ALTAMAHA GRIT REGION OF GEORGIA 315 



LESKEA Hedw. 

 L. denticulata Sull. 



colquitt: On rough bark of old dead tree in Ocklocknee 



Creek swamp near Moultrie (1673a). 

 Middle and Southeastern United States. 



FONTINALIS L. 

 F. flaccida R. & C, Bull. Soc. Bot. Belg. 27 1 :i 34 . pl.g; Bot. 

 Gaz. 13: 201. pi. ig. 1888. 

 tattnall: About low-water mark in rocky bed of Ohoopee 

 River at the shoals west of Reidsville (2151a). I have 

 collected what has been identified as the same thing in a 

 cypress pond near Brunswick, a totally different habitat. 

 BRACHELYMA Schimp., Syn. Muse. Europ. ed. 2. 557. 1876. 

 B. robustum (Cardot) E. G. Britton, Bryologist 7:48. May 1904. 

 Cryphceadelphus robustus Cardot, Rev. Bryol. 31:8., 1904; 

 Brotherus in Engler & Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam.i 3 :73i. 

 1905. 

 On trees and bushes subject to inundation, along all three 

 classes of streams, tattnall: Ohoopee River west of 

 Reidsville; coffee: Ocmulgee River at Barrow's Bluff; 

 wilcox : abundant along branches about five miles southeast 

 of Rochelle. Our largest moss (Sphagnum excepted). 

 Occurs also in Jefferson, Laurens, Pulaski, and Miller 

 Counties, in the upper third of the coastal plain. (The 

 species is based on material from the two counties last 

 mentioned.) 

 Not known elsewhere. 



TETRAPLODON Br. & Sch. 

 T. australis Sull. & Lesq. Mosses U. S. 53. 1856. 



colquitt: On old cow dung in moist pine-barrens north of 

 Moultrie, Sept. 24, 1902 (1668a). Prehistoric habitat 

 unknown. 

 New Jersey to Florida, in the coastal plain. 



RHIZOGONIUM Brid., Bryol. Univ. 2:664. 1827. 

 R. spiniforme (Hedw.) Bruch, Flora 29:134. 1846. 



coffee: Abundant on rotten logs and bases of trees in non- 



