426 PENNELL: STUDIES IN THE AGALINANAE 
7. AGALINIS HarPERI Pennell in Small, Flora of Miami, 167. 
1913 
Agalinis Harperi Pennell. ‘‘Type.—St. Marks, Wakulla County, 
Florida. F. W. Pennell, 4707 coll. September 25, 1912”’ in 
Herb. University of Pennsylvania. 
Annual. Plant 4-8 dm. tall, relatively sparingly branched. 
Stem slightly angular, glabrous or nearly so. Leaves opposite, 
rather stiffly spreading, narrowly linear, scabrous on the upper 
surface, those of the stem 2-3.5 cm. long. Axillary fascicles 
scarcely or not developed. Racemes of 8-20 mostly opposite 
flowers. Pedicels very short, in flower less than 2 mm. long, 
hardly longer in fruit. Calyx-lobes triangular-lanceolate to tri- 
-angular-subulate, 1 mm. long or less. Corolla 15-18 mm. long, 
pubescent without, pubescent at base of upper lobes within, pink- 
purple, 2 yellow lines within throat below, small purple spots 
mostly along these; lobes all spreading, rounded to truncate, 
ciliate. Filaments lanose; anther-sacs oblong, lanose, acute at 
base, 1.5 mm.long. Capsule 4-5 mm. long. Seeds reticulated 
with dark brown ridges, areas between these relatively dark, with 
finer cross lines. 
Flowers, mid-September to mid-October. Fruit, October. 
DISTRIBUTION: Moist sandy pineland, borders of salt marsh, 
etc. Flat pine woods’ of southern Georgia, south through the 
Florida peninsula. Apparently most frequent in the Everglades. 
Restricted to the coastal plain. 
PLANTS AND SPECIMENS EXAMINED: 
Georgia: Thalmann (4810); Thomasville (4726). 
Florida: Camp Longview; St. Marks (4701, 4707, 4711). 
8. AGALINIS FASCICULATA (EIl.) Raf. New Fl. Am. 2: 63. 1837 
Gerardia fasciculata Ell. Sketch 2: 115. 1824. ‘‘Grows prin- 
cipally in lands subject to occasional inundation from the 
ocean—on Eding’s Island near Beaufort very common.” 
Type seen in the Elliott Herbarium at the Charleston Museum. 
Gerardia purpurea fasciculata (Ell.) Chapm. Fl. So. U. S. 300. 
' 1860. 
Flowers, August to October. Fruit, September to October. 
DISTRIBUTION: Moist to dry sandy, loam, or clay soil; depres- 
sions among sand-dunes of beach, edges of salt marsh, or loam soil 
