ALTAMAHA GRIT REGION OF GEORGIA 203 



rarely in moist or even rather dry pine-barrens, bulloch, 



TATTNALL, TELFAIR, COFFEE, WILCOX, IRWIN, BERRIEN, 



dooly, colquitt, thomas. Fl. June-Aug. Nearly through- 

 out the pine-barren region of Georgia. 



South Carolina to central Florida and Mississippi, in the 

 pine -barrens. 

 H. fasciculatum Lam., Encyc 4 : 160. 1796. 



Moist pine-barrens, branch-swamps, and shallow ponds; 

 common throughout the pine-barrens of Georgia. Fl. 

 April— A.ug. (I have not been able to distinguish H. as- 

 palathoides Willd., which differs chiefly in size.) 



North Carolina to central Florida and Texas, in the pine- 

 barrens. 

 H. galioides pallidum Mohr. Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb. 6:621. 1901. 



Swamps of streams of the second class (see p. 28). tatt- 

 nall: Ohoopee River; Montgomery and telfair: Gum 

 Swamp Creek. Fl. July. More common in the Lower 

 Oligocene region. 



Reported also from Florida, Alabama, and Mississippi, in the 

 coastal plain. 



H. opacumT. &. G., Fl. i : 163. 1838. 



Intermediate pine-barrens, etc. appling, coffee, irwin, 

 dooly, colquitt, thomas. Fl. summer. Extends inland 

 to Sumter County and coastward to Camden, but not re- 

 corded east of the Altamaha River and its tributaries. 



South to central Florida and west to Louisiana, in the pine- 

 barrens. 



H. acutifolium Ell., Sk. 2:26. 1821. 



Shallow cypress ponds, irwin, colquitt. More common 



in Sumter County, where it flowers July-September. 

 Also reported from Florida and Alabama, but distribution 

 not well understood. 

 H. gymnanthum Engelm. & Gray, Bost. Jour. Nat. Hist. 5; 

 212. 1847. 

 bulloch: Shallow pine-barren pond near Bloys, June 27, 1001 

 {957). More common in the Lower Oligocene region. 



