206 
Pedicels 1.5-10 (-15) mm. long. (Euau- 
reolaria. 
Capsule densely rusty-pubescent. Stem pubes- 
d leaves downy-pubescent. Ped- 
icels 1.5-3 mm. long. 2. A. virginica. 
Capsule glabrous. Stem glabrous and leaves 
glabrous or minutely puberulent on the 
upper surface. Pedicels 3 mm. long or 
longer. ‘ 
Stem slender, not glaucous, rarely pur- 
plish. Petioles very short, less than 10 
mm. long. Lower. leaves lanceolate 
to ovate-lanceolate, widest below the 
middle, long-acuminate. Pedicels 3-8 
mm. long. Corolla 30-35 mm. long. 
Seeds 1.5-1.7 mm. long. 3. A. laevigata. 
Stem relatively stout, glaucous, frequently 
purple. Petioles mostly over 10 mm. 
long. Lower leaves ovate-lanceolate 
to ovate, widest about the middle, not 
long-acuminate. Pedicels 5-10 (-15) 
mm. long. Corolla 35-40 mm. long. 
Seeds 2—-2.7 mm. long. 4. A. flava. 
1. AUREOLARIA PEDICULARIA (L.) Raf. 
Gerardia pedicularia L. Sp. Pl. 611. 1753. ‘Habitat in 
Virginia, Canada.” Type not seen, but description 
sufficiently distinctive. 
Panctenis pedicularia (L.) Raf. New Fl. Amer. 2:61. 1837. 
The specific name spelled by Rafinesque ‘‘Hedicularis.”’ 
Aureolaria pedicularia (L-) Raf. le. 61.: 3637; 
Dasystoma pedicularia. (L.) Benth. in DC. Prod. 10: 521. 
1846. 
Agalinis pedicularia (L.) Blake in Rhodora 20: 70. 1918. 
Flowering from early August to late September, fruiting from 
September into November. 
Dry oak-woodland, thin soil, sandy or rocky, pile or 
local above Fall-line, more frequent southwestward; in the — 
Coastal Plain of Long Island and New Jersey, passing into var. 
caesariensis. Northwestward the species passes into var. 
intercedens. Ranges, southward and westward mainly through 
its varieties, from western Maine to North Carolina and Minne- 
sota. 
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