STYRACACEAE 239 



which matures in autumn, is a nearly black, ovoid, pulpy drupe 

 usually about y'l inch long. 



Distribution. — The Southern Buckthorn, a shrub of moist 

 situations and thickets, ranges from Virginia to southern Illinois 

 and south to Florida and Texas. In Illinois, it is to be found 

 in the valleys of the Ohio and Cache rivers, south of the Ozarks, 

 where it may be sought in cypress swamps and in thickets along 

 dry sloughs. It has been recorded in Hardin, Pulaski, Union, 

 Johnson and Alexander counties. 



BUMELIA LANUGINOSA (Michaux) Persoon 

 Woolly Buckthorn Gum Elastic 



The Woolly Buckthorn, fig. 62, is a shrub up to 20 feet tall 

 or sometimes, in the far south, a tree reaching a height of 60 

 feet, with usually spiny twigs and persistent, rather leathery 

 leaves, which are glabrous above and densely pubescent beneath. 

 The leaves are oblanceolate or oblong, usually obtuse at the 

 apex and wedge shaped at the base, 1]/^ to 3 inches long by 

 about 1/^ to 1 inch wide, and they stand on petioles up to 14 

 inch in length. The flowers occur 3 to 18 together in fascicles 

 developed on old wood, and the fruit, which is an oval, or glo- 

 bose, black berry, is 14 to l/^ inch in diameter. 



Distribution. — The Woolly Buckthorn is a shrub of thickets 

 and woods, w^hich ranges from Illinois to Kansas and south to 

 Florida and Texas. It is exceedingly rare in Illinois and has 

 been reported with authority only from the vicinity of Mound 

 City in Pulaski County. 



STYRACACEAE 

 The Storax Family 



The storax family consists of trees or shrubs with alternate 

 leaves more or less covered with stellate pubescence, without 

 stipules and with regular, perfect flowers borne in clusters. The 

 calyx is adherent to the ovary to some extent and consists of 

 4 to 8 parts, and the corolla has 4 to 8 lobes. The stamens are 

 generally twice as many as the petals and inserted on the tube. 

 The ovary consists of 2 to 5 cells and develops into a berry-like 

 fruit or drupe, which is nearly dry, is 1-seeded and in some 

 cases is winged. 



