209 
Gerardia quercifolia Pursh, Fl. Amer. Sept. 423. 1814. 
“On the banks of rivers, in rich shady places, Pensyl- 
vania to Carolina.’’ Type not seen, but description 
distinctive. 
Aureolaria glauca (Eddy) Raf. New Fl. Amer. 2:60. 1837. 
Dasystoma quercifolia (Pursh) Benth. in DC. Prod. 10: 520. 
1846. 
Dasystoma flava (L.) Wood, Class-Book 529. 1861. As to 
synonymy, not description, the latter applying to Aureo- 
laria virginica. 
Agalinis glauca (Eddy) Blake in Rhodora 20: 71. 1918. 
Aureolaria flava (L.) Farwell in Rep. Mich. Acad. Sci. 20: 
188. 1918. 
Flowering from late August to late September, fruiting from 
September to November. 
Dry to rather moist oak-woodland, usually on rocky hillsides, 
loam or sometimes in sandy soil, frequent or locally common 
through the counties above the Fall-line, especially toward the 
mountains; on northern Long Island,but rare in southern Long 
Island and very rare in the Coastal Plain of New Jersey. In- 
cluding varieties, this species ranges from Maine to Florida, 
Illinois, Arkansas and Louisiana. 
14. AGALINIS Raf. New Fl. Amer. 2:61. 1837 
Type species, A. palustris Raf. 
Corolla with lobes all spreading, ene within at base of posterior lobes. 
Seeds dark-brown. Plants tending to blacken in drying. Calyx-tube not 
evidently liiliaciede. 
Pedicels less than 12 mm. long. Inflorescence of normal racemes. Seed- 
coat with dark-brown ridges, between which are broad areas, paler 
and minutely reticulate. 
Leaves and calyx-lobes obtuse to acutish. Anther- 
sacs obtuse to acutish. Plant fleshy, bushy- 
branched below, with elongated racemes above. 
Pedicels 5-12 mm. long. Corolla 12-17 mm. 
long. 1. A. maritima. 
Leaves and calyx-lobes acute to acuminate. Anther- 
sacs mucronate to minutely awned. Plants not 
fleshy, more uniformly branched. Pedicels 
rarely over 5 mm. long. 
