6o 



Ilex coriacea Rhexia AlifanusX 



Viola primulifolia 



Ascyrnni stans Eleocharis tuberculosa^ 



Rhynchospora glomerata paniculata 



Smilax laurifolia Sabhatia macrophylla N 



Pogonia ophioglossoides 

 Lycopodium ale pecur aides N 

 Helian th us angustifolius 

 Rhynchospora rariflora** 



MOSSES 



Sphagnum sp. 



Another noteworthy plant occurring in the central pine belt 

 and not elsewhere within a hundred miles, as far as known, is 

 Pinus serotina, found by the writer in sour swamps in Chilton 

 and Autauga Counties but farther east than the bogs here 

 described.* 



In the above list evergreens are slightly in the majority among 

 the woody plants, and most of them have fleshy fruits. Among 

 the herbs monocotyledons and dicotyledons are nearly equal 

 in number of species, but the former are more numerous in 

 individuals, as in most bogs and marshes the world over. 



The interested reader may find it worth while to compare this 

 list with one for streams in the Hempstead Plains of Long Island 

 (Mem. Torrey Club 17: 276-278. 1918), McAtee's Maryland 

 list previously referred to, one for moist pine-barrens in Georgia 

 (Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 17: 54-59. 1906), and Dr. Mohr's lists 

 of moist pine-barren plants in southern Alabama (Contr. U. S. 

 Nat. Herb. 6: 116-117, 119-121. 1901). 



University, Ala. 



t Long known as R. glabella Mx., a later name. (See Bull. Torrey Club 

 33: 238. 1906; Rhodora 17: 132. 195.) Reported by Dr. Mohr as having 

 been found by Dr. Eugene A. Smith near Coosada, which is in this same 

 central pine belt, and might be another locality for several of the species 

 here discussed. 



§ Dr. Mohr knew this no farther inland than Autauga County, but I found 

 it in Cherokee County in 1906. See Bull. Torrey Club 36: 591. 1909. 



** See Torreya 10: 222. 1910. 



*See Bull. Torrey Club 33: 524. 1906. 



