212 SCROPHULARIACEAE., Vou. III. 
10. Agalinis parvifolia (Chapm.) Small. 
Ten-lobed Agalinis. Fig. 3827. 
Gerardia parvifolia Chapm. Fl. S. U. S. 300. 1860. 
Gerardia decemloba Greene, Pittonia 4: 51. 1899. 
Annual, pale green, usually roughish; stems 8’~23° 
tall, simple or branched above, striate-angled, the 
branches mostly ascending. Leaves few, remote, 
linear-spatulate, to narrowly linear, more or less 
revolute, 24-10” long or rarely slightly longer, 
scabrous-pubescent above; pedicel exceeding the ca- 
lyx ; calyx campanulate or turbinate-campanulate, 1’ 
14” high, the lobes minute, triangular; corolla light 
rose-colored, about 4’ long, or less, the lobes obcor- 
date or deeply emarginate; capsules globose-ovoid, 
or oval, 14’-2” long, apiculate. 
In dry sandy soil or on banks, Massachusetts to Flor- 
ida and Louisiana. Aug.—Oct. 
11. Agalinis Skinneriana (Wood) Britton. Skinner’s Agalinis. Fig. 3828. 
Gerardia Skinneriana Wood, Classbook 408. 1847. 
?G. tenutfolia asperula A. Gray, Bot. Gaz. 4: 153. 1879. 
Annual, roughish; stem strict, striate, branched, 
or sometimes simple, 6-18’ high, very slender, the 
branches erect or ascending. Leaves setaceous, as- 
cending or commonly erect and appressed, 4’-1’ long, 
4”" wide or less, the uppermost minute; pedicels 
longer than the calyx, scarcely longer than the flow- 
ers, 2-4 times the length of the capsule; calyx-teeth 
minute; corolla light purple, 5’-6” long and about 
as broad, glabrous without, its lobes ciliolate; capsule 
oblong, 2”-3” high, considerably longer than the 
calyx. 
In dry sandy woods and thickets, Indiana to Minne- 
sota and Kansas. Recorded from Ontario. Aug.—Oct. 
Gerardia viridis Small, differing by more widely 
spreading pedicels and narrow calyx-teeth often one- 
half as long as the tube, inhabits the western Gulf 
States and is recorded as extending northward into Mis- 
sourl. 
12. Agalinis setacea (Walt.) Raf. Thread- 
leaved Agalinis. Fig. 3829. 
Gerardia setacea Walt. Fl. Car. 170. 1788. 
A, setacea Raf. New FI. N. A. 2: 64. 1836. 
G. Holmiana Greene, Pittonia 4: 52. 18099. 
Annual, smooth or slightly scabrous; stems 1°-2° 
tall, loosely branching, the branches mostly ascend- 
ing. Leaves rather numerous, mostly opposite, linear- 
filiform or setaceous-filiform, +’-14’ long, scabrous 
or nearly smooth; pedicels very slender, 4’-13’ long; 
calyx campanulate, 14’-2”" long, the lobes broadly 
triangular, about 4 as long as the tube; corolla rose 
purple, 5’-8” long or rarely larger; capsules subglo- 
bose or globose-oval, 2’-24” in diameter. 
In dry soil or pine barrens, New Jersey to Florida and 
Texas. Aug.—Oct. 
