206 HARPER 



RHAMNACEiE. 

 CEANOTHUS L., Sp. PI. 195. 1753. 

 C. Americanus L., 1. c. Red-shank. 



Bluffs, dry pine-barrens, etc. bulloch, Montgomery, coffee, 

 wilcox. Fl. May-June. Not noticed nearer the coast, 

 but common farther inland, particularly in Middle Georgia. 

 Widely distributed in the Eastern United States. 

 C. microphyllus Mx., Fl. 1 : 154. 1803. 



Dry pine-barrens and sand-hills ; frequent but nowhere abun- 

 dant. Noted in most of the counties. Fl. late spring. 

 Extends inland to Sumter Co. 

 Reported also from several stations in East Florida. 

 BERCHEMIA Neck.; DC, Prodr. 2 : 23. 1825. 

 B. scandens (Hill) Trel., Trans. Acad. Sci. St. L. 5:364. 1889. 

 Rattan Vine. 



Creek- and river-swamps, tattnall, Montgomery, telfair. 

 More common in the Lower Oligocene region, but extends 

 coastward to Camden County. 

 Virginia to Florida, Missouri, and Texas, in the coastal plain; 

 also in Northwest Georgia (See Bull. Torrey Club 28 : 474. 

 1 901) and adjacent Tennessee (Gattinger) . 

 Leaf-anatomy described by Kearney, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 

 • 5 =494- i9 QI - 



ACERACE.E. 

 ACER L., Sp. PI. 1055. 1753. 

 A. rubrumL., 1. c. Maple. Redbud. 



Creek- and river-swamps, common. Fl. February. Probably 

 grows in every county in Georgia (including varieties or 

 closely related species which I have not attempted to dis- 

 tinguish) . 

 Common throughout temperate Eastern North America. 

 (See maps in Bulletin 59 of the U. S. Bureau of Forestry, 



1905-) 



JESCULACEjE. 



jESCULUS L., Sp. PI. 344. 1753. 

 A. Pavia L., 1. c. Buckeye. 



Bluffs along the muddy rivers, near the inland edge of our 



