PENNELL: STUDIES IN THE AGALINANAE 413 
6. Aureolaria pedicularia caesariensis Pennell, subsp. nov. 
Annual. Stem ro dm. tall, widely branching, minutely and 
closely pubescent, very sparingly glandular below. Leaves sessile, 
ovate-lanceolate, less than 2 cm. long, pinnatifid, segments 
irregularly crenate-dentate, equaling or longer than the width of 
the central portion of the lamina, minutely and closely pubescent. 
Pedicels slender, glandular, 15 mm. long, longer than the calyx, 
longer than, mostly twice exceeding, the bracts. Calyx-tube 
glandular with short-stalked glands, equaled by the dentate 
calyx-lobes. Corolla 35 mm. long, yellow. Capsule 10-12 mm. 
long, elliptic-ovoid, minutely glandular, surpassing the calyx-lobes. 
Type, Atco, Camden Co., New Jersey, Sept. 7, 1911, F. W. 
Pennell 3545 in Herb. University of Pennsylvania. 
Flowers, mid-August to mid-September. Fruit, October, per- 
sisting through the winter. 
DistriBuTION: Dry sandy pine and oak woods, frequent in the 
pine barrens of New Jersey, where it mostly replaces the species. 
PLANTS AND SPECIMENS EXAMINED: 
New Jersey: East Plains; Bamber; Woodmansie; Taunton; Atco 
(3545, 3627); Middletown, Cape May Co. 
7. Aureolaria pedicularia carolinensis Pennell, subsp. nov. , 
Annual. Stem 10 dm. tall, widely branching, minutely 
glandular-pubescent. Leaves sessile, ovate-lanceolate, 2-3 cm. 
long, pinnatifid-lobed, segments somewhat crenate, shorter than 
the width of the central portion of the lamina, minutely glandular- 
pubescent. Pedicels slender, glandular, 10-20 mm. long, longer 
than the calyx. Calyx-tube glandular with short-stalked glands, 
mostly exceeded by the incised-dentate calyx-lobes. Corolla 
35 mm. long, yellow. Capsule 12 mm. long, elliptic-ovoid, minutely 
glandular, equaling or barely surpassing the calyx-lobes. 
Type, savannahs near Mill Pond, Wilmington, North Carolina, 
June 23, 1909, J. M. Macfarlane in Herb. University of Pennsyl- 
Vania. 
Flowers, June to September. Fruit, October. 
Distripution: Dry sandy pine and oak woods, pine barrens of 
southeastern North Carolina, where it probably replaces the species. 
PLANTS AND SPECIMEN EXAMINED: 
North Carolina: Wilmington (4925) (J. M. Macfarlane in 1909; 
in 1911); ‘Southeastern North Carclina,” W. W. Ashe. 
