26 
Blue Ridge or Talladega. mountain,.Clay county, at the rocky 
summit of Che-aw-haw mountain, alt., 2400 ft., and in rocky woods 
of the Delta divide, alt., 1700 ft., in full bloom, July. 
SABBATIA DODECANDRA STRICTA Gray. 
Sabbatia chloroides var. stricta Gray, Syn. Fl. N. A. 2: Part 1, 
LAS: 3678. : 
Littoral region, Baldwin county, near Perdido Bay. Brackish 
swamps, July. - 
' TpoMOEA BARBIGERA (G. Don) Sweet. Fl. Gard. p/. 86. 1818. 
Pharbites barbigera G. Don, Gen. Syst. 4: 262. 1838. 
Matches the illustration by Sweet in every detail excepting 
the inflorescence. Peduncles frequently 2, rarely more than 3- 
flowered. This most vigorous and rapidly growing climber has 
been. strangely overlooked by our botanists. With the fleshy 
stem frequently from 1{’—14’ thick, climbing over bush and tree, 
this plant is one of the most injurious of the bindweeds infest- 
ing the gardens and fields in the lower belt of the. Carolinian 
and in the Louisianian zone of Alabama and Mississippi. The _ | 
flowers are azure, white in the throat. June-September. Com- 
mon from the mountains to the coast. 
Type locality. North America. 
SCUTELLARIA INCANA PUNCTATA (Chapm.) 
Scutellaria canescens var. punctata Chapm. Fl, 323. 1860. 
Mountain region to coast pine belt. Blount Co., Cullmam 
Co., alt., 600 ft. 
SOLANUM HirsuTUM (Vahl) Dunal, Solan. 158. 1813. 
Solanum nigrum var. hirsutum Vahl, 2: 40. 1790-94. £ 
Adventive from the Mediterranean countries of the old world. — 
Common ballast plant. Naturalized on the coast. Mobile, border — 
of swamps. June—October. ; 
MICRANTHEMUM ORBICULATUM EMARGINATUM (Elliott). 
Micranthemum emargiatum E\l. Sk. 1: 18. 1817. 
Distinct from the typical form by the habit of growth and hab- 
itat.. The stem is 4-6 inches long, submersed and floating in — 
