218 HARPER 



APIOS Moench, Meth. 165. 1794. 



A. tuberosa Moench, 1. c. 



colquitt: Branch-swamps near Moultrie, Sept. 23, 1902, 

 Aug. 22, 1903. Fl. August. Known also from Sumter 

 and Camden Counties. 



Widely distributed in the Eastern United States. 



CLITORIA L„ Sp. PI. 753. 1753. 

 C. Mariana L., 1. c. 



Sand-hills; rare, bulloch, Montgomery. . Fl. May-Aug. 

 Also in Middle Georgia, in Sumter County, and on Cumber- 

 land Island, usually as a weed. 



Widely distributed in the Eastern United States, but natural 

 range and habitat uncertain. 



BRADBURYA Raf., Fl. Lud. 104. 18 17. 



B. Virginiana (L.) Kuntze, Rev. 1 : 164. 1891. 

 Montgomery: Bluff along Oconee River above Ochwalkee, 



July 1, 1903. More common in the upper third of the 

 coastal plain, but usually a weed. 

 Maryland to South Florida, Arkansas, and Texas, in the 

 coastal plain; also in tropical America, where it perhaps 

 originated. 



GALACTIA P. Br., Hist. Jam. 298. 1756. 

 G. mollis Mx.,Fl. 2:61. 1803. 



bulloch: Dry pine-barrens near Bloys {825). tattnall: 

 Sandy west bank of Ohoopee River, June 24, 1903. Also in 

 Dooly, Sumter, and Lee Counties, in the Lower Oligocene 

 region. 

 North Carolina to Florida, in the pine-barrens. 



G. regularis (L.) B. S. P., Prel. Cat. N. Y. 14. 1888; Britton 

 Mem. Torrey Club 5 : 208. 1892. 

 Sand-hills, especially toward the hammocks at their bases. 



TATTNALL, MONTGOMERY, TELFAIR, COFFEE (1450), BERRIEN. 



Fl. June-July. Inland to Richmond County and coast- 

 ward to Effingham. 

 New York to Florida and Louisiana, in the coastal plain. 



