GEOGRAPHY OF CENTRAL FLORIDA 



125 



Quercus Catesbaei 

 Quercus cinerea 

 Mag'nolia g°lauca 

 Quercus greminata 

 Cbolisnia ferrugrinea 

 Quercus myrtifolia 

 Fersea bumilis 

 Salix long:ipes? 

 Myrica cerifera 

 Osmanthus Americana 

 Prunus umbellata 

 Quercus Chapmani 

 Cornus florida 

 Hex Cassine 

 Carpinus Carollniana 



SMALL, TREES. 



Black-jack oak 

 Turkey oak 

 Bay 

 Live Oak 



(Scrub oak) 

 Red bay 

 Willow 

 Myrtle 



Hog plum 



Dogwood 



(Cassena) 



Ironwood 



Sandy uitlands 



Sandy uplands 



Swamps and bays 



Scrub, etc. 



Sandy hammocks, etc. 



Scrub, etc. 



Scrub 



Edges of swamps 



Hammocks, etc. 



Sandy hammocks 



Hammocks, etc. 



Sandy hammocks 



Hammocks 



Swamps 



Low hammocks 



Smilax laurifolia 



Vitis rotundifolia? 

 Smilax auricnlata 

 Ampelopsis arborea 

 Rhus radicans 

 Parthenocissus quinquefolia 

 Berchemia scandens 



WOODY VINES. 



Bamboo vine 

 Muscadine 



Poison ivy 

 Virginia creeper 

 Rattan vine 



Swamps and bays 



Hammocks and swamps 



Scrub 



Low hammocks 



Low hammocks, etc. 



Hammocks, etc. 



Low hammocks 



Sereno?. serrulata 

 Fieris nitida 

 Myrica cerifera 

 Chrysobalanus oblongrifolius 

 Hypericum fasciculatum 



Ceratiola ericoides 

 Ceanothus microphyllus 

 Hex glahva, 

 Bejaria racemosa 

 Iiupinus diffuBUs var.* 

 Myrica pumila 

 Cephalanthu.c: occidentalis 

 Vaccinium nitidum 

 G^rberia fruticosa 

 Cbolisma fruticosa 

 Prunus geniculatat 

 Rhus copallina 

 Sabal gflabra 



SHRUBS 



Saw-palmetto 

 (Hurrah bush) 

 Myrtle 



Sand myrtle 



Rosemary 



Gallberry 



(Lupine) 

 Myrtle 



(Elbow-bush) 

 Huckleberry 



(Poor grub) 

 (Plum) 

 Sumac 

 Palmetto 



Various situations 

 Scrub, bays, etc. 

 Low hammocks, etc 

 High pine land 

 Around lakes 



prairies 

 Scrub mostly 

 High pine land 

 Flatwoods 

 Flatwoods 

 High pine land 

 Flatwoods 

 Swamps, etc. 

 Pine lands 

 Scrub 

 Flatwoods 

 High sandy hills 

 Hammocks, etc. 

 Low hammocks 



and peat 



Tillandsia usueoides 

 Aristida stricta 

 Kuhnistera pinnata 

 Cladium effusum 

 Spartina Bakeri 

 Pterocaulon undulatum 

 Pontederia cordata 

 Panicum hemitomon 

 Anchistea Virginica 

 Eriogonum tomentosum 



HERBS 



Spanish moss 



Wire-grass 



(Summer farewell) 



Saw-grass 



Switch-grass 



Black-root 



Wampee 



Maiden cane 



vA fern) 



On most trees 



High pine land 



High pine land 



Marshes, etc. 



Around l^ikes and prairies 



Flatwoods, etc. 



Lakes, etc. 



Lake margins, etc. 



Bays, etc. 



High pine land 



*This species is ordinarily an herb, but in Polk County and elsewhere it 

 grows bushy, about three feet tall, and is full of leaves and flowers in mid- 

 winter, or earliest spring. 



tApparently confined to the lake region, ranging from Lake County to De- 

 Soto. In the original description (Torreya 11:64-67. March, 1911) the flowers 

 were said to be in few-flowered umbels; but they are really solitary and sessile 

 or nearly so. 



