144 HARPER 



ERIGERON L., Sp. PL 863. 1753. 

 E. ramosus (Walt.) B. S. P., Prel. Cat. N. Y. 27. 1888; MacM., 

 Met. Minn. 526. 1892. 

 Montgomery: Dry sandy soil near Mount Vernon, June 30, 



1903. Probably not native. 

 Widely distributed in North America, doubtless a weed in 

 most places. 



E. vernus (L.) T. & G., Fl. 2: 176. 1841. 



Intermediate and moist pine-barrens and shallow ponds, 

 nearly throughout the pine-barrens of Georgia. Fl. April- 

 August. 



Virginia to South Florida and Louisiana, in the coastal plain. 



ASTER L., Sp. PL 872. 1753. 

 A. eryngiifolius T. & G., Fl. 2:502. 1843. 



decatur : Moist pine-barrens near Recovery, Aug. 14, 1903. 



(1932.) Rare. Fl. summer. 

 Known otherwise only from adjacent parts of Florida. (See 

 Bull. Torrey Club 32: 169. 1905.) 

 A. squarrosus Walt., Fl. Car. 209. 1788. (Not of AIL, 1785.) 

 Intermediate pine-barrens, etc. screven, emanuel, tattnall, 



APPLING, COFFEE (fio), IRWIN, BERRIEN (658), COLQUITT. 



Frequent in our territory and coastward. Flowers probably 



in November. Extends inland a little beyond our limits, 



in Johnson, Laurens, and Dooly Counties. 

 North Carolina to northeastern Florida, in the pine-barrens. 

 A. adnatus Nutt., Jour. Acad. Phila. 7:82. 1834. 



Intermediate pine-barrens; less common than the preceding. 



berrien, colquitt, thomas. Also in Sumter, Lee, Mitchell, 



and Early Counties in the Lower Oligocene region. Flowers 



probably in November. 

 Pine-barrens of Georgia, Florida, and Alabama. Also in the 



Bahamas (Britton). 



SERICOCARPUS Nees, Gen. & Sp. Ast. 148. 1832. 

 S. bifoliatus (Walt.) Porter, Mem. Torrey Club 5:322. 1894. 

 5. tortifolius (Mx.) Nees, Gen. & Sp. Ast. 151. 1832. 

 Aster Collinsii Nutt. 



