150 HARPER 



E. tortifolium Chapm., Bot. Gaz. 3:5. 1878. 



colquitt: Dry pine-barrens south of Moultrie (1Q46). Fl. 

 Aug.-Sept. Also reported from the fall-line sand-hills in 

 Richmond County (A. Cuthbert), and from the pine-barrens 

 of Decatur County (type-locality, Chapman) and neighbor- 

 ing parts of Alabama and Florida. 



? E. Mohrii Greene; Mohr, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 6: 762. pi. n. 



IQOI. 



appling: Flat pine-barrens near Prentiss (ipp4); berrien: 

 Margin of shallow pond near Tifton (1681). 

 E. lecheaefolium Greene, Pittonia 3:177. 1897. 



dooly: Dry pine-barrens east of Wenona, Sept. 1, 1903. Also 

 known from the lime-sink region of Decatur County, and 

 neighboring parts of Florida and Alabama. 

 E. album L., Mant. in. 1767. 



Dry pine-barrens and sand-hills, coffee, wilcox, berrien, 

 colquitt, decatur. Fl. July-Sept. Ranges inland to the 

 mountains of Northwest Georgia. 

 Widely distributed in the Southeastern United States. 

 E. rotundifolium L., Sp. PL 837. 1753. 



Intermediate and moist pine-barrens, etc., nearly throughout 

 South Georgia. Fl. July-Sept. Occurs rarely in North- 

 west Georgia. 

 Widely distributed in the Southeastern United States, and ex- 

 tending northward to Long Island, mostly in the coastal plain. 

 E. verbenaefolium Mx., Fl. 2:98. 1803. 



With the preceding or in similar situations, but less common. 



DODGE, TELFAIR, APPLING, IRWIN, COLQUITT. Fl. Aug.-Sept. 



Also in the flat country toward the coast, and in Pike County, 

 Middle Georgia. 



Range similar to that of E. rotundifolium, but extending north- 

 eastward to Massachusetts. (See Rhodora 7:76. 1905.) 

 E. perfoliatum L., Sp. PL 838. 1753. Boneset. 



Branch-swamps, and places where the Lafayette formation 

 is supposed to be absent; not common, berrien, colquitt. 

 Fl. September. 



Widely distributed in the Eastern United States. 



