258 . PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [Dec., 
1. Angelonia angustifolia Benth. 
Occasional in pineland, Dade County, southern Florida. Escaped 
from gardens. Introduced from Mexico. 
24, LINARIA Miller. 
Linaria Mill., Gard. Dict. ed. IV. 1754. 
Type species, Antirrhinum linaria L., of Europe. 
Corolla, excluding spur, 4-12 mm. long, blue, posterior lip erect; 
anterior lip broadly spreading, but not forming a definite raised 
palate. Capsule 2-3.5 mm. long, equaling to exceeding the 
sepals. Seeds .3-.4 mm. long, cylindric, prismatic-angled, not 
winged. Das less leafy, the younger stems spreading-prostrate 
from bas (Leptoplectron.) 
Pedicsla paadituhaes ubcasent, longer than the corollas. Spur very 
short. 
oridana 
Pedicels nearly glabrous, caver than the corollas. Spur slender. 
oro e less than 8 mm g, excluding the spur. Surface 
s smooth to “lightly tuberculate. 2. L. canadensis. 
Corolla sid 10 mm. long, excluding the spur. Surfaces and 
of seed densely tuberculate. . texana. 
oo. setaing spur, 15-18 mm. long, yellow; posterior lip arched 
anterior; anterior lip forming a conspicuous protruding 
orange palate; spur stout. Capsule 10 mm. long, much ex- 
ceeding the sepals. Seeds 1.7 mm. long, flattened and cir- 
cularly broadly winged. Stem densely leafy, always erect. 
4. L. linaria. 
i. Linaria floridana Chapm. 
Linaria floridana Chapm., Fl. 8. Un. St. 290. 1860. “Drifting sands 
near the coast, West Florida.” Several specimens, collect a ty Dh 
Chapman at Ay alachicola, seen in Herb. New York bsecepar lees 
and Academy of Natural Sciences of Philade Ip 
Dry sandy soil, sand ridges along rivers and near the coast, south- 
ern Georgia to central Florida, westward near the Gulf Coast to 
southern Mississippi. 
Flowering in March and April, and soon ripening fruit, the late 
flowering and fruiting plants persisting through May. Corolla 
light-blue, the palate paler. 
Pennell (Florida)—9579, 9581. 
2. Linaria canadensis (L.) rire 
Antirrhinum a se Sp. “PL 618. 1753. “Habitat in Virgi 
Canada.” egos r7 A southern New Jersey, and Beale Sage the 
species owe Sanit ered. For discussion see Torreya se 151. 1 
Linaria canadensis Dum.-Cours. Bot. Cult. 2: 96. 1802 “Lieu, Le Can- 
ada, la Virginie.” Doubtless based upon Antirrhinum canadense 
Open sandy soil, usually a weed, mostly common in the aL 
lantic Coastal Plain south to central Florida (intergrading somewhat 
with L. texana in Georgia and Florida); in the Piedmont on the 
