442 ULMACEAE 
About 60 species of tropical and temperate regions. The wood is used in 
the manufacture of furniture.—Spr.—HACKBERRIES.  NETTLE-TREES. SUGAR- 
BERRIES. 
Leaf-blades of an ovate type. 
Mature drupe 7-10 mm. in diameter. 1. C. occidentalis, 
Mature drupe 5-7 mm. in diameter. 2. C. georgiana. 
Leaf-blades of a lanceolate type. 
af-blades entire or nearly so. A C. noni DOM 
Leaf-blades sharply serrate. . C. 8ma 
1. C. occidentalis L. Tree "m 40 m. tall, the twigs glabrous (or pubes- 
cent, and leaf-blades rough above in C. cras sifolia whieh now appears not 
to be specifically distinct) : leaf-bl ades 
ovate or rarely iptic-ov -15 
abov 
oval, globose or subglobose, 7-10 mm. in 
rapist orange, purple or nearly black.— 
(BEAVER-WOOD. d ONE- 
BERRY.)—-Woods and river-banks, various 
provinces, rarely Coastal Plain, S. C. to 
Ala., Okla., Man., and Que. 
2. C. georgiana Small Shr ub, or tre 
SH 
above, entire or sharply serrate: 
globose or nearly so, 5-7 mm. = iameter, 
red-purple or tan-colored.— (GE ORGIA-HACKBERRY. )—Rocky places and stream- 
banks, Coastal Plain and adj. provinces, Fla. to Ala., Mo., and N. J. 
3. ©. mississippiensis Bose. Tree becoming 30 m. tall, the twigs sometimes 
pubescent: leaf-blades lanceolate varying to ovate-Tanceotate or in dd -lanceo- 
late esa d broader, often ovate, in C. Berlandieri), 6-12 c ong, long- 
acuminate, entire or nearly so: drupe d A ovoid- othe a ur m. in 
diameter, D le or orange-red.—Rich -woods, river-bottoms, Eg pum 
7 2 pec Plain and adj. provinces, Fla. to Tex., Mo., Ind., and D. C.— 
4. C. Smallii Beadle. Tree usually smaller than C. mississippiensis : 2r 
blades thin, lanceolate or elliptic-lanceolate, 5-10 cm. lon ng, acuminate, 
e = ipium Pai dea sharply a and irregularly serrate: drupe 
globose, 5-7 diameter.—Sandy or roeky woods and Beer baa 
Coastal Plain and “adj. n. Fla. to Ala., Mo., Ky., and N. C. 
4. TEEMA Lour. Unarmed shrubs or trees, the bark smoothish: leaves 
persistent: blades toothed, more or less inequilateral. Calyx rotate, the lobes 
much longer than the tube. Stigmas 2, entire. Drupe ovoid or globose.— 
re ut 30 species of = regions.—In Florida the ns are a favorite 
bird-food.—N ETTLE-TREE: 
Leaf-blades cordate at the base: anthers over 1 mm. long: DEBE S oid orange. 
orvaand. 
ra ae or rounded at the base: anthers less than 
: drupe pink. 2. T. Lamarckiana. 
T. floridana Britton. Shrub, or tree 6 m. tall, with copiously pubescent 
foliage leaf-blades ovate, elliptic. ou or lanceolate, 4-10 em. long, softly 
