G3G PLANT LIFE OF ALABAMA. 



Ludwigia linifolia Poir. Snppl. 3 : 513. 1813. FLAX-LEAF LUDWIGIA. 



Chap.Fl. 141. 



Louisianiau area. North Carolina to Florida. 



ALABAMA: Lower Pine region. Border pine-barren ponds. Mobile County. 

 Grand Bay. Flowers August 16' (1869) ; rare. 



Type locality : "Cette plante crolt dans 1'Amerique septentrionale." 



Herb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 



Ludwigia glandulosa Walt. Fl. Car. 88. 1788. 



CYLINDRICAL-FRUITED LUDWIGIA. 



Ludwigia brachycarpa Lam. Encycl. 3 : 331. 1789. 



L. cylindrica Ell. Sk. 1 : 213. 1818. 



Gray, Man. ed. 6, 188. Chap. Fl. 141. 



Carolinian and Louisianian area. South Carolina to Florida, west to Louisiana 

 and Arkansas and southern Illinois. 



ALABAMA : Coosa Valley. Coast plain. Shady swampy places. Etowah County, 

 near Gadsdeu, pine woods, 450 feet. Mobile County, swampy thickets, Dauphin way ; 

 river swamp on the telegraph road, Grand Bay. Flowers July to September; not 

 rare. Bushy, 1^ to 2 feet high. 



Type locality : South Carolina. 



Herb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 



Ludwigia pilosa Walt. Fl. Car. 89. 1788. HOARY LUDWIGIA. 



Ludivigia moUis Michx. Fl. Bor. Am. 1 : 90. 1803. 



Ell. Sk. 1 : 214. Chap. Fl. 141. 



Louisianian area. South Carolina and Florida to Louisiana. 



ALABAMA: Central Prairie region 1o Coast plain. Elmore County, Coosada sta- 

 tion (E. A. Smith). Montgomery County, etc. Miry borders of ponds, ditches. 

 Flowers July; frequent. Abundant throughout the Lower Pine region and Coast 

 plain. 



Type locality: South Carolina. 



Herb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 



ISNARDIA L. Sp. PI. 1 : 120. 1753. 



Isnardia palustris L. Sp. PI. 1 : 120. 1753. WATER PURSLANE. 



Ludwigia palustris Ell. Sk. 1 : 211. 1821. 



Gray, Man. ed. 6, 188. Chap. Fl. 142. Coulter, Contr. Nat. Herb. 2 : 113. Griseb. 

 Fl. Brit. W. I nd. 271. 



A cosmopolitan weed, Europe, western Asia, East and West Indies, Mexico. 



Allegbenian to Louisianiau areas. Nova Scotia to the Saskatchewan, south to the 

 Gulf, west to New Mexico. 



ALABAMA : All over the State. In miry soil and stagnant pools, floating and root 

 ing, June to October. 



rpe locality: "Habitat in Galliae, Alsatiae, Russiae, Virginiae fluviis." 

 ferb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 



One hundred and sixty species, cooler and temperate regions of the globe. Europe, 

 Asia. North America, about 38. 



EFILOBITJM L. Sp. PI. 1 : 347. 1753. 



ty species, cooler and temperate regi 

 about 38. 



Epilobium coloratum Muhl. ; Willd.Enuni. 1:411. 1809. 



COLORED WILLOW-HERB. 



Epilobium tetragonum Pursh, Fl. 1 : 250. 1814. 



Ell. Sk. 1 : 445. Gray, Man. ed. 6, 189. Chap. Fl. 141. 



Alleghenian and Carolinian areas. Nova Scotia to Saskatchewan and the Rocky 

 Mountains; New England west to Dakota, Nebraska, and Kansas, south from New 

 York to West Virginia; Ohio Valley to Missouri and along the mountains to South 

 Carolina. 



ALABAMA: Mountain region. Metamorphic hills. Cleburne County, Arbacoochee, 

 1,200 feet. Flowers rose-pink; July. Rare. Perennial. 



Type locality : "Hab. in Pensylvania." 

 Herb. Geol. Surv. 



Herb. Mohr. 



