274 HARPER 



C. glaucescens Ell., Sk. 2 ".553. 1824. 



Chiefly in branch-swamps. Montgomery, telfair, coffee, 

 irwin, colquitt, thomas. Remarkable for its late flower- 

 ing, June- July. Inland to Americus and coastward to 

 Charlton County. 



South Carolina to Florida and Mississippi, in the coastal plain. 



C. sp. (See Bull. Torrey Club 32 :46c 1905.) 



Differs from the preceding in having its pistillate spikes on 

 stouter mostly erect peduncles, and flowering regularly 

 about three months earlier. It is not at all rare, and was 

 doubtless known to southern botanists of a century ago, 

 but it is almost impossible to decide if any of them have 

 ever given it a tenable name, on account of the confusion 

 in this particular group. 

 Cypress ponds principally, coffee, wilcox, berrien, and 

 doubtless other counties. Seems to be pretty well dis- 

 tributed over the pine-barrens of Georgia. 



C. macrokolea Steud., Syn. PI. Cyp. 223. 1855. 



What I took for this species was noted in cypress ponds in 

 irwin (near Ocilla, July 15, 1902) and decatur (near 

 Climax, Aug. 13, 1903). More study is needed to determine 

 the specific limits of this and the two preceding. 



Florida to Missouri (?) and Texas, in the coastal plain. 



C. Walteriana Bailey, Bull. Torrey Club 20 1429. 1893 

 C. striata Mx., Fl. 2: 174. 1803. Not of Gilib., 1792. 

 In rather permanent ponds; not common, screven (2090), 

 irwin. Fl. April. Inland to Dooly County and coastward 

 to Effingham, but details of distribution imperfectly under- 

 -stood. See Bull Torrey Club 32 :46c 1905. 

 "New Jersey to Florida, in the pine-barrens. 



C. squarrosa L., Sp. PI. 973. 1753. 



coffee: Rather dry swamp of Ocmulgee River near Barrow's 

 Bluff, May 14, 1904 (2204). Fl. April. No other station 

 seems to be known for it within two or three hundred 

 miles. See Bull. Torrey Club 32 :46c. 1905. 



Connecticut to Michigan, Georgia, and Texas (?). 



