23 
leaves, and by the inflorescence, and as Elliott remarks, resemb- 
ling somewhat Fiméristylis autumnalis in appearance and size. 
Coastplain, dry sandy places, common; September—October. 
Coast of South Carolina, Florida and Texas. 
LIMODORUM MULTIFLORUM (Lindl.) 
Calopogon multiforus Lindl. Gen. & Sp. Orch. 425. 1835. 
Coastplain. Flat damp pine barrens. Mobile. Rare. April. 
LimoporvuM PALLIDUM (Chapm.) 
Calopogon pallidus Chapm. FI. 457. - 1860. 
Lower Pine Belt. Boggy Pine Barrens. Mobile. May-June. 
Roripa WALTER! (Elliott). 
Sisymbrium tanacetifolium Walt. Fl. Car. 174. 1788. Not L, 
Sisymbrium Walteri Elliott, Sk. 2: 146. 1824. 
Nasturtium tanacetifolium Hook. & Arn. Jour. Bot. 1: 190. 1835. 
Cultivated and waste ground. Mobile. February—March. 
SARRACENIA FLAVA CATESBAEI (Elliott). 
Sarracenia Catesbaci Elliott, Sk. 2: 11. 1824. * 
Near the type, differs in habit of growth and range of distri- 
bution. Leaves rarely over 12’ long, with a very narrow wing, 
erect hood, dark purple veined, the lamina covered with a fine 
silky pubescence. Apparently confined to the mountains of South 
Carolina and Alabama. 
Alabama, De Kalb Co., Lookout Mountain, bank of Little 
river, about 1700 feet. 
CAKILE MARITIMA GENICULATA Robinson, in Gray, Syte PIN, AL Pee 
132. 1895. 
Cakile maritima var aequalis Coult. Bot. W. Tex. 22. 1861, 
Not Chapm. 
Specimens from the seashore of Alabama and distributed as 
Cakile mantima var aequalis Chapm. have to be referred to this 
variety. The prostrate racemes are 8’—10’ long, strongly geniculate. 
In the Alabama specimens the second joint of the ribbed pace) ust 
acuminate and rather acute. 
