64 MISSISSIPPI STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (Bull. 
Family SELAGINELLACEAE. Underw. 
SELAGINHLLA Beauv. 
Selaginella apus (L.) Spring. (Lycopodium apodum L.) 
Wet springy banks, mcstly in pine barrens. Jackson; 
Hattiesburg. 
Geo. Surv. Herb. 
Subkingdom SPERMATOPHYTA. Flowering and Seed-bearing 
Plants. 
Class GYIMNOSPERMAE. Cone-bearing Plants. 
PINACEAE. Pine Family. 
Pinus L, Pine. 
Pinus taeda L. Loblolly, or Old Field Pine. 
Mostly an upland tree throughout the state in light sandy 
soils. Not common originally in the loess bluffs bordering 
the Mississippi Delta, or in the Delta. As second growth 
forms dense youn forests throughout the state. 
Pinus hetrophylla, (Ell.) Sudworth (P. Elliottii Englem.) 
Cuban Pine. 
Coast Counties. (Hilg. Rep.) Coastal Islands. 
Wayne, Perry, Forrest, Lamar Counties. 
Pinus palustris Mill. (P. australis Michx.) Long Leaf Pine. 
Southern counties to the Coast; Coastal Islands. (Tracy.) 
Lost Gap. 
Pinus echinata Mill. (P. mitis Michx.) Short Leaf Yellow Pine. 
Central Pine Belt. : 
Allison Herbarium 
Pinus glabra Walt. Spruce Pine. 
First bottoms of streams flowing into the Gulf. — Smith, 
Wayne, Jones, Neshoba, Hinds, Pike, Amite, Forest and Han- 
cock counties; Lauderdale. 
Geol. Surv. Herb. 
