276 HARPER 



1902. Flowers later than the type, or at least retains its 

 perigynia longer. Known also from Johnson and Sumter 

 Counties (see Bull. Torrey Club 27 : 462. 1900.) 

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



SCLERIA Berg., Kgl. Sv. Acad. Handl. 26 : 142. 1765. 

 S. Michauxii Chapm., Fl. 532. 186c. 



(?) 5. hirtella Sw., Prodr. 19. 1788. 



colquitt: Moist pine-barrens, several stations near Moultrie, 

 September, 1902. With the typical form is often one with 

 glabrous leaves, but apparently otherwise identical (1646). 

 Fl. summer. Also in Mcintosh, Glynn, and Charlton 

 Counties in the flat country. 



South Carolina to central Florida and Louisiana, in the pine- 

 barrens. 



S. verticillata Muhl.; Willd., Sp. PI. 4 '3^1- 1805. 



colquitt: Moist pine-barrens, with the preceding and else- 

 where; rare {1647). Also in Sumter and Early Counties, 

 in the Lower Oligocene region. 



Glaciated region and coastal plain of the Eastern United States, 

 but with many gaps in its known range (not reported from 

 Alabama, for instance). Also in Mexico and the West Indies, 

 if it is all the same species. 

 S. pauciflora Muhl.; Willd., Sp. PI. 4 : 318. 1805. 



bulloch: Rather dry pine-barrens near Pulaski, June 24, 

 1 90 1 (940). Grows also on dry slopes of the mountains of 

 Northwest Georgia. 



New Hampshire to Missouri, Cuba, and Texas ; but not reported 

 from Alabama. 

 S. glabra [Chapm.] Britton; Small, Fl. 200. 1903. 



Sand-hills chiefly, emanuel (#07), tattn all, Montgomery, 

 coffee (1460), Wilcox, decatur. Identity of my speci- 

 mens still a little doubtful. 



North Carolina to Florida and Mississippi, in the pine-barrens. 

 S. trichopoda Wright; Britton, Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 3:232. 

 1883. (as syn.) 



5. reticularis pubescens Britton, 1. c. 



Moist pine-barrens, etc. Montgomery, dodge, coffee, ber- 



