282 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [Dec., 
within pubescent below sinus and over entire width of basal por- 
tions of posterior lobes; probably rose -pink (not seen fresh). Anther- 
sacs 1.7-2 mm. long, lanceolate, acuminate at distal apex, lanate 
with white hairs on the valvular surface. Style glabrous. Stigma 
1.5-2 mm. long. Capsule 3-4 mm. long, globose-ovoid, dark-brown. 
Seeds .5-.6 mm. long; testa dark-brown to nearly black, with reticu- 
lations Craigees and relatively remote; intra-reticular lines not dis- 
cerni 
Type, anion, Florida, collected in flower and young fruit Oc- 
tober, 1877, A. P. Garber 281; in Herb. Academy of Natural Sciences 
of Philadelphia. 
Known only from the original collection. 
14. Agalinis setacea (Walt.) Raf. 
Anonymos setacea Walt., Fl. Car. 170. 1788. Supposedly Type i beat 
South Carolina, but probably from much further west. 
British Museum identified ey Dr. A. B. Rendle as agreeing with my 
a. 
Gerardia plukenetii Ell., Sketch Bot, S.C. rik Ga.2:114. 1822. “Grows 
in wet spungy soils, very ¢ aa on between the Oakmulgee and Chata- 
houchie Rivers.” Type n the Elliott Horbecan at the Charleston 
Museum. Statement of habitat probably due to confusion with Agalinis 
pinetorum Pennell. 
~ Agalinis setacea (Walt.) Raf., New Fl. Amer. 2: 64. 1837. 
sg osha gatesti Benth. .. in DC. Prod. 10: 518. 1846. “In Ala- 
a (Gates!).” Type is Kew Herbarium, identified, frum a frag- 
ones ane me, as Gin mics 
Dry open sandy ek In the Coastal Plain from western 
Georgia and northern Florida to eastern Mississippi, usually in long- 
leaf pineland; inland in pinewoods on mountain-slopes through 
northern Georgia and northern Alabama. 
Flowering from mid-September to October, and soon ripening 
fruit. Corolla rose-pink, with two yellow lines and many small 
diffused purple-red spots within throat anteriorly. 
Pennell (Georgia)—4757, 5710. (Florida)—4569, 4570, 4583, 
4584, 4672. (Alabama)—4426, 4457, 4461, 4517, 4523, 4524, 4561, 
4623, 5690. (Mississippi)—4382. 
15. Agalinis keyensis Pennell, sp. nov. 
Plant dull-green, tending to blacken in drying. Stem at least 
7 dm. tall, slender, with many spreading-ascending branches, spar- 
ingly mabrelidus or glabrous. Leaves spreading, filiform, entire, 
acuminate, those of the stem (lowest not seen) .8—1.2 cm. long, 
.2-4 mm. wide; scabrous above. Axillary fascicles none. Racemes 
not elongate, witch broken and but one flower of each pair devel- 
oped, 1-4 flowered. Pedicels ascending, glabrous, in flower 3-4 
mm. long, in fruit 4-6 mm. long, about equaling the bracts, some 
