PENNELL: STUDIES IN THE AGALINANAE 425 
ing, rounded to emarginate, ciliate. Filaments lanose; anther- 
sacs oblong, lanose, minutely mucronate-awned at base, 2 mm. 
long. Style filiform 6-10 mm. long. Capsule globose, 5 mm. 
long. Seeds not seen. 
Type, St. Marks, Wakulla Co., Florida, Sept. 26, 1912, F. W. 
Pennell 4708, in Herb. University of Pennsylvania. 
Flowers, late-September to October. 
DisTRIBUTION: Moist soil, in pineland, southern Georgia and 
northern Florida. Probably common in Altamaha grit region, 
frequent through flat pine woods of northern Florida, west to the 
Apalachicola River. Restricted to the coastal plain. 
PLANTS AND SPECIMENS EXAMINED: 
Georgia: Waycross (4781, 4791); Douglas (4775); Naylor (4750); + 
Thomasville (4734, 4738); Cordele (4770, 4771, 4773). ; 
Florida: Jacksonville (4795); St. Marks (4708); Fort Gadsden 
(4688); Apalachicola. 
6. Agalinis delicatula Pennell, sp. nov. 
Annual. Plant 6-8 dm. tall, branched, branches long and very 
slender. Stem angular, glabrous. Leaves opposite, spreading, 
almost filiform, scabrous on the upper surface, those of the stem 
I-2 cm. long. Axillary fascicles scarcely developed. Racemes 
of 8-12 mostly opposite flowers. Pedicels very short, in flower 2 
mm. long or less. Calyx-lobes subulate, 1.5-2 mm. long. Corolla 
20 mm. long, sparingly pubescent without, pubescent within at 
base of upper lobes, rose-purple, 2 yellow lines but (in this collec- 
tion) no purple spots within throat below, lobes all spreading, 
rounded to emarginate, minutely ciliate. Filaments lanose; 
anther-sacs oblong, lanose, mucronate-awned at base, 1.5 mm. 
-long. Style filiform. Fruit not seen. 
Type, Ponce de Leon, Holmes Co., Florida, Sept. 17, 1912, 
F, W. Pennell 4661 in Herb. University of Pennsylvania. 
Nearest to A. pinetorum of which this may possibly prove a 
form, but the plants seen appeared strikingly distinct, and 
occurred in a different region, west of the known range of that 
species. 
Flowers, mid-September to October. 
DIstRIBUTION: Most sandy pineland, western Florida. 
Possibly frequent in the west Florida pine hills. Restricted to 
_ the coastal plain. Type only seen. 
