CATALOGUE OF FOREST TREES. 23 



ANONAOEJil. 



9. Asimina triloba, Dunal, 



Mon. Auon. 83. De Candolle, Syst. i, 479; Prodr. i, 87. Elliott, Sk. ii, 42. Guimpel, Otto & Hayne, Abb. Holz. 66, t. 53. Hayuo, 

 Dend. Fl. 118. Spivngel, Syst. ii, 639. Torrey, Compend. Fl. N. States, 222; Ann. Lye. N. York, ii, 165 Beck, Bot. 16. Don| 

 Miller's Diet, i, 91. Nuttall in Jour. Philadelphia Acad. vii, 11. Dietrich, Syn. iii, 304. London, Arboretum, i, 293, f. 39. Gray, 

 Genera, i, 69, t. 26,27; Manual N. State*, 5 ed. 50. Parry in Owen's Rep. 609. Darlington, Fl. Cestrica, 3 ed. 9. Darby, Bot. S. 

 States, 212. Cooper in Smithsonian Rep. 1858, 250. Chapman, Fl. S. States, 15. Curtis in Rep. Geological Surv. N. Carolina, 

 1860, iii, 94. Lesquereux in Owen's 2d Rep. Arkansas, 347. Maont & Decaisne, Bot. English ed. 199 & figs. Bot. Mag. t. 

 5854. Wood, Cl. Book, 215; Bot. & Fl. 26. Porcher, Resources S. Forests, 41. Engehnann in Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. new ser. 

 xii, 183. Koch, Dendrologie, ii, 383. Young, Bot. Texas, 149. Vasey, Cat. Forest Trees, 6. Ridgway in Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus, 

 1882, 60. Burgess in Coulter's Bot. Gazette, vii, 95. 



Anona triloba, Linnanis, Spec. led. 537. Marshall, Arbustum, 10. Lamarck, Diet, ii, 125. Walter, Fl. Caroliniana, 158. 

 B. S. Barton, Coll. i, 29. Aiton, Hort. Kew. ii,254 ; 2 ed. iii, 335. Willdenow, Spec, ii, 1267 ; Enum. i, 580. Nouvean 

 Duhamel, ii, 83, t. 25. Desfontaines, Hist. Arb. ii, 21. Michaux f. Hist. Arb. Am. iii, 161, t. 9; N. American Sylva, 

 3 ed. ii, 33, t. 60. Barton, Prodr. Fl. Philadelph. 59. Schkuhr, Handb. ii, 95, t. 149. 



Anona pendula, Salisbury, Prodr. 380. 

 Orchidocarpum arietinum, Michaux, Fl. Bor.-Am. i, 329. 



Porcelid triloba, Persoon, Syn. ii, 95. Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept. ii, 383. Rafinesque, Fl. Ludoviciana, 92. Barton, Compond. 

 Fl. Philadelph. ii, 18. Nuttall, Genera, ii, 19. Poiret, Suppl. iv, 529. Eaton, Manual, 6 ed. 278. Andubon, Birds, t. 

 2, 162. Eaton & Wright, Bot. 371. 



Uvaria trilol)Cl, Torrey & Gray, Fl. N. America, i, 45. Torrey, Fl. N. York, i, 30. Caruel in Ann. Mus. Firenze, 1864, 9, t. 

 1, f. 1-7. Baillon, Adansonia, viii, 333; Hist. PI. i, 193, f. 220-228. 



A. campaniflora, Spach, Hist. Veg. vii, 529. 



PAPAW. CUSTARD APPLE. 



Western New York (Lockport and in Monroe county); Ontario (Queen stown heights); eastern and central 

 Pennsylvania, west to southern Michigan, southern Iowa, and eastern Kansas (Manhattan), south to middle 

 Florida and the valley of the Sabine river, Texas. 



A small tree, sometimes 12 meters in height, with a trunk rarely exceeding 0.30 meter in diameter, or often 

 reduced to a slender shrub ; rich, rather low woods, reaching its greatest development in the lower Wabash valley 

 and in the valley of the White river, Arkansas. 



Wood very light, very soft and weak, coarse-grained, spongy; layers of annual growth clearly marked by 

 several rows of large open ducts ; color, light yellow shaded with green, the sap-wood lighter ; specific gravity, 

 0.3969; ash, 0.21. 



10. Anona laurifolia, Dunal, 



Mon. Anon. 65. De Candolle, Syst. i, 468; Prodr. i, 84. Sprengel, Syst. ii, 641. Lindley, Bot. Reg. xvi, t. 1328. Schnizlein, Icon. 

 1. 174, f. 9. Grisebach, Fl. British West Indies, 4. Cooper in Smithsonian Rep. I860, 439. Chapman, Fl. S. States, Suppl. 603. 



A. glabra, Chapman in Coulter's Bot. Gazette, iii, 2 [not Linnaeus]. 



A. Species, Vasey, Cat. Forest Trees, 6. 



POND APPLE. 



Semi-tropical Florida, cape Malabar to bay Biscayne, on the west coast, Pease creek to the Caloosa river, 

 and through the West Indies. 



A small tree, sometimes 9 meters in height, with a trunk 0.30 meter in diameter, or toward its northern limit and 

 on the west coast often reduced to a stout, wide-spreading shrub ; common and reaching its greatest development 

 within the United States on the low islands and shores of the Everglades in the neighborhood of bay Biscayue. 



Wood light, soft, not strong, rather close-grained, compact, containing many scattered open ducts ; color, light 

 brown streaked with yellow, sap-wood lighter ; specific gravity, 0.5053 ; ash, 4.86. 



The large fruit (0.14 to 0.28 meter long) scarcely edible. 



