( 429 ) 
Bull Key, opposite Lemon City, Sizad? & Carter, no. 642. 
Along Boca Ratone Lake, Small & Carter, no. 1242. 
Stillingia tenuis sp. nov. 
A shrub 3-12 dm. tall, with slender virgate stems or branches, 
the a Se pically unbranched at the base, the bark ultimately with 
many transverse cracks: leaves early deciduous from the lower part 
of the stem and the branches, mostly approximate at the tips of the 
branches; blades linear or nearly so, commonly narrowly linear, 
2-10.5 cm. long, finely, closely a shallowly toothed : staminate 
diameter: seeds 4-4.5 mm. long, shallowly rugose 
A woody species related to Stillingta aquatica Chapm., from 
which it differs in the more slender habit, narrowly linear leaf- 
blades, the slender red spikes with small bracts and large glands. 
The type-specimens were collected in the everglades between 
Homestead and Camp Jackson, in May, 1904 (Small & Wilson, 
no. 1580). Other specimens referable to this species are as fol- 
lows: 
Between Cutler and Camp Longview, Syzall & Carter, nos. 
1095, 1297 and 1440. 
Chamaesyce hyssopifolia (L.) 
Euphorbia hyssopifolia L. Syst. Ed. 10. 1048. 1759. 
is well-marked species, ieee collected on some of the 
West Indian Islands, was found in the pinelands along the home- 
stead trail near Camp Longview . Mr J. J. Carter and the writer, 
November, 1903 (no. 859). 
Chamaesyce pinetorum sp. nov. 
Perennial: plants pubescent with pale or white hairs: stem 
branched at the base, the branches ascending, spreading or pros- 
m 
revolute, paler and less pubescent beneath than above, entire, short- 
petioled: involucre broadly campanulate, about 1 mm _ high, copi- 
ously hirsute; glands relatively large, on broad stalks, elevated 
above the triangular ciliate involucral lobes, the oy eee thick, 
very narrow or a mere border, pubescent without: capsules de- 
ressed, 2 mm. wide, hirsute: seeds ovoid, 1 mm. long, gray-papil- 
lose, triangled, obtuse, the faces cone wrinkl ed. 
