1890. Not Chap. 
Gray, Man.l.c. Chap, Fl. 440. 
Carolinian and Louisianian areas, New York, coast of New Jersey to Florida. 
ALABAMA: Coast plain, Sandy tidewater flats. Mobile County, Frascati. Flow- 
ers in September. Rare, One-half inch high. 
Type locality: ‘Hab. in Virginia.” 
Herb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mobr. 
Sagittaria subulata natans (Michx,) J. G. Smith, Rep. Mo. Bot. Gard. 44, 1894. 
FLOATING ARROWHEAD. 
Sagittaria subulata Michx. Vl. Bor, Am. 2: 190, 1303, 
S. subulata var, lorata Chap. Fl, 419. 1860. 
