310 ECONOMIC BOTANY OF ALABAAIA 



6A. Lamar, Pickens, Tuscaloosa, Bibb and Chilton Counties. 

 6B. Tuscaloosa and Autauga Counties. 

 6C. Autauga County. 



8. Montgomery and Pike Counties. 



9. Sumter County. 



lOE. Barbour, Pike, Dale and Coffee Counties, 

 low. Frequent throughout. 



11. Clarke and Conecuh Counties. 



12. Geneva County. 



13. Mobile and Baldwin Counties (Mohr). Escambia and Covington. 



One or more species of Btiddlcia, Asiatic shrubs with small purple 

 flowers, commonly cultivated for ornament, occasionally run wild near 

 dwellings, or persist for a few years after the house around which they 

 grew is deserted. 



APOCYNACEAE. Doc.bane Family. 



A rather large family, with about 130 genera and 1,100 species, 

 of herbs, shrubs and trees, mostly tropical. All have milky juice, 

 and some are poisonous. Quite a number are cultivated for orna- 

 ment. 



TRACHELOSPERUM, Lemaire. (No common name.) 



Trachelospermum difforme (Walt.j Gray. (Forstcronia dif- 

 fonnis, A.DC.) 



A slender twining vine, woody at the base, something like the 

 yellow jessamine, but sinaller and with narrower leaves and much 

 smaller flowers, which appear in June. Economic properties un- 

 known. Probably poisonous, like many of its relatives. 



Grows on banks of streams, in second-bottom sloughs, etc., 

 usually in silty soil, and mostly in the coastal plain. 



IB. Morgan County. 



2A. Along Calvert Prong of Locust Fork of Warrior River, Blount 

 County. (See Bull Torrey Bot. Club, 33-535. 1906.) 



2B. Walker County (E. A. Smith). Long Shoal on Locust Fork of 

 Warrior River, Jefferson County. 



6A. River bottoms, etc., Tuscaloosa County. 



7. Choctaw Bluff on Warrior River, Greene County. Montgomery 

 County (Mohr). 



8. Sumter and Marengo Counties. 



11. St. Stephens Bluff, Washington County. 

 13 or 14. Mobile County (Mohr). 



