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1a. AUREOLARIA PEDICULARIA CAESARIENSIS Pennell in Bull. 
Torrey Club 40: 413. 1913. ‘‘Type, Atco, Camden 
Co., New Jersey, Sept. 7, 1911, F. W. Pennell 3545 in 
Herb. University of Pennsylvania.” 
Sandy open woodland, Coastal Plain of Long Island and New 
Jersey, mainly in the Pine Barrens, where it replaces the species. 
Occurs northeastward to southeastern Massachusetts. 
1b. Aureolaria pedicularia intercedens Pennell, var. nov. 
Stem glandular-pubescent above, with spreading or recurved - 
short hairs, scattered among which occur glands which are 
borne on stalks shorter than or longer than the pubescence. 
Leaves somewhat puberulent with short-stalked glands. Calyx- 
lobes 8-13 mm. long. Capsule 11-12 mm. long. Otherwise as 
in the species. 
Type, Mt. Arlington, Morris Co., New Jersey, collected in 
flower August 26, 1906, K. K. Mackenzie 2356; in Herb. Missouri 
Botanical Garden. 
Environment of the species, between which and the densely 
hirsute western A. pedicularia ambigens (Fernald) Farwell it 
forms a connected series of intergradations. Occasional in 
northern New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania, to be expected 
with the species in our northwestern counties in New York. 
2. AUREOLARIA VIRGINICA (L.) Pennell. 
Rhinanthus virginicus L. Sp. Pl. 603. 1753. “‘Habitatin Vir- 
ginia.”” As specimen in the Linnean Herbarium bears the 
handwriting of Linné the younger and so appears to have 
been a late addition, Gronovius’s plant must be taken as 
the type. This is Clayton 488, recently identified by | 
Dr. S. F. Blake, in Rhodora 20: 66. 1918, as the plant 
here considered. Our traditional applications of the 
names virginica and flava must be transposed. 
Aureolaria villosa Raf. New Fl. Amer. 2: 59. 1837. No 
type locality given, nor type known to exist. Description 
sufficiently distinctive. 
Dasystoma pubescens Benth. in DC. Prod. 10: 520. 1846. 
“In Americae sept. civitatibus orientalibus frequens.”’ 
Type not verified, but description sufficiently distinctive. 
