ALTAMAHA GRIT REGION OF GEORGIA 265 



berrien. Fl. July. Also in several counties nearer the 

 coast, but not seen farther inland. 

 South Carolina to Florida, in the coastal plain. 

 J. biflorus Ell. ; Sk. i : 407. 181 7. 



/. marginatus biflorus Chapm., Fl. 495. i860. 

 /. aristulatus pinetorum Coville; Small, Fl. 259. 1803. 

 . Typically in moist pine-barrens, more rarely on sand-hills 

 or around the bogs at their bases, bulloch (868), emanuel, 



TATTNALL, MONTGOMERY, DODGE, TELFAIR, COFFEE, IRWIN, 



berrien, dooly, colquitt. Fl. May-June. Pretty widely 

 distributed in the pine-Darrens of Georgia (see Bull. Torrey 

 Club 33: 232. 1906.) 



North Carolina to Florida, in the pine-barrens. 

 J. repens Mx., Fl. 1 : 191. 1803. 



Cephaloxys flabellata Desv., Jour. Bot. 1 : 324. pi. 2. 1808. 



Branch-swamps and shallow ponds, or more commonly a 

 weed in ditches, emanuel, coffee, irwin. Pretty well 

 distributed over the pine-barrens of Georgia. 



North Carolina to Florida, Arkansas, and Texas, in the 

 coastal plain. Also in Cuba. 



Anatomy discussed by Holm, Bull. Torrey Club 26:359-364. 

 pi. 363. 1899. 

 J. dichotomus Ell., Sk. 1 : 406. 181 7; Wiegand, Bull. Torrey Club 

 2 7: 5 2 5~5 2 7- ^oo- 



screven and bulloch, in various habitats, but not well under- 

 stood and perhaps not indigenous. Quite common along 

 the Central R.R. from Millen to Savannah. 



This has been more or less confused with other species, and 

 its distribution has not been satisfactorily worked out. 



J. bufonius L., Sp. PI. 328. 1753. 



bulloch: A weed on damp roadsides near Bloys (862). 

 Cosmopolitan, but natural range and habitat unknown. 



BROMELIACEiE. 

 DENDROPOGON Raf., Neogen. 3. 1825. 

 D. usneoides (L.) Jackson, Ind. Kew. 1:733. 1893. "Moss.' 

 Hanging Moss. 



