264 HARPER 



south westward, and probably northeastward also. Fl. June— 

 Aug. Inland to Sumter and Randolph Counties and coast- 

 ward to Charleston. 

 New Jersey to northern Florida and Louisiana, in the coastal 

 plain. 



JUNCACEjE. 



JUNCUS L., Sp. PI. 325- 1753. 

 J. Elliottii Chapm., Fl. 494. i860. 



"J. acuminatus (?) Mx." Ell., Sk. 1 1409. 1817. 

 (?) /. Pondii Wood, Class-Book, 724. 1861. 

 Branch-swamps, etc., sometimes ruderal; rather rare, bul- 

 loch (841, 864, 86g), emanuel. Possibly not indigenous. 

 North Carolina to central Florida and Texas, in the coastal 

 plain. 

 J. diffusissimus Buckl., Proc. Acad. Phila. 1862 :g. 1862. 

 emanuel: Marshy place near Stillmore, July 3, 1901 {gg5). 

 (See Bull. Torrey Club 30: 327. 1903.) As I have not met 

 with it since, its indigeneity may be doubted. 

 Ranges mostly westward. 

 J. trigonocarpus St'eud., Syn. PL Cyp. 308. 1855. 



Moist pine-barrens, etc.; common, emanuel, dodge, coffee 



(717), IRWIN, BERRIEN (667), DOOLY, WORTH, COLQUITT, 



decatur. Fl. Aug.-Sept. Inland to Americus and Meri- 

 wether County (see Bull. Torrey Club 30 : 294. 1903) and 

 coastward to Charlton County. 

 South Carolina to Middle Florida and Mississippi, mostly in 

 the pine-barrens. 



J.r polycephalus Mx., Fl. 1 :292. 1803. 



Typically in rather open branch-swamps, more rarely in other 

 related habitats, bulloch, emanuel, tattnall, Mont- 

 gomery, TELFAIR, COFFEE, WILCOX, IRWIN, COLQUITT. 



Pretty widely distributed in the pine-barrens of Georgia. 

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

 barrens. 

 J. scirpoides compositus Harper, Bull. Torrey Club 33 : 233. 1906. 

 Margins of sand-hill ponds and bogs, dodge, coffee (1445), 



