138 HARPER 



BALDWINIA Nutt., Gen. 2:175. 18 18. 

 B. uniflora Nutt., 1. c. 



Dry, intermediate, and moist pine-barrens; common not only 

 in our territory but throughout the pine-barrens of Georgia, 

 i. e., from the inland edge of the Lower Oligocene to within a 

 few miles of the coast. Fl. July-September. 

 North Carolina to northern Florida and Louisiana, strictly 

 confined to the coastal plain. 

 B. atropurpurea Harper, Bull. Torrey Club 28:483. 1901. 



Moist pine-barrens, not rare, bulloch, coffee, wilcox, 



IRWIN, BERRIEN (662, type), DOOLY, WORTH, COLQUITT 



(1644). Fl. Aug.-Oct. Also in Wayne and Pierce 

 Counties, in the flat pine-barren region. (See Bull. Torrey 

 Club3i:26. i904;32:27o. 1905 ; Torreya 5 : 114. 1905.) 

 Not known elsewhere. 



BIDENSL.,Sp. PL 832. 1753. 



B. bipinnata L., 1. c. Spanish Needles. 



A weed. Seen in the streets of Tifton, Sept. 27, 1902. More 

 common in the older-settled parts of the state. 



Widely distributed in the Eastern United States and Mexico, 

 but natural range and habitat uncertain. 



COREOPSIS L.,Sp. PI. 907. 1753. 



C. nudata Nutt., Gen. 2:180. 1818. 



Common in shallow ponds, and occasionally in branches. 



BULLOCH, TATTNALL (TOOl), COFFEE (2ip8), IRWIN, BERRIEN, 



colquitt. Fl. April-June. Widely distributed in the 



pine-barrens of Georgia. 

 Also reported from northeastern Florida. 

 C. angustifolia Ait., Hort. Kew. 3:253. 1789. 



Moist pine-barrens, coffee, wilcox, irwin, berrien (661), 



DOOLY, COLQUITT (l666), THOMAS. Fl. July-Sept. 



North Carolina to Florida and Louisiana, in the pine-barrens. 

 Several species very closely related to this have been pro- 

 posed, and some of my material may perhaps be refer- 

 able to one or more of them. 

 C. delphinifolia Lam., Encyc. 2:108. 1786. 



(?) C. Wrayi Nutt., Jour. Acad. Phil. 7:76. 1834. 



