ALTAMAHA GRIT REGION OF GEORGIA 245 



P. gracilis (Nutt.) Meisn., in DC. Prodr. 14 : 80. 1856. 



Sand-hills, dodge {igyj), Montgomery, and doubtless else- 

 where. In coffee County I have collected a form (2010) 

 with linear acute leaves, but apparently otherwise identical. 

 Fl. September. Coastward to Mcintosh County. 



South Carolina to Florida and Mississippi, m the pine-barrens. 

 THYSANELLA Gray, Bost. Jour. Nat. Hist. 5 : 24. 1845. 

 T. fimbriata (Ell.) Gray, 1. c. (excl descr.). 



Sand-hills, tattnall, Montgomery, coffee, wilcox, ber- 

 rien (16Q4). Fl. Sept.-Oct. Extends inland to the fall- 

 line sand-hills in Taylor County, where Elliott discovered it 

 (see Bull. Torrey Club 31 : 12. 1904), and coastward to 

 Bryan County. 



Also in Florida and southeastern Alabama. 



BRUNNICHIA Banks; Gaert., Fr. & Sem. 1:213. pi. 45. f. 

 2. 1788. 

 B. cirrhosa Banks, 1. c. 



Swamps of the muddy rivers. Oconee River near Mount 

 Vernon, and Ocmulgee River near Lumber City. Fl. July— 

 Aug. Extends down the Altamaha to Doctortown and 

 Barrington, but more frequent along the Flint and Chatta- 

 hoochee Rivers in the upper third of the coastal plain. 



South Carolina to Florida (River Junction), Illinois, and Ar- 

 kansas, in the coastal plain. 



ARISTOLOCHIACE.E. 

 ARISTOLOCHIA L., Sp. PI. 960. 1753. 



A. Serpentaria L., Sp. PI. 961. 1753. 



wilcox : Upper Seven Bluffs, May 17, 1904. Does not prop- 

 erly belong to our flora, but is more common in the upper 

 third of the coastal plain and northward to the mountains 

 and beyond, much as in the case of Sanguinaria and Podo- 

 phyllum, already mentioned. 

 Connecticut to Michigan, northern Florida, and Missouri. 



LORANTHACE.E. 

 PHORADENDRON Nutt., Jour. Acad. Phila. II. 1 : 185. 1848. 

 P. flavescens (Pursh) Nutt.; Gray, Man. ed. 2, 383, 1856. "Mis- 

 tletoe. " 



