ALTAMAHA GRIT REGION OF GEORGIA 191 



New Jersey to Florida and Texas (?) (but not reported from 

 Alabama), in the coastal plain. It should perhaps also 

 turn up in the West Indies, like several of its associates. 



SANICULA L., Sp. PI. 235. 1753. 

 S. Marilandica L., 1. c. 



Montgomery: Bluff along Oconee River near Ochwalkee, 



July 1, 1903. More common farther inland. 

 Widely distributed in North America north of latitude 32 . 



CENTELLA L., PI. Rar. Afr. 28. 1760. 



Glyceria Nutt., Gen. 1 : 177. 1818. Not R. Br. (Changed to 



Chondrocarpus in errata.) 



C. repanda (Pers.) Small, Fl. 859. 1903. 



Hydrocotyle reniformis Walt., Fl. Car. 113. 1753. 



Moist pine-barrens, shallow ponds, etc. Quite common in our 



territory and throughout the pine-barrens of Georgia. Fl. 



July-Aug. 

 Maryland to South Florida and Texas, in the coastal plain. 



Said to have a wide distribution in the tropics, but this 



deserves investigation. 



ARALIACE.E. 

 ARALIA L., Sp. PI. 273. 1753. 

 A. spinosa L., 1. c. Prickly Ash. 



Bluffs and hammock-like places along rivers, but apparently 

 never in genuine hammocks, screven, bulloch, tattnall, 



MONTGOMERY, TELFAIR, COFFEE, BERRIEN. Fl. August. 



Widely distributed over the state in shady places, from the 

 mountains of Northwest Georgia nearly to the coast. 

 Nearly throughout the Eastern United States south of the 

 glaciated region. 



CORNACE^. 

 CORNUS L., Sp. PI. 117. 1753. 

 C. florida L., 1. c. "Dogwood." 



A characteristic inhabitant of hammocks, occurring also on 

 bluffs, and in rich woods along the Altamaha Grit escarp- 



