Botanical Communications. 167 
16. Sarracenia flava.—From the southern borders of the Chesa- 
peake Bay to the Gulf of Mexico, in rian savannahs, and wet 
pine woods. 
Sabal Adansoni, in the swamps around New Orleans. I have 
already noted its existence as far north as Neuse River, N. C. Lat- 
itude 35° 20’. In Georgia I have noted it as far up as Hartford on 
the Ocmulgee. 
18. Iris cuprea and Crinum americanum in swamps around New 
Orleans. 
19. Pancratium (rotatum?) flowering in May. Very abit 
on the Mississippi below New Orleans. 
20. Helenium quadridentatum, Mich.? (Leaves broadly decur- 
rent.) Very abundant on the Mississippi below New Orleans, flow- 
eringin May. I have noted the same plant on the Neuse River, N. 
C. and in Georgia between the Oconee and Ocmulgee Rivers. 
Along the Flint River road I have observed it with a few remaining 
flowers in October. 
21. Catalpa cordifolia. 
On the Conechee, about the 31st disuse of latitude, native? See 
Ellicott’s Notes. 
22. Gossypium. (Cotton plant.) 
Spontaneous near the southern extremity of the peninsula of 
Florida—seeds woolly.—G. hirsutum or G. barbadense? Reported 
tome by Mr. Wyatt of Tallahassee. The Cotton plant (G. barba- 
dense ?) is also spontaneous at Key West. 
I. Remarks on some parts of my former communications, and 
correction of some errors therein. 
In Baptisia simplicifolia the flowers (which I have since obtained) 
are yellow, the legumes pedicelled, leaves rhombovate, without stip- 
ules. Flowers in June. 
Thyrsanthus Aloridana is probably only a variety of T. frutescens, 
- (Wistaria speciosa, Nutt. 
Sarracenia pulchella is the S. calceolata of Nuttall, figured and 
described in the Trans. Am. Philo. Soc. I still think it may be the 
original S, psittacina of Michaux. 
Sarracenia Catesbai of Elliott, I now think, is only a variety of S. 
flava. An examination of the figure in Catesby’s work, referred to 
by Elliott, has confirmed me in this opinion. 
The parasite tree, figured in one of your late numbers, by Lieut. 
Long, is the same mentioned by me in a previous number, (October, 
