172 HARPER 



CUSCUTACEJE. 

 CUSCUTA L., Sp. PI. 124. 1753. 

 C. indecora Choisy, Mem. Soc. Genev. 9 : 278. pi. 3. f. 5. 1841. 

 colquitt: On a considerable variety of herbs, in moist pine- 

 barrens, at two or three places near Moultrie {1650.) Fl. 

 September. Not seen elsewhere in Georgia. 

 Ranges mostly westward, but distribution not well worked out. 



C. compacta Juss., Choisy, 1. c. 9: 281. pl.4.f.2. 1841. LoveVine. 

 On shrubs, mostly in swamps, dooly, coffee, berrien, 



colquitt. Fl. September. Pretty well distributed over 

 the state, perhaps less common eastward. 

 Widely distributed in the Eastern United States, but probably 

 not everywhere native. 



CONVOLVULACE^. 

 BREWERIA R. Br., Prodr. 1 1487. 1810. 

 B. humistrata (Walt.) Gray, Syn. Fl. 2 121.7. 1878. 



Dry pine-barrens, sand-hills, etc. bulloch, tattnall, Mont- 

 gomery, COFFEE, IRWIN, BERRIEN, COLQUITT. Fl. May-Sept. 



Inland to Middle Georgia (see Bull. Torrey Club 27:328. 

 1900) and coastward to Cumberland Island. Varies con- 

 siderably in the width of its leaves. 

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



B. aquatica (Walt.) Gray, 1. c. 



Around shallow ponds (not cypress ponds. See p. 79). 



BULLOCH, IRWIN, BERRIEN, COLQUITT. Fl. June-July. 



More common in the Lower Oligocene region. 

 Virginia (?) to central Florida and Texas (?), in the coastal 

 plain; but the only Alabama station reported by Dr. Mohr 

 is in the Palaeozoic region. There are evidently some sur- 

 prising gaps in its known range. 



DICHONDRA Forst., Char. Gen. PI. 39. pi. 40. 1776. 



D. Carolinensis Mx., Fl. 1 : 136. 1803. 



telfair: Ocmulgee River swamp near Lumber City, Sept. 11, 

 1903. Not free from the suspicion of being introduced. In 



