PENNELL: STUDIES IN THE AGALINANAE 407 
South Carolina to Mississippi, south in the Florida peninsula to 
Miami. Frequent in southern Georgia and southern Alabama 
and in Florida. Nearly restricted to the coastal plain. 
PLANTS AND SPECIMENS EXAMINED: 
South Carolina: Aiken. 
Georgia: Augusta; Thomson; Louisville; Brunswick (4845); Way- 
cross (4780); Thomasville (4732) ; Leslie (4760) ; Columbus. 
Florida: Jacksonville; South Jacksonville; San Pablo (4802); St. 
Augustine; Tocoi; Eustis; Palm Springs; Clarcona; Georgiana; 
Miami; Marco; Tampa; St. Marks (4705, 4715); Quincy; 
River Junction; Liberty Co.; Fort Gadsden (4686); Apalachi- 
cola (4674); Chipley (4645); Ponce de Leon (4656); Milligan 
(4585); Milton (4568); Santa Rosa Island. 
Alabama: Auburn; Abbeville; Ozark; Florala (4630); Greenville; 
Wilcox Co.; Mobile Co. 
Mississippi: Waynesboro. 
2. AFZELIA CASSIOIDEs (Walt.) J. F. Gmel. curante L. Syst. Nat. 
ed. 13. 927. 1791 
Anonymos cassioides Walt. Fl. Carol. 171. 1788. No type locality 
given, presumably from Berkeley Co., South Carolina. 
Gerardia cassioides (Walt.) Pers. Syn. 2: 154. 1807. 
Seymeria tenuifolia Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept. 2: 737- 1814. New 
name for Gerardia cassioides (Walt.) Pers. 
Flowers, September to: mid-October. Fruit, October. 
DistriButTion: Moist to dry pineland, mostly sandy, in the 
coastal plain from North Carolina to Florida and Louisiana. 
Frequent in the Wilmington pine barrens, occurs also near Fayette- 
ville, North Carolina, and occasional or frequent southward. Most 
abundant in flat pine woods of southern Georgia, northern Florida, 
and near the Gulf coast to Louisiana. In the Florida peninsula 
reaching Bradentown on the west coast. Mostly in the coastal 
plain, casually inland in northern Georgia, Alabama, and south- 
_ astern Tennessee. 
PLANTS AND SPECIMENS EXAMINED: : 
North Carolina: Wilmington (4900, 4919); Fayetteville. 
South Carolina: Columbia; Santee Canal; St. Johns; Cooper 
