280 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [DeC, 



Pennell (North Carolina)— 4949. (South Carolina)— 4849, 4860, 

 4863, 4868. (Georgia)— 4735, 4740, 4747, 4751, 4755, 4761, 4766, 

 4772, 4792, 4818. (Florida)— 4669, 4675, 4680, 4695, 4697, 4706, 

 4717, 4718, 4793, 9544, 9562. (Mississippi)— 4356, 4370. (Louisi- 

 ana)— 4267, 4276, 4303, 4304, 4330. 



8. Agalinis georgiana (Boynton) Pennell. 



Gerardia georgiana Boynton, Biltm. Bot. Stud. 1: 148. 1902. "In the 

 pine barrens near Cordele, Dooly County, Georgia, in September, 1901. 

 . . . In moist sandy soil in pine barrens. . . . The type speci- 

 mens are deposited in the Biltmore Herbarium." Type, collected Sept. 

 18, 1901, seen in the Biltmore Herbarium. 



Agalinis georgiana (Boynton) Pennell, Bull. Torr. Bot. Club 40: 427. 1913. 



Dry sandy or clay soil, in longleaf pineland, southern Georgia, 

 southern Alabama and northern Florida. 



Flowering from mid- to late-September, and soon ripening fruit.. 

 Corolla lavender-pink, without yellow lines or purple-red spots 

 within throat anteriorly. 



Pennell (Georgia)— 4728, 4739. (Florida)— 4586, 4662, 4665, 

 4693. (Alabama)— 4609, 4629, 4632. 



9. Agalinis pulchella Pennell. 



Agalinis pulchella Pennell, Bull. Torr. Bot. Club 40: 428. 1913. "Type, 

 Ponce de Leon, Holmes Co., Florida, Sept. 17, 1912, F. W. Pennell 4658, 

 in Herb. University of Pennsylvania." 



Dry open sandy longleaf pineland, southern Georgia and northern 

 Florida, westward to Louisiana. 



Flowering in September, fruiting in October. Corolla rose-pink, 

 with two yellow lines and relatively large longitudinal purple-red 

 spots within throat anteriorly. 



Pennell (Georgia)— 4731, 4776, 4779. (Florida)— 4587, 4650, 

 4658, 4663, 4692. (Alabama)— 4427, 4452, 4454, 4455, 4493, 4515, 

 4642. 



10. Agalinis filifolia (Nutt.) Raf. 



(?erard^ay^^^/o/^a Nutt., Gen. PI. N. Amer. 2: 48. 1818. "Hab. In West 

 Florida.' Dr. Baldwyn." No type in the herbarium of the Academy of 

 Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, but the description is quite distinctive. 



Agalinis filifolia (Nutt.) Raf., New Fl. Amer. 2: 65. 1837. 



Rather dry sandy longleaf pineland, in the Coastal Plain from 

 southern Georgia southward to southern Florida. 



Flowering in September and early October, and soon ripening 

 fruit. Corolla rose-pink, with two yellow lines and diffused purple- 

 red spots within throat anteriorly. 



Pennell (Georgia)— 4741, 4752, 4785, 4821, 4828, 10174. (Florida) 

 —4671, 4673, 4694, 4800, 4803. 



