224 HARPER 



telfair, appling, coffee, berrien. Fl. June-Aug. Ex- 

 tends inland to the Pine Mountains of Middle Georgia (see 

 Bull. Torrey Club 30 : 294. 1903), and coastward to Cumber- 

 land Island, but in some places only a weed. 

 North Carolina to Florida and Louisiana, in the coastal plain, 

 with the above-mentioned exception. 



TRIFOLIUM L., Sp. PI. 794. 1753. 

 T. repens L., Sp. PI. 767. 1753. White Clover. 



Lulaville and Fitzgerald, May 17, 1904. Common in Middle 

 Georgia and northward, introduced from Europe. 



LUPINUS L., Sp. PI. 721. 1753. 

 L. villosus Willd., Sp. PI. 3 : 1029. 1805. (Plate XXII, Fig. 2). 



Dry and intermediate pine-barrens ; not abundant, tattnall 

 (2148), berrien. Fl. April. 



North Carolina to northern Florida and Louisiana, in the pine- 

 barrens. 

 L. diffusus Nutt., Gen. 2 193. 1818. 



Sand-hills; not common, bulloch, emanuel (2097), tatt- 

 nall, coffee, wilcox. Fl. April. Extends inland to 

 Richmond and Laurens Counties. 



North Carolina to central Florida and Mississippi, in the 

 coastal plain. 

 L. perennis L., Sp. PI. 721. 1753. 



? L. gracilis Nutt., Jour. Acad. Phila. 7 : 115. 1834. 



Sand-hills; not common, bulloch (969), tattnall, Mont- 

 gomery, coffee, berrien. Fl. April. Also on the sandhills 

 of the Oconee River opposite Dublin, and on sand-banks 

 along the head-waters of the same river in Middle Georgia 

 (see Bull. Torrey Club 27:328. 1900). 



Widely distributed in the Eastern United States, but often 

 in unnatural habitats northward. 



Root-anatomy studied by W. E. Britton, Bull. Torrey Club 

 30 :6o5. 1903. 



CROTALARIA L., Sp. PI. 714. 1753. 

 C. rotundifolia (Walt.) Poir., Suppl. 2 1402. 181 1. 



Sand-hills, etc.; rather rare, berrien, colquitt, thomas. 



