1(32 Small : The flora of peninsular Florida 



on the mainland of Florida and on the Bahamas. The following 

 citations represent specimens from peninsular Florida. They are 

 all from the Everglade Keys and vicinity. 



Everglades near Camp Jackson, Britton 237. Hammocks, 

 Long Key, Small & Wilson 1678. Everglades west of Camp 

 Jackson, Small & Wilson 1Q62. Everglades between Homestead 

 and Cross Key, Small & Carter 2675. 



Bourreria virgata (Sw.) G. Don 



The shrub or small tree was recently discovered growing on 

 an outlying Everglade Key situated about eight miles below the 

 settlement of Cutler {Small & Carter 2818). 



Goniostachyum citrosum sp. nov. 



A straggling or reclining shrub with elongate and irregularly 

 branched stems, the bark pale-gray or whitish, the branches stri- 

 gillose: leaves opposite; blades lanceolate to elliptic-lanceolate, 

 2.5-6 cm. long, acuminate, shallowly serrate, pubescent on both 

 sides, pale beneath, dark green above, narrowed to petiole-like 

 bases: peduncles solitary in the axils, 5-16 mm. long, strigillose: 

 spikes depressed, 4-6 mm. long; bracts ovate, acute or acuminate, 

 the outer ones 4-5 mm. long: calyx about 1 mm. long; lobes 

 broadly triangular, much shorter than the tube: corolla white 

 about 4.5 mm. long, minutely pubescent; tube swollen above the 

 middle; limb about 3 mm. broad: nutlets 1.5 mm. long. 



This species differs from Goniostachyum graveolens by its strigil- 

 lose foliage, its sparingly and shallowly serrate acuminate leaf- 

 blades and its short spikes. The type specimens were collected 

 in the hammocks near the Silver Palm Schoolhouse southwest of 

 Perrine, November, 1904 (Small 2142). Collected in 1906 in the 

 same region {Small & Carter 2680). 



This plant was first collected in Mexico many years ago; but 

 these specimens were referred to Lantana canescens H. B. K., a 

 species originally from northern South America. The species was 

 discovered in Cuba the same year that it was first found in Florida. 

 Its geographical distribution seems to be the same as that of Al- 

 varadoa amorphoides Liebm., with which it is associated in the 

 hammocks in Florida. 



Phyla stoechadifolia (L.) comb. nov. 

 Verbena stoechadifolia L. Sp. PI. 19. 1753. 

 Lippia stoechadifolia H. B. K., Nov. Sp. & Gen. PI. 2: 265. 

 1817. 



