434 Harper : Ox the Flora of South Georgia 



scription of the type locality, which is " high pine-barren ridges 

 between the Flint and Chatahouchie rivers." The original sta- 

 tion was probably farther south than mine however. 



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Mesosphaerum RUGOSUM (L.) Pollard, Bull. Torr. Club, 24: 156. 



1897 



Hyptis radiata Willd. Sp. PI. 3: 84. 1081. 

 Grows in moist sandy places in the eastern part of Sumter 

 County. Flowers. Northern limit ? 



Leonotis nepetaefolia R. Br. Hort. Kew. ed. 2, 3: 409. 181 1 

 I have found this showy weed along sandy roadsides at two 

 or three localities north and east of Americus. 



Gratiola quadridentata Mx. Fl. Bor. Am. I : 6. 1803 

 In wet pine-barrens and sandy bogs, Sumter County. 



Gerardia linifolia Nutt. Gen. 2 : 47. 18 18 



Collected in moist pine-barrens near Huntington, Aug. 30-31, 

 1 897, in flower. Not previously reported from Georgia. 



Utricularia macrorhyxcha Barnhart, Bull. Torr. Club, 25 : 515. 



1898 



Grows in wet muddy or sandy places ; the commonest XJtrir 

 cularia in Sumter County. This species has been previously re- 

 ported only from Florida. 



Epiphegus Virginiana (L.)Bart. Comp. Fl. Phila. 2 : 50. 1818 



Found only in " Magnolia Dell " near Muckalee Creek, Amer- 

 icus, under Fagus Americana. 



Catalpa bignoxtoides Walt. Fl. Car. 64. 1788 



Grows on high banks of the Flint River, on the Sumter County 

 side. There has been some uncertainty as to the native habitat of 

 this species, but the evidence is strongly in favor of its being native 

 in Georgia. The locality above mentioned is in a region remote 

 from human habitations, where there are no introduced plants 

 within many miles, so that it is extremely improbable that the 

 Catalpa could have been introduced. 



