(121 ) 
very showy flowers pure white. Turks Islands (A7almarson, type 
in Herb. Kew); Fortune Island (Brace, 455); Green Cay ( Coker, 
242); Inagua (Nash & Taylor, 985, 1134, 1231); Cave Cay 
(Britton & Millspaugh, 2825); Great Guana Cay (Britton & 
Millspaugh, 2917). 
LupwWiGIA MICROCARPA Michx. 
Palmetto lands, Golden Grove, Great Bahama (Britton & Mills- 
paugh, 2734). 
HYDROCOTYLE VERTICILLATA Thunb. 
Moist palmetto lands, Barnett’s Point, Great Bahama (Brztton & 
Millspaugh, 2651). The determination is based on leaf specimens 
only. 
JACQUINIA KEYENSIS Mez. 
Very common in coastal thickets and scrub-lands, both in sandy 
and rocky soil, from Abaco and Great Bahama to Inagua. The 
pure white flowers are delightfully fragrant; the corolla 12-14 
mm. broad. The mature fruit is white. 
MIMuSOPS PARVIFOLIA (Nutt.) Radlk. 
The ‘‘ wild sapodilla”” has a wide range in the Bahamas, occur- 
ring as a prominent feature of the coastal thickets and scrub-lands 
from Abaco and Great Bahama to Inagua, less abundant on New 
Previdence than on many other islands. It is identical with the 
tree of South Florida, erroneously referred to JZ. Steberi DC. of 
Trinidad. 
SABBATIA CAMPANULATA (L.) Torr. 
Marsh Harbor, Abaco (race, 7797); palmetto lands, Barnett’s 
Point, Great Bahama (Sritton & Millspaugh, 2663). — 
distinct from the white-flowered S. szmuéata Britton, Bull. 
Bot. Gard. 3: 448, in its larger rose-pink corolla. 
SABBATIA SIMULATA Britton. 
Swampy pine barren, Marsh Harbor, Abaco (race, 7677). 
JACQUEMONTIA RECLINATA House, Bull. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 3: 4 
This species, originally described from specimens collected by 
Small & Carter on Bull Key, Florida, is abundant on the Ba- 
hamas, and clearly distinct from /. yamaicensts, which often grows 
near it; while closely related, I observed no intergrading. The 
leaves of J. reclinata are broad and fleshy, those of J. jamatcensis 
