410 PENNELL: STUDIES IN THE AGALINANAE 
Aureolaria glauca (Eddy) Raf. New Fl. Am. 2: 60. 1837 
Dasystoma quercifolia (Pursh.) Benth. in DC. Prodr. 10: 520. 
1846. 
Dasystoma flava (L.) Wood, Class Book. 529. 1861. As to 
synonymy, not description, the latter applying to Aurevlaria 
villosa Raf. 
Gerardia virginica (L.) Britton, Prelim. Catal. N. J. Pl. 40. 1888. 
Dasystoma virginica (L.) Britton in Mem. Torrey Club 5: 295, 
1894 
Flowers, in New Jersey, September. 
DIsTRIBUTION: Frequent on rich slopes, often rocky, in wood- 
land inland, very rare in the Coastal Plain. On wooded slopes at 
a few points in southern New Jersey. 
SPECIMENS EXAMINED: 
New Jersey: New Egypt; Nesco; Fairton. 
2. AUREOLARIA RETICULATA Raf. New Fl. Am. 2: 59. 1837 
Aureolaria reticulata Raf. ‘Florida and Alabama.’ No type 
_ known to exist. 
Dasystoma bignoniiflora Small in Bull. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 1: 285. 
1899. ‘Collected by Dr. Burrows, at Tampa Bay, Florida, 
in 1834.’’ Type seen in Herb. Columbia University. 
Flowers, late-August to mid-October. Fruit, September to 
October. 
DISTRIBUTION: Sandy ravines and moist woodland, both in 
calcareous and siliceous districts, in the coastal plain from North 
Carolina to central and western Florida. Apparently most 
frequent in calcareous region of northern and western Florida. 
Restricted to the coastal plain; possibly better considered a sub- 
species of A. virginica replacing that species in the southern 
coastal plain. 
PLANTS AND SPECIMENS EXAMINED: 
North Carolina: Fayetteville. 
South Carolina: Santee Canal; St. Johns; Monks Corner (4875) > 
Eding Island. 
Georgia: Thomasville (4723); Leslie (4765). 
Florida: Tampa Bay; Monticello (4720) ; Tallahassee (4690, 4698); , 
River Junction; Marianna; Milton (4565, sae 
