280 HARPER 



R. ciliaris (Mx.) Mohr, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 6 :4o8. 1901. 

 R. ciliata Vahl, Enum. 2 : 235. 1806. 

 Normally in intermediate pine-barrens; not rare, bulloch 



{88'/), MONTGOMERY, APPLING, COFFEE (68 J, JOl), "WILCOX, 

 IRWIN; BERRIEN, WORTH, COLQUITT, DECATUR. Fl. May- 



Aug. Inland to Sumter, Lee, and Mitchell Counties, and 

 coastward to Ware and Charlton. 

 North Carolina to central Florida and Mississippi, in the 

 pine-barrens. 



R. leptorhyncha Sauv., An. Acad. Cienc Habana, 8 184. 1871. 



(Our specimens not quite typical. See Bull Torrey Club 33 : 

 231—232. 1906.) 



coffee: Cypress ponds about three miles south of Douglas, 

 July 24, 1902. Also in Pulaski and Sumter Counties in 

 the Lower Oligocene region. Fl. June-July. 



Also in western Cuba, where it was discovered. 



R. filifolia Torr., Ann. Lye. N. Y. 3: 366. 1836. 



coffee: Cypress ponds near Douglas (1434) and Chatterton. 

 Fl. summer. Also in a similar place in Charlton County. 

 Not seen elsewhere. 



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

 barrens. 



R. gracilenta Gray, Ann. Lye. N. Y. 3 : 216. 1835. 



Moist pine-barrens; infrequent, tattnall, Montgomery, 

 coffee, irwin, Fl. June-July. Also in Sumter County. 

 New Jersey to northeastern Florida and Texas, in the coastal 

 plain. 



R. axillaris (Lam.) Britton, Bull. Torrey Club 15: 104. 1888. 

 Cypress ponds, branch-swamps, etc.; common in most if not 



all of the counties in the pine-barren region of Georgia. 



Fl. May-July. 

 Long Island to central Florida, Arkansas, and Louisiana, in 



the coastal plain. 



R. glomerata paniculata [Gray] Chapm., Fl. 528. i860. 



Branch-swamps, etc. ; not common. Montgomery, telfair, 



