ALTAMAHA GRIT REGION OF GEORGIA 309 



SELAGINELLACE JE . 

 SELAGINELLA Beauv., Prodr. ^Etheog. 101. 1805. 

 S.acanthonota Underw., Torreya 2 1172. 1902. (Plate XXVIII, 

 Fig. a). 



Sand-hills along the tributaries of the Altamaha River, tatt- 

 nall (1852), Montgomery (1987). Extends down the 

 Altamaha to Liberty County. (See Bull. Torrey Club 

 32:152. /. 3. 1905.) 



A form not quite typical {1957) grows on rock outcrops in 

 dooly County near Arabi. 



North Carolina to Florida (?), in the pine-barrens. 



S. arenicola Underw., Bull. Torrey Club 25: 541. 1898. 



tattnall: Rock outcrops near Ohoopee River {1854) and 

 Pendleton Creek (i860), June, 1903. (See Fern Bull. 13 : 15. 



i9°S-) 

 Previously known only from the lime-sink region of Decatur 

 County, and from Lake County, Florida, on Columbia sand. 



S. apus (L.) Spring, in Mart., Fl. Bras, i 2 : 119. 1840. 



berrien: Damp woods west and southwest of Tifton, Sep- 

 tember, 1902. More common in the upper fourth of the 

 coastal plain, and northward. 



Widely distributed in the Eastern United States 



LYCOPODIACE.E. 

 LYCOPODIUM L., Sp. PI. 1100. 1753. 

 L. Carolinianum L., Sp. PI. 1104. 1753. 



Moist pine-barrens ; comparatively rare, emanuel, tattnall, 

 coffee (1428), Irwin, colquitt, decatur. Extends inland 

 to a few miles beyond Americus, and coastward to Bryan 

 and Charlton Counties, always on Columbia sand. 

 New Jersey to central Florida and Mississippi, in the coastal 

 plain. 

 L. alqpecuroides L., Sp. PI. 1102. 1753. 



Moist pine-barrens, sand-hill bogs, etc. ; rather common. 



SCREVEN, BULLOCH, EMANUEL, TATTNALL, MONTGOMERY, 

 TELFAIR. COFFEE, IRWIN, BERRIEN, COLQUITT, THOMAS, 



