LORAXTHACEAE 157 



Gleditsia triacaulhos. IB. Jackson County. 



Acer leucodennc. 2B. Tuscaloosa County. 



Acer saccharinuin. IB. Jackson, Madison, Marsliall. 2B. Tuscaloosa. 



6A. Tuscaloosa, Greene, Hale. 6C. Hale. 7. Hale. 10\V. Marengo. (Con- 

 trast this with the entries under Populus dcltoidcs — a tree which grows in 

 most of the same places — above.) 



Acer rubnmi. 6A. Tuscaloosa County. 



Conuis florida. 13. Baldwin County. 



Nvssa svk'otica. lA. Limestone, 1B(?). Madison. IC. Colbert. 2A. 

 Marshall, DeKalb. 2B. Walker, Tuscaloosa. 3. Shelby. 5. Chilton. El- 

 more{?). 6A. Tuscaloosa, Bibb. 13. Baldwin. 



A'vssa biflora. 6A. Franklin, Tuscaloosa. 6B. Chilton, Autauga. 6C. 

 Pickens. Dallas, Macon. 8. Bullock. lOE. Pike. Dale. lOW. Sumter. 12. 

 Covington, Geneva, Houston. 13. Mobile, Baldwin, Escambia, Covington. 

 14. Mobile, Baldwin. 



Nyssa uniflora. 6A. Tuscaloosa County. 



Adelia aciiiiiiiiafa. Choctaw Bluff, Clarke County. 



Fraxiiuts Americana. IB. Marshall. 6A. Tuscaloosa. 7. Sumter. 



Diosf^yros J'irgiiiiaiia. 2B. or 6A. Near Xorth Alabama Junction, Tus- 

 caloosa County. 



Xo (louljt thi.s list can be consideralily extended ; but when all 

 the facts are in. it will ])r()l)ably be found that in any one region 

 the mistletoe (assuming it to be all one species) is confined to cer- 

 tain species of trees, and rare or absent on others on which one 

 might reasonably expect it. But it may be adapting itself to more 

 and more species all the time, as shown by its occasional occurrence 

 on cultivated trees, which it could have had no experience with up 

 to say 100 years ago. 



SANTALACEAE. Sandal-wood Family. 



NESTRONIA, Rafinesque. (Darbya. Gray) 



Nestronia umbellulata, Raf. 



A rare shrub, so little known that it has no common name and 

 no known use. Grows in dry or rich woods. 



2A. Cullman County (Mohr). A single staminate specimen seen by 

 the writer in dry woods near east fork of Flint Creek north of \'inemont. 

 in bloom. Mav 15, 1928. A few others have been seen in the same countv 

 by \\'. Wolf. ' 



5. Lee County (Baker & Earle). 



Pyrularia ptibcra, Mx., another shrub nearly as rare, belonging to the 

 same family, which has been found in rich woods at one or two places in 

 the Piedmont region of Georgia, and more commonly in the mountains of 

 North Carolina, is credited to Alabama in Small's Flora of the Southeast- 

 ern United States, but without definite locality and probably without suf- 

 ficient evidence. 



