102 SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA. 
Vaccinium arboreum, v. 119. Extend range to southeastern Kansas, where it has been found by E. N. 
Plank near Galena, Cherokee County. 
Arbutus Andrachne, v. 122. This name was first published by Linnzus in 1759 in the tenth edition of the 
Systema (ii. 1024). 
Andromeda ferruginea, v. 131. Extend range to Tampa, Florida, where it was collected March 29, 1898, 
by C. S. Sargent; to Appalachicola, where it was collected in low sandy Pine barrens March 10, 1888, by Dr. A. 
W. Chapman; and to Mary Esther, Santa Rosa County, Florida, where it was found by Dr. C. Mohr in October, 
1880. ‘ 
Oxydendrum arboreum, v. 135. Extend range to Exmore, Hampton, and Old Point Comfort on the 
east coast of Virginia, where it is abundant. (Zeste W. M. Canby.) 
Chrysophyllum oliviforme, v. 161. What is probably the Florida tree, judging from Plumier’s figure 
(Pl. Am. ed. Burmann, t. 69), was first described by Linnzus as Chrysophyllum oliviforme in the tenth edition 
of the Systema (p. 937), published in 1759, and not by Lamarck. 
Add to the synonyms : — 
Chrysophyllum Cainito B, Linneus, Spec. 192 (1753). 
Bumelia lanuginosa, v. 171. Extend range to Eustis, Lake County, Florida, where it was found in July, 
1895, by Mr. G. B. Nash; to the neighborhood of Appalachicola, Florida, where it was collected in June, 1897, 
by Dr. A. W. Chapman ; and to southeastern Kansas (Hitchcock, Flora of Kansas, xiii.). 
Fraxinus quadrangulata, vi. 35. Extend range to southeastern Kansas (Hitchcock, Flora of Kansas, 
xiii.). 
Fraxinus anomala, vi. 39. Extend range to the cafion of the Gunnison River at Grand Junction, western 
Colorado, where it has been found by Miss Alice Eastwood (see Zoé, ii. 232), to the banks of Grand River in 
Utah, where it has also been collected by Miss Alice Eastwood (see Proc. Cal. Acad. ser. 2, vi. 805) ; to the 
southern rim of the Grand Cajion of the Colorado River, where it was found at Talfrey, Arizona, in September, 
1894, by Toumey and Sargent; and to the Mogollon Mountains, New Mexico, where it was collected in April, 
1881, by Professor E. L. Greene. 
Fraxinus Pennsylvanica, vi. 49. Extend range to central Kansas (Hitchcock, Flora of Kansas, xiii.). 
Fraxinus Pennsylvanica, var. lanceolata, vi. 50. Extend range southward in Florida to the deep river- 
swamps of the lower Appalachicola River basin, where it is very abundant and grows probably to its largest size, 
often forming trunks three feet in diameter; and to Assiniboin, where it was collected by Mr. John Macoun on 
the shores of Old Wives’ Lakes in 1895 and south of Moose Jaw in 1896. (See Canadian Record of Science, 
vii. 281.) 
Large quantities of lumber manufactured from this tree in the sawmills of Appalachicola are sent to the 
north, where it is used in the interior finish of houses and in cabinet-making. 
Catalpa Catalpa, vi. 86. Catalpa communis was first published in 1802 in the first edition of Du Mont 
de Courset’s Bot. Cult. Gi. 189). 
Crescentia cucurbitina, vi. 99. Remove from the synonyms Crescentia ovata, Burmann, an East Indian 
species, and add Crescentia ovata, Sudworth (Bull. No. 14 Div. Forestry U. S. Dept. Agric. 886 [Nomen- 
clature of the Arborescent Species of the United States] [not Urban] [1887]). 
Sassafras Sassafras, vii.17. Extend range to the neighborhood of Wells, York County, Maine, where it 
was found September 16, 1895, by Mr. Walter Deane; and to the neighborhood of Sarnia, Lambton County, 
Ontario. (See Canadian Record of Science, vii. 285.) 
Ulmus campestris, vii. 40. Add to the synonyms : — 
Ulmus nitens, Moench, Meth. 333 (1794). 
Ulmus surculosa, Stokes, Bot. Mat. Med. ii. 85 (1812). 
Ulmus scabra, vii. 40. An older name for this tree is Ulmus glabra, Hudson, Fl. Angl. 95 (1762). 
Add to the synonyms : — 
Uimus latifolia, Moench, Meth. 333 (1794). 
Ulmus levis, vii. 40. Add to the synonyms : — 
Ulmus racemosa, Borkhausen, Handb. Forstbot. i. 851 (1800). 
Ulmus racemosa, vii. 48. This name was used by Borkhausen in 1800 for a European species of Elm 
(Handb. Forstbot. i. 851), and therefore was not applicable to the American tree, for which the name Ulmus 
Thomasi is proposed. 
