COLLECTIONS OF MOSSES. 289 



Lejeunea auriculata Hook. & Wils. 

 On trees. Mobile. 

 Louisianian area. Louisiana, Mississippi. 



Lejeunea mohrii Aust. 



Mossy trunks and roots of trees. Mobile, 1873. 

 Louisianian area. Louisiana. 



FRULLANIA Raddi. 



Frullania virginica Lehm. 



Bark of trees. Over the State, common. Mobile, Lee, and Winston counties. 



Louisianiau to Alleghenian area. North to Ohio, New York, New Brunswick, and 

 Ontario. 



Frullania kunzei Lehm. & Lindb. 

 On trees. Mobile. 

 Louisianian area. Southern States. 



Frullania caroliniana Sulliv. 



Barks of trees. Mobile County, Citronelle (Baker $ Earle}. 

 Frullania donnelli Aust. 



On trees. Mobile County, Citronelle ( Baker <f Earle). 



Louisianian area. Louisiana to Florida. 



Frullania aeolotis Nees. 

 On trees. Mobile, common. 

 Louisianian to Alleghenian area. Ohio, New York. 



Frullania squarrosa Nees. 

 On trees. Mobile. 

 Louisianian and Carolinian areas. Louisiana to central Ohio. 



Frullania dilatata Nees. 

 On trees. Mobile. 

 Louisianian and Carolinian areas. Europe 



Frullania asa-grayana Mont. 

 Winston and Etowah counties. 

 Carolinian and Alleghenian areas. Eastern United States and Canada. 



Family ANTHOCEROTACEAE. 



ANTHOCEROS L. 

 Anthoceros punctatus L. 



Low fields, damp ground. Mobile County, frequent. March. 

 Louisianian to Alleghenian area. Missouri, Nebraska, Ontario. 



Anthoceros laevis L. 



Damp low places. Over the State. Mobile County, common in the open flat pine 

 barrens. 

 Louisianian to Alleghenian area. United States, Canada. Europe. 



Anthoceros carolinianus Michx. 

 Mobile County. With the last, not infrequent. 

 Louisianian and Carolinian areas. Florida to North Carolina. March. 



Anthoceros ravenelii Aust. 



Damp fields, low open pine barrens. Mobile County, not rare. 

 Louisianian area. Louisiana, Florida, South Carolina. 



MOSSES. 



The first record of Alabama mosses appears in Sullivant's Musci 



Alleghanienses, where Fontinalis disticha and Dicranum debile are 



credited to Mobile, collected by Mr. Sullivant in 1843. Prof. Leo 



Lesquereux explored in 1848 parts of the mountain region of north 



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