150 Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 



350. Icica cubensis Rose (?). 



Idea Copal A. Richard, in Sagra, Histoire Physique, Politique et Naturelle de 



I'ile de Cuba, I, 1845, p. 1842. Not Icica Copal Schlechtendal, 1830. 

 Icica cubensis Rose, North American Flora, XXV, 191 1, p. 260. 



Blain's specimen No. 124, from the northern part of the island, 

 was listed by Millspaugh under Protium heptaphyllum (Aublet) 

 March. Without an examination of the specimen the writer is 

 unable to properly refer this to any of the species recorded for the 

 West Indies in the North American Flora, XXV, 191 1, p. 268-291, 

 It probably belongs to Icica cubensis Rose, as there published. See 

 also, with reference to these species, Urban, Symbolce AntillancB. 

 VII, 1912, pp. 239-241. 



351. Elaphrium Simaruba (Linnaeus) Rose. 



Pistacia Simaruba Linn^us, Species Plantarum, 1753, p. 1026. 



Bursera gummifera Jacquin, Selectarum Stirpium Americanarum, (1762?), p. 94, 



PI. 65; Grisebach, Flora of the British West Indian Islands, 1859, p. 173. 

 Elaphrium Simaruba Rose, North American Flora, XXV, 191 1, p. 246. 



Pedernales Point, February 16, 1899. — C. F. Millspaugh. General 

 Distribution: Florida, the West Indies, and probably Mexico. 



Family MELIACE^. 



Key to the Species Enumerated. 

 Leaves even-pinnate. 



Leaflets in 7-10 pairs; fruit a woody oblong capsule about 3 cm. long. 



352. Cedrela odorata. 



Leaflets in 5-8 pairs; fruit a globose capsule not over 1.5 cm. long. 



353. Trichilia hirta. 



Leaflets in 3-5 pairs; fruit a woody ovoid capsule about 6-12 cm. long. 



355. Swielenia Mahagoni. 



Leaves odd-pinnate, the leaflets 7-9, rarely 5, in number. 



354. Trichilia havanensis. 



352. Cedrela odorata Linnaeus. W^est Indian Cedar. Cedro. 



Cedrela odorala Linn^us, Systema Naturae, Ed. X, II, 1759, p. 940. 

 Surenus Brownii O. Kuntze, Revisio Generum Plantarum, I, 1891, p. 574. 



Near Nueva Gerona, February 2, 1904. Fruiting specimen, A. H. 

 Cnrtiss, No. 325; middle slope of Caballos Mts., May 13, 1910, 0. E. 

 Jennings, No. 226 (fruiting specimen) ; near Nueva Gerona, early 

 summer 1912, G. A. Link. General Distribution: West Indies and 

 from Mexico to Colombia. 



Probably at one time quite a common tree on the slopes of the 



