ALTAMAHA GRIT REGION OF GEORGIA 205 



South to Florida and west to Arkansas (?) and Texas (?), 

 in the pine-barrens. 



VITACEjE. 

 PARTHENOCISSUS Planch, in DC. Mon. Phan. 5 2 : 447. 1887. 

 P. quinquefolia (L.) Planch., 1. c. 448. Virginia Creeper. 

 Hammocks, bluffs, etc. bulloch, emanuel, Montgomery, 

 wilcox, berrien. Fl. early summer. More common farther 

 inland. 

 Widely distributed in Eastern North America. Also in Cuba 

 ( ?) and the Bahamas. 



AMPELOPSIS Mx.,Fl. 1 : 159. 1803. 

 A. arborea (L.) Rusby, Mem. Torrey Club 5 : 221. 1894. 



Hedera arborea (L.) Walt. ; Cissus stans Pers. ; Vitis bipinnata 



(Mx.) T. & G. 

 Swamps of the muddy rivers. Montgomery: Near Mount 

 Vernon; telfair: Near Lumber City; coffee: Barrow's 

 Bluff. Fl. June. More common in the Lower Oligocene 

 region, where it is often a weed along fences, etc. 

 Virginia to Florida, Illinois, and Mexico, in the coastal plain. 

 Also in Cuba. 



VITIS L., Sp. PI. 200. 1753. 

 V. aestivalis Mx., Fl. 2 : 230. 1803. Wild Grape. 



Montgomery : Stallings' Bluff on the Oconee River near Mount 



Vernon, June 30, 1903. Fl. late spring. Widely distributed 



over the state, mostly inland. 



Nearly throughout Eastern North America. 



V. rotundifolia Mx., Fl. 2 : 231. 1803. Muscadine. Bullace. 



Hammocks, bluffs, and non-alluvial creek-swamps, emanuel, 



TATTNALL, MONTGOMERY, DODGE, TELFAIR, COFFEE, BERRIEN. 



Fl. May. Grows nearly all over the state in a variety of 

 habitats, from muddy swamps to drifting sands on the coast. 



Widely distributed in the Southeastern United States. 

 V. sp.. 



An unidentified species closely related to the preceding 

 is abundant in the Oconee River swamp near Stallings' 

 Bluff, Montgomery County, but was not collected for lack 

 of flowers and fruit. 



