ALTAMAHA GRIT REGION OF GEORGIA 217 



P. grandiflora Walt., 1. c. 



Dry pine-barrens; rare, bulloch (958), irwin. Also in 



Sumter and Charlton Counties. Fl. June-Sept. 

 South Carolina to central Florida and Mississippi, in the 



coastal plain. 



OXALIDACEiE. 



OXALIS L., Sp. PL 433- 1753- 

 O. recurva Ell., Sk. 1 1526. 1821; Small, Bull. Torrey Club 

 21 : 471— 474. pi. 422. 1894. 

 screven: Dry pine-barrens near Sylvania, April 1, 1904 

 {2082). emanuel: Near Swainsboro, April 5, 1904. 

 Possibly not native. More common farther inland, but 

 usually as a weed. 

 Widely distributed in the Southeastern United States, but 

 natural range and habitat uncertain. 



LINACE^). 

 LINUM L., Sp. PI. 277. 1753. 

 L. Floridanum [Planch.] Trel., Trans. St. L. Acad. Sci. 5 : 13. 

 1886. 

 Intermediate pine-barrens; not abundant, bulloch {949), 



TATTNALL, MONTGOMERY, IRWIN, DECATUR. Fl. June-July. 



Inland to Washington and Sumter Counties and coastward 

 to Ware and Charlton. 

 South Carolina to central Florida and Louisiana (?), in the 

 coastal plain. 



LEGUMINOSjE. 

 PHASEOLUS L., Sp. PI. 723. 1753. 



P. polystachyus (L.) B. S. P., Prel. Cat. N. Y. 15. 1888; MacM., 



Met. Minn. 312. 1892. 

 Wooded bluffs along the muddy rivers. Montgomery: 



Stallings' Bluff; telfair: near Lumber City; wilcox: 



Upper Seven Bluffs. Fl. June. More common farther 



inland and northward. 

 Widely distributed in the Eastern United States. 



