174 MISSISSIPPI STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY [Bull. 
Meibomia bracteosa (Michx.) Kuntz, (Desmodium cuspidatum 
Hook.) Bracted Tick Trefoil. 
Dry, thin upland soils. Oxford. September. 
Meibomia viridiflora (L.) Kuntze, (Desmodium viridiflorum 
Beck.) Green-Flowered Tick Trefoil. 
In light, moist woodland soils. Oxford, Bay St. Louis. 
July-September. 
Allison Herb. 
Meibomia laevigata (Nutt.) Kuntze, Desmodium laevigatum 
DC.) Smooth Tick Trefoil. 
Southern counties (Hilg. Rep.) August-September. 
Meibomia Marilandica (L. Kuntze, (Desmodium Marilandicum 
Boott. ) 
Central and south Mississippi (Hilg.Rep.) August-Sept. 
LESPEDEZA Michx. 
Lespedeza repens Bart. (L.) (L. prostrata Ell.) Creeping Les- 
pedeza. 
Perhaps distributed over the state. Starkville (Tracy.) 
June. 
Lespeceza procumbens Michx. Trailing Lespedeza. 
Dry soil on borders of fields. Reported in Hilg. Rep. Sept. 
Lespedeza violacea (.) Pers. (Hedysarum violaceum-L.) 
Open woods and _ copses. Lawrence Co. (Hilg.Ms.) ; 
Starkville (T September. 
Lespedeza stuvei angustifolia Britton. 
Probably found in the southern counties. August. 
Lespetiera, frutescens (L.) Britton (Hedysarum frutescens L.) 
DGush Clover. 
Open uplands; more common in old fields of light sandy 
soil. Seooba: Oxford.’ October. 
Geol. Surv. Herb. 
