440 PLANT LIKK <>K A I, A MAMA. 



L. Hiiperhuiii \m\ curorDtuutuiu Cluiii. l''l. ISI. ISllO. 



Ell.Sk.l::{SS. Chai). Fl. 1X1. 



Carolinian and I.onisianian arras. North Carolina to Florida, witst to MiHsisHijtpi, 

 Louisiana, and Arkansas. 



Ai.ahama: .Mountain region to Lower Fine belt. Dry woodH. Cullnian Couut.v. 

 Shelby ( oiinty ( /■>'. A. Smith). Mobile County. Flowers orange vermilion willi .small 

 brown H)>ot8. .Inly; not rare. 



Type locality : " Hab. in herbosis buinidis Caroliuae inferioris." 



Herb. (ieol. .Surv. Herb. Mohr. 



Lilium catesbaei Walt. Fl. Car. 12.3. 17SS. CATKsitYs Lii.v. 



Kll.Sk.l:;{S7. (;ray, Man. 6(1.6,529. Chaj). Fl. 181. 



Carolinian and Louisianian areas. North (!aroliua to Florida, west to MisHissip])! 

 and southern Missouri. 



Al.Al».\M.\ : Coast ])lain. Low wet jiinr barrens. Mobile and Halilwin eoiiuties. 

 Flowers searlct, with oijitige. -inly; uot rare. 



Typo locality : "'South Caiidina." 



Herb. Mohr. 



ERYTHRONIUM L. Sp. PI. ItSOf). 17.")3. 



Seven species, perennials, north temperate zone, Japan. North America, 5. Atlantic 

 States, 2. 



Erythrouium americanuni Ker-(;awl. Hot. Mag. 27 : ^ ///.?. 180X. 



Yellow Addeh's Toncuk. 



Erythroniiim dens-cania Michx. Fl. Bor. Am. 1 : 198. 1803. Not I>. 



Fll. Sk. 1 : :W9. Cray, Man. ed. 6, r.28. Chap. Fl. 484. 



Alleghenian and Carolinian areas. Nova Scotia aiul Ontario; New England west 

 to Minnesota, Missouri, and Arkansas; Now York to the Ohio Valley; south to mid- 

 dle Florida. 



Alabama: Lower hills. Rich shaded banks. Tuscaloosa County {E. A. Smith). 

 March to April. Flowers yellow, 8i>otted brown. Kare. 



Tyjie locality of E. denn vanis ^Iichx. : " Hab. in frigidioribus Americae septentri- 

 onalis." 



Herb. Geol. Surv. 1 lerb. Mohr. 



QUAMASIA Kaf. Am. Month. Mag. 2 : 20;"). 1818. 

 (Camassia Lindl. P.ot. Keg. t. 14S(). 1832.) 



Four species, perennials, North American. Eastern 1, Pacilic 3. 



Quamasia esculenta (Ker-Gawl.) Coville, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 11 : 65. 1897. 



Wild Hyacinth. 



Scilla esculenta Ker-Gawl. Bot. Mag. 38 : t. 1574. 1813. 



Phalanf/ium pxcH/enfHW Nutt. ; Ker-Gawl. Bot. Mag. 38: /./'?•/. 1813. As svuonym. 



L<'nio/)-^.s /i.'/oei;i(/(()ia Kaf. Fl. Tellnr. 3:. ')1. 1836. 



Camassia fraseri Torr. Pai\ K. Kep. 2 [i)t. 4] : 176. 185.">. 



Scilla fraseri Gray. Man. <ul. 2, 469. 18,56. 



(,>uam'asia hijacinihiua Britton in Britt. »fe Brown, 111. Fl. 1 : 423. 1896. 



Gray, Man. ed. 6, 523. Chap. Fl. Suppl. 656. Coulter, Contr. Nat. Herb. 2 : 435. 



Alleghenian and Carolinian areas. Ontario; Pennsylvania to Minnesota and 

 through the Ohio Valley to Missouri, south along the lower mountains to Georgia. 



Alauama: Prairie regioii. Kich copses. Sumter County, Livingston {E. A. 

 Smith). Flowers lilac. A])ril ; infrequent. 



Ty])e locality : According to F. V. Coville, op. cit., the type specimens j.robably 

 came from near St. Louis. .Mo. 



Herb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 



YUCCA L. Sp. PI. 1 : 319. 1753. 



About 1 dozen si)e(ies. of warmer and temperate Mexico, Central America, and 

 North America; arid plains of the Lower Sonoran area to the Pacific. East of the 

 Mi8sis8ip[>i Kiver 2 species. 



Yucca aloifolia L. Sp. PI. 1 : 319. 1753. Spanish 1 )a(;ger. 



Ell. Sk. 1 :401. Chap. Fl. 485. Griseb. Fl. Brit. W. Tnd. ,5X2. 

 Mexico, West Indies. 

 Louisianian area. North Carolina along tht; coast to Florida and Louisiana. 



