MORNING GLORY FAMILY. 679 
ALABAMA: Throughout the State. Here and there. Mobile County. Flowers 
crimson, July, August. Not infrequent of spontaneous growth. Annual. 
Type locality: ‘‘ Hab. in India.” 
Herb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 
Ipomoea barbigera Sweet, Fl. Gard. ¢. 86. 1818. BEARDED MORNING GLORY. 
Pharbitis barbigera Don, Hist. Dich]. Pl. 4: 262. 1838. 
“Stem downy; leaves cordate, acuminate, entire, hairy on both surfaces, lobes 
rounded; peduncles 1-tlowered, shorter than the petioles, bibracteate near the 
calyx; sepals acuminate, spreading, reflexed, densely bearded at the base; the cam- 
panulately funnel-shaped corolla 5-lobed, slightly crenulate, limb azure, the tube 
nearly white; capsule smooth, 3-celled, cells 2-seeded, seeds black, roughish-downy.” 
Our plant difters from the above description solely in the peduncles with two, or 
seldom three, flowers. Mr. Charles L. Pollard, on comparing it with the illustration 
of Sweet, finds it to differ in no essential point. 
Strangely overlooked by the botanists in this country. 
Carolinian and Louisianian areas. Mississippi. 
ALABAMA: Mountain region to the Coast plain in cultivated ground. Flowers 
from August to close of the season. An annual of most vigorous and rapid growth, 
with the fleshy stem + to nearly + inch thick. Climbing and twining over bushes 
and trees, and producing its seeds in abundance, this plant is one of the most 
injurious of the bind weeds which infest the garden and field. Most abundant from 
the Central Prairies to the coast. 
Type locality: ‘‘Native of North America.” 
Herb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 
Ipomoea hederacea Jacq. Icon. Rar. ¢. 36. 1781. Ivy-LEAF MORNING GLORY. 
Pharbitis hederacea Chois. in DC. Prodr. 9: 348, 1845. 
Ipomoea nil of American authors. 
Ell. Sk.1:259. Gray, Man. ed. 6, 368. Griseb. Fl. Brit. W. Ind. 473. 
West INDIES, MEx1co TO BRAZIL, AUSTRALIA. 
Carolinian and Louisianian areas. In the Atlantic States from New York and 
Pennsylvania to Tennessee. 
Adventive from the South. Indigenous from North Carolina to Florida and west 
to Louisiana, Arkansas, and southern Missouri. 
ALABAMA: Mountain region to Coast plain. Border of thickets and in fields. 
Clay County, near Ironaton. Cullman and Tuscaloosa counties. Lee County. 
Autauga County (F. 8. Zarle). Mobile County, waste places. Flowers violet-pur- 
ple, apparently rare in the Jow country. Annual. 
Type locality: ‘‘Hab. in America.” 
Herb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 
Ipomoea purpurea (L.) Roth, Bot. Abh. 27, 1787. CoMMON MoRNING GLORY. 
Convolvulus purpureus L. Sp. Pl. ed. 2,1:219. 1762. 
Pharbitis hispida Chois. in DC. Prodr. 9: 345. 1845. 
Ell. Sk.1:252. Gray, Man. ed. 6,369. Chap. Fl. 342. Griseb. Fl. Brit. W. Ind. 473. 
TropicaL AMERICA. Naturalized in tropical countries. 
Carolinian and Louisianian areas. Introduced and escaped from cultivation. Nat- 
uralized from North Carolina to Louisiana and westward. 
ALABAMA: Over the State. In cultivated ground near dwellings. Talladega 
County, Ironaton. Clay County, Ashland, 1,700 feet. Cullinan County, 800 feet. 
Lee County, Auburn (/arle). Mobile County. Flowers white to pink, purple, 
violet, and blue; August to October. Escaped from cultivation; in some localities a 
pernicious weed. Annual. 
Type locality: ‘‘Hab.in America.” 
Herb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 
Ipomoea pes-caprae (L). Sweet, Hort. Lond. ed. 2, 289. 1818-1820. 
ROUND-LEAF IpOMOEA. GoOaT’s-FOOT SEASIDE IPOMOEA, 
Colvolvulus pes-caprae L. Sp. P1.1:159. 1753. 
Ipomoea orbicularis Ell. Sk. 1: 257. 1817. 
Ell. Sk.l.c. Chap. Fl. 342. Gray, Syn. FLN. A. 2, pt.1:211. Coulter, Contr. Nat. 
Herb. 2:290. Griseb. Fl. Brit W. Ind. 470. 
SEASHORES OF THE TROPICS IN BOTH HEMISPHERES. WEST INDIES TO BRAZIL, 
Louisianian area. Sandy sea beaches from South Carolina to Florida, west to 
Texas. 
ALABAMA: Littoral region, sandy shores near the surf. Baldwin County, Perdido 
Bay. Mobile County, Big Dauphin Island. Flowers purple; July to October; not 
frequent. Creeping, 2 feet and over. Perennial. 
Type locality: ‘Hab. in India.” 
Herb. Geol. Surv. Herb. Mohr. 
