1919.] NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA. 279 
5. Agalinis pinetorum Pennell. 
Agalinis pinetorum Pennell, Bull. Torr. Bot. Club 40: 424. 1913. ‘Type, 
St. Marks, Wakulla Co., Florida, Sept. 26, 1912, F. W. Pennell 4708, 
in Herb. University of Pennsylvania. da 
y iar delicatula Pennell, 1. c. 425. 1913. “Type, Ponce de Leon, 
olmes Co., Florida, Sept. 1 17, 1912, Bs W: wear i 4661 in Herb. Uni- 
versity of Pe nnsylvania. dees ‘distinet-seeming plant, cate leaves more 
slender, filiform, ee in drying, and corolla within not spotted with 
purple-red. Until k nown from dees staliead not maintained as a species. 
Moist soil in longleaf pineland, and on coastal prairie, southern 
Georgia and northern Florida to Louisiana. 
Flowering in September and October, and soon ripening fruit. 
Corolla pink, with two yellow lines and purple red 2 within 
throat anteriorly. 
Pennell (Georgia)—4734, 4738, 4750, 4770, 4771, 473, 4775, 4781, 
4791. (Florida)—(4661 delicatula), 4688, 4708, 4795. 
6. Agalinis harperi Pennell. 
Agalinis harperi Pennell; Small, Fl. Miami 167, 200. 1913. “Type, St. 
Marks, Wakulla County, Florida, F. W. Pennell 4707.” Type, collected 
September 25, 1912, se Herb. University of Pennsylvan 
Moist sandy pineland sea "bebidas of salt-marshes, setliat pine- 
land, from southern Georgia south to the Everglades of southern 
Florida. Also on the Bahamas. 
Flowering northward from mid-September to October, and soon 
ripening fruit, southward flowering and fruiting throughout the 
year. Corolla pale rose-pink, with two yellow lines and small purple- 
red spots mostly along these lines within see Te This 
has been confused with the northern “Gerardia paupercula.” 
Pennell (Georgia)—4726, 4810. (Florida) 4701, "4707, 4711. 
7. Agalinis fasciculata (Ell.) Raf 
Gerardia fasciculata Ell., Sketch Bot. 8S. C. and Ga.2:115. 1822. “Grows 
principally in 
i Island near Beaufort very common.’ Type seen in 
the Elliott Herbarium at the Charleston Museum 
Agalinis fasciculata (Ell.) Raf., New Fl. Amer. 2: 63. 1837. 
Moist to dry sandy loam or clay soil, in depressions among sand- 
dunes, edges of salt-marsh, or loam soil in limestone districts; 
the only species of cultivated fields; locally common through the 
Coastal Plain from South Carolina to southern Florida and west- 
ward near the Gulf Coast. Ranges westward to Texas and south- 
ern Missouri. In southern Florida represented by a variant with 
less scabrous stem. 
Flowering from August to October and soon ripening fruit. Cor- 
olla pink, with two yellow lines and many diffused purple-red spots 
within throat anteriorly. 
