316 HARPER 



alluvial swamp of Seventeen Mile Creek, February, 1904 

 (2046a). Also in Lowndes County. 

 Otherwise known only from Florida, Alabama (Mobile Co.), 

 Louisiana, and some tropical countries. 



FUNARIA Schreb. 



F. hygrometrica (L.) Sibth., Fl. Oxon. 288. 1794. 

 bulloch: Wet woods near Bloys (884c, in part). 

 Cosmopolitan, but apparently not native everywhere. 



PHYSCOMITRIUM Brid. 

 P. turbinatum (Mx.) Brid. 



bulloch : With the preceding (884a) . Also in Clayton County, 



Middle Georgia. 

 Throughout most of the United States. 



SCHLOTHEIMIA Brid., Mant. Muse. 114. 1819. 

 S. Sullivantii C. Mull. 



On trees, especially Magnolias, in hammocks and swamps. 

 Montgomery, berrien, colquitt. Also in Effingham and 

 Brooks Counties, nearer the coast. 

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



PTYCHOMITRIUM Br. & Sch. 



P. incurvum (Schwaegr.) Sull. 



tattnall: Ledge of Altamaha Grit near Ohoopee River 



(1857b). Rare and inconspicuous. 

 Ranges northward to Canada. 



GRIMMIA Ehrh., Beitr. 1: 168. 1787. 



G. leucophaea Grev., Act. Soc. Wern. 4: pi. 6. 



tattnall : Cliffs of Altamaha Grit near Ohoopee River (1858a) 

 and Pendleton Creek, June, 1903. Probably not previously 

 reported from the coastal plain. More common on granite 

 outcrops in Middle Georgia. 

 North to New York and Ohio. Also in the Mediterranean 

 region. 



LEUCOBRYUM Hampe, Flora 20: 282. 1837. 

 L. glaucum (L.) Schimp. 



tattnall: Cliffs of Altamaha Grit near Pendleton Creek, 



