832 PLANT LIFE OF ALABAMA. . 
* Prunus americana Marsh. WILbD GoosE PLUM. RED AND YELLOW PLUM, 
Prunus triflora Roxb. JAPANESE PLUMs. KELSEY and BoraNn PLUMs, 
Coast to the mountains. 
Japan, 
“Amyegdalus persica L. PEACH. 
Asia. 
Amygdalus persica nectarina Ait. NECTARINE, 
Upper districts. 
Rubus occidentalis L. BLACK-CAP RASPBERRIKS, 
Rubus idaeus L. RASPBERRY. 
Rubus argutus Link. BLACKBERRY. 
Rubus trivialis Michx.and R. invisus Bailey DEWBERRIES, various strains. 
Punica granatum L. POMEGRANATE. 
Lower Pine region, Coast plain. 
Mediterranean region. 
Citrus aurantium L. SWEET ORANGE. 
On the seacoast. Mobile Bay, Perdido Bay. Cultivated extensively before the 
great freeze in the winter of 1879-80. At present only in well-sheltered localities, 
Citrus bigaradia Loisel. BITTER ORANGE. 
On the seacoast. 
Zizyphus vulgaris L. JUJUBE-BERRY. 
Lower Pine region. Coast plain. Here and there. 
Vitis labrusca L. Fox GRAPE. 
Southern varieties: Catawba, Diana, Isabella. Northern varieties: “Concord, 
Ives seedling. 
*Vitis aestivalis Michx. SUMMER GRAPE, 
Virginia seedling, Norton’s Virginia, * Herbemont, Cynthiana. 
“Vitis rotundifolia Michx. MUSCADINE GRAPE. BULLACE GRAPE. 
Flowers, Thomas, * Scuppernong. 
Chiefly in the Coast Pine belt. 
CULTIVATED FOR SHADE TREES AND FOR ORNAMENT. 
Cycas revoluta Thunb. FERN PALM, 
Coast plain. 
Japan. 
Nageia chinensis (Roxb.) Kuntze. (Podocarpus sinensis 'Teijsm. & Binn.) 
Coast plain. Evergreen shrub. 
Japan. 
Cupressus sempervirens L. CYPREss, 
Cypress of southern Europe. 
Coast plain to Central Prairie belt, 
Cupressus funebris Endl. . WEEPING CyYPREsS, 
Louisianian area, 
China. 
