222 MISSISSIPPI STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY [Bull. 
Limonium Nashii Small. Nash’s Marsh Rosemary. 
Salt marshes along the coast (Small). 
SAPOTACEAE. Sapodilla Family. 
BUMELIA Sw. 
Bumelia lycioides (L.) Pers. Sideroxylon lycioides L.). South- 
ern Buckthorn. 
Dry open woods and copses; more common on calcareous 
soils. Jackson; Yazoo City; Grenada. March. 
Geol. Surv. Herb. 
DIOSPYROS L. 
Diospyros Virginiana L. Persimmon. 
Common throughout the state in old fields; occasionally in 
deep river swamps. Tishomingo Co.; Lafayette Co.; Hinds 
Co.; Copiah Co. May. 
Geol. Surv. Herb. Allison Herb. 
STYRACACEAE. Storax Family. 
Mohrodendron Carolinianum (L.) Britton (Halesia tetraptera 
L.) Carolina Silverbell Tree. 
Wooded banks of streams; Hinds Co.; Amite Co.; Wilk- 
inson Co.; Chunky; Newton Co.; perhaps throughout the 
state. April. 
Geol. Surv. Herb. Allison Herb. 
Mohrodendron dipterum (L.) Britt. (Halesia diptera L.) 
Southern Silverbell. 
Low wooded stream banks. Madison Co. (Hilg. Ms.); 
Woodville; Rosetta. April. 
STYRAX L. 
Styrax Americana Lam. (S. glabrum Michx.) American So- 
rax. 
North Mississippi (Hilgard); Lafayette Co.; Jones Co. 
(Allison) ; Hattiesburg; Gulfport. Low wet thickets along 
streams. March and April. 
Geol. Surv. Herb. Allison Herb. 
