lUC) PLANT LIFK oK ALABAMA. 



Ai-AitAM.v: Lowcrliills. Tiispaloosa Couiily. J'lowcrs white; April. Not friMpieiit. 

 Tvpc localilv : " Halt, in N'ir^iiiia."' 

 llVrl.. .M(.lir.' 



Chaeropbylluni tainturieri liook. ("oinp. Bot. Maj^. 1:47. 18.S5. 



Tainturier's Chervil. 



( liairophyllmn prnciimJinis var. lainturicri Conlt. Ar Rose, ]5ot. Gaz. 12 : IGO. 1887. 



Chap. Fl. IC"). Coulter, Contr. Nat. Herli. 2 : Uti. 



Carolinian and Lonisianian areas. .Soutborn ^■ir{^luia, TeiinesBce, aud Missouri, 

 8«uith to Florida and Texas. 



Ai.auama: Lower hills to Coast plain. MotanH)rplii<' lulls. Shaded banks, bor- 

 ders <d" (ields. Lee Count}', Aulinrn. Dallas Connty, Marion .Junction. Mont- 

 gomery an<l M()l)ile eonnlies. Flowers white; ApriL Freipicut. Annual. 



Tyjn" loc.ility: "New Orleans" (M. Tainturier). 



Herb. Gcol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 



SCANDIX L. Sp. PI. 1 : 2o6. 17.53. 



Scandix pecten-veneris L. .Sp. I'l. 1 : !'.">(). I7.")3. Venus's Comb. 



KiKoi'K, North Asia. 



Alabama: Fujiitive on ballast. Mobile; May. Observed in 1880 and 1892. 

 Type loeality: "Hab. inter Germaniae et Europao australioris segetes." 

 Herb. GeoL Surv. Herb. Mohr. 



WASHINGTONIA Raf. Am. Month. Mag. 2 : 176. 1818. 



(OsMOKiu/A Raf. Am. Month. Mag. 2 : 17G. 1818.) 



(Glycosma Nutt.; Terr. & Gray, Fl. X. A. 1 : 639. 1840.) 



Twelve species, Atlantic and western North America. 



Washingtonia claytoni (Michx.) Britton in Britt. & Br. 111. Fl. 2 : 530. 1897. 



Sweet Cicely 



Mi/rrhis clnytoiii Michx. Fl. Bor. Am. 1 : 170. 1803. 



Osviorhiza brevistyUs DC. Prodr. 4 : 232. 1830. 



O. claytoni C. B. Clarke in Hook. Fl. Brit. lud. 2 : 690. 1879. 



Ell. Sk. 1 : 358. Gray, Man. ed. 6, 210. Chap. Fl. 166. 



AUeghenian and Carolinian areas. Nova Scotia, Quebec, Ontario; New England, 

 ■west to Minnesota, south to the Ohio Valley, Missouri, and Arkansas, and along the 

 mountains to Georgia. 



Alabama: Mountain region. Rich woodlands. Madison County, Montesano, 

 1,500 feet. Root sweet, aromatic. I'erennial. 



Type locality : " Hab. in moutibus Alieghauis." 



Herb. Mohr. 



Washingtonia longistylis (Torr.) Britton in Britt. & Br. 111. Fl. 2 :530. 1897. 



Smoother Sweet Cicely. 



Myrrhis longisU/lis Torr. Fl. N. & Mid. U. S. 310. 1824. 



Osmorhiza longistylis DC. Prodr. 4 : 232. 1830. 



Gray, Man. ed. 6, 210. 



Japan. 



AUeghenian and Carolinian areas. New Brunswick and Quebec to Manitoba; 

 New .Jersey to Minnesota, Dakota, and Nebraska, south along the mountains to 

 Georgia. 



Alabama: Lower hills. Tuscaloosa County (E. A. Smith). Flowers in June. 

 Very rare. Perennial. 



Type locality : "In wet meadows near Albany, New York. Tracy, Near Geneva, 

 N.Y. I'aine. June. Near Hudson, N. Y. Alsop, &g." 



Herb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 



CONIUM L. Sp. PI. 1 : 243. 1753. 

 Two species, biennials. Europe, Asia. 



Conium maculatum L. Sp. 1*1. 1 : 243. 1753. Poison Hemlock. 



Gray, Man. ed. 6, 209. 



Europe. 



Naturalized in New England, Pennsylvania, Iowa, and Minnesota. 



ALABA3IA: Coast plain. Adventive on ballast. Waste places. Mobile County, 

 banks of Mobile River. Flowers white; May. Two to 3 feet high. 



