242 HARPER 



Club 32 1143, 160. /. 1. 1905. The illustration in Torreya 

 4 : 140 represents another station for it.) Known elsewhere 

 in the state only on flat granite rocks in Middle Georgia, 

 where it flowers from May to September. 

 New York to Alabama, mostly in the Piedmont region. 

 AIZOACEJE. 

 MOLLUGO L., Sp. PI. 89. 1753. 



M. VERTICILLATA L., 1. C. 



wilcox : Near dwelling, Queensland, May 17, 1904. More 



common in the older-settled parts of the state. 

 Widely distributed in North and South America, but natural 

 range and habitat unknown. 



NYCTAGINACEiE. 

 BOERHAVIA L., Sp. PI. 3. 1753. 



B. ERECTA L., 1. C. 



A weed in Tifton, Sept. 27, 1902. More common in larger and 

 older cities in other parts of the state (e. g., Athens, Ameri- 

 cas, Brunswick). Fl. June-Oct. 

 South Carolina to Mexico and the West Indies. Certainly 

 not native in Georgia, and probably introduced from the 

 tropics. * 



ILLECEBRACEiE. 

 GIBBESIA Small, Bull. Torrey Club 25 1621. 1898. 

 G. Rugelii (Shuttl.) Small, 1. c. 



Montgomery: Lower slopes of sand-hills of Little Ocmulgee 

 River, Sept. 10, 1903. {1990). Fl. Aug.-Sept. Known 

 otherwise only from the lime-sink regions of Decatur and 

 Lowndes Counties, and a few places in Florida. 



SIPHONYCHIA T. &G.,F1. 1 :17a. 1838. 

 .S. Americana (Nutt.) T. & G., Fl. 1 : 173. 1838. 



jSand-hills ; not common, coffee (700) , irwin, berrien i 696) . 

 Fl. Sept-Oct. Inland to Richmond County (A. Cuthbert). 

 "South Carolina to Florida, in the pine-barrens, with the above 

 exception. 



S. pauciflora Small., Fl. 402. 1903. 



Hammocks and sand-hills. Perhaps intergrades with the 



