PENNELL: STUDIES IN THE AGALINANAE 423 
plain. Abundant from New Jersey to South Carolina, in New 
Jersey in the middle district and coastal strip, absent from the 
New Jersey, probably also from the Wilmington, N. C., pine 
barrens; southward abundant near the coast in Georgia, extending 
to the Florida Keys, of occasional occurrence in the Altamaha 
grit region of Georgia, more common inland. Westward occa- 
sional, especially near the Gulf coast, and probably frequent north 
of the pine belts. A characteristic plant of coastal regions, edges 
of salt marshes. Widely distributed in the eastern United States, 
most abundant in the coastal plain. 
PLANTS AND SPECIMENS EXAMINED: 
New Jersey: Keasbey; South River; Spotswood; Keyport; Farm- 
ingdale; New Egypt; Burlington; Delair; Griffith’s Swamp; 
Kirkwood; South Westville; Clarksboro; Mickleton; Swedes- 
boro; Deal; Belmar; Chadwick; Toms River; Seaside Park; 
Forked River; Waretown; Barnegat Pier; Cox’s; Manahawken; 
Absecon; Atlantic City; Ventnor; Ocean City; Ocean City 
Junction; Avalon (4004); Wildwood; Middletown; Cape May 
Court House (2602, 2603); Bennett; Cape May. 
Pennsylvania: Tinicum (3598). 
Delaware: Porter; Ellendale; Rehoboth. 
Maryland: Kent Island; Abbey’s Island; Laurel; Lanham; Buena 
Vista (2640); College Park; Hyattsville; Bladensburg. 
District of Columbia: Anacostia; Terra Cotta (2678, 2679); 
Holmead Swamp; District Line (2639); Washington. 
Virginia: Alexander Island (2671); Arlington (2672); Alexandria; 
Four-mile Run; Seven Pines (4946); Smith’s Island; Norfolk; 
Virginia Beach; Munden. 
North Carolina: Weldon (4948); Rocky Mount (4932); Wilming- 
ton (4914, 4927); Southport. 
South Carolina: Ebenezer; Santee Canal; Monks Corner (4876); 
Otranto (4869); Charleston; Yemassee (4850, 4854); Bluffton; 
Aiken. 
Georgia: Thomson; Thalmann (4811); Waycross (4784); Fitz- 
gerald; Naylor (4746, 4753); Thomasville (4735A); Cordele 
(4769); De Soto (4758); Leslie (4767). 
Florida: Jacksonville (4799); San Pablo (4806); Miami; Black 
