^0 TENNESSEE FLORA. 



* L. (lattiii^eri Gray. Cedar glades of Middle Tenn. Rocky 

 banks of Ciiniberlaiid river. Frequent May-June. 



L. Nnliallii lloem. & Schult. Mountain swamps. Sewanee. 

 July. 



L. inflata L. Dry, argillaceous and siliceous soils. August- 

 Seuteniber. 



CAMPANULACE^. 



S|»e('ularia perfoliata A. DC. Waste ground and roadsides. 

 April-May. 



Campanula aparinokles Pursh. Mountain swamps and laurel 

 thickets. July- August. 



C. divaracata Michx. Cumberland and Alleghany Mts. July- 

 August. 



C. Americana L. Thickets and dry Avoodlands. August- 

 September. 



ERICACE^. 



Gaylussacia braehyeera Gray. Mountains on Ocoe river. 

 June- July. 



G. frondosa Torr. & Grav. Mountains of East Tenn. April- 

 May. 



(i. resinosa Torr. & Gray. Highlands. Valley of East Tenn., 

 etc. April— May. 



Vacciniuni arboreum Marsh. Highlands and siliceous soil 

 generally. May. 



V. stainineuni L. Oak barrens and highlands. May-June. 



V. coryiubosum L. Mountains and ridges of East Tenn. 

 Highlands. April-May. 



y^ar. pallidum Gray. {V. Constablei Gray .) Mountains of 

 East Tenn. June. 



"^Lobelia Gattingeri Gray. Flowers 4-5 lines long:, deep blue; stem 

 smooth, weak and branching; leaves thin, sessile, oblong-ovate, obtuse, 

 serrate, the lowest obovate; racemes peduncled, very slender, many- flow- 

 ered ; calyx-tube ovoid, longer than its pedicel, shorter than the linear- 

 subulate entire lobes, the sinuses not appendaged, but slightly callous. 

 The pedicels are sometines i)rovided with small bracteols. Plant 6-20 

 inches high. Regular flowering time first week in May, but some plants 

 are tound fl')wering as late as August. Its home is the limestone basin 

 of Middle Tenn., and prominently moist places in the cedar glades First 

 ■collected about 1869, at Lavergne, seventeen miles south of Nashvilli. 



