PRELIMINARY REPORT ON PEAT. 
263 
SHRUBS AND WOODY VINES 
Hypericum fasciculatum 
Smilax laurifolia (bamboo vine) 
Hypericum myrtifolium 
Pieris nitida 
Pieris phillyreifolia 
Phcradendron flavescens (mistle¬ 
toe) (mostly on black gum) 
Leucothoe racemosa 
Stillingia aquatica 
Smilax Walteri 
I tea Virginica 
HERBS 
Anchistea Virginica (a fern) 
Tillandsia usneoides (Spanish moss) 
Panicum hemitomon (maiden cane) 
Pciygala cymosa 
Eriocaulon decangulare 
Dichromena latifolia 
Pluchea bifrons 
Eriocaulon compressum 
Oxypolls filiformis 
Aristida palustris (a grass) 
Centella repanda 
Gerardia linifolia 
Iponioea sagittata (morning- 
glory) 
Tillandsia recurvata (air-plant) 
Sabbatia de can dr a 
Pontederia cordata (wampee) 
Gyro theca tinctoria (paint root) 
Erigeron vernus 
Leptcpoda Helenium 
Xyris sp. 
Proserpinaca pectinata 
Rhexia strict a 
Scleria Baldwinii 
Cladium effusum (saw-grass) 
Rhyne hasp ora axillaris 
Ludwigia linifolia 
Manisuris Chapmani (a grass) 
Asclepias hnceolata (milkweed) 
Gratiola ramosa 
Tillandsia tenuifolia (air-plant) 
Chondrophora nudata 
Lycopus sp. 
Panicum erectifolium (a grass) 
Rhynchcspora corniculata 
Panicum agrostoides? (a grass) 
Erianthus sp. ( a grass) 
Andropogon sp. (broom-sedge) 
Drosera capillarrs 
Osmunda cinnamomea (a fern) 
Scleria sp. 
Monniera Caroliniana 
Castalia odorata (white water-lily) 
Coreopsis nudata 
Ludwigia pilosa 
Triadenum Virginicum 
Lobelia paludosa 
Aster Chapmani 
Rhynchospora Tracyi 
Panicum sp. 
Mesosphaerum radiatum 
Mesadenia lanceoiata 
Panicum tenerum (a grass) 
Car ex Walteriana? 
Fuirena breviseta 
MOSSES 
Sphagnum sp. Sphagnum macrophyllum. 
The two trees first mentioned, pond cypress and slash pine, 
usually exceed in bulk all the rest of the vegetation of these ponds: 
but there are ponds—usually rather small ones—-in which the 
third species, black gum, is the most abundant and almost the only 
tree. From Washington County on the west to Suwannee County 
