FREE INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE 
VEGETATION OF SOUTH FLORIDA 
139 
о Eugenia buxifolia Willd. Near the beach, Palm Beach, Nov. 19, 1904; 
Miami, Oct. 28-Nov. 28, 1903. 
— Eugenia axillaris (Sw.) Willd. Long Key (Everglades), Jan. 18-26, 1909; 
Miami, Mar. 19, 1904; —near Homestead Trail, about Silver Palm 
School, Nov. 24-27, 1904. 
+ Rapanea guyanensis Aubl. Long Key (Everglades), Jan. 18-26, 1909; + 
about New River Sound, below Ft. Lauderdale, Nov. 25, 1904; —south 
of Miami, Mar. 18, 1904. 
+ Icacorea paniculata (Nutt.) Sudw. Near Homestead Road, between 
Cutler and Longview Camp, Nov. 9-12, 1903; == Miami, Oct. 27-Nov. 
13, LOOT, 
9 Chrysophyllum olivaeforme L. Near Homestead Trail, about Silver 
Palm School, Nov. 24-27, 1904; —Snapper Creek, south of Cocoanut 
Grove, Oct. 27-31, 1901; —between Cocoanut Grove and Cutler, 
Nov. 13-23. 
— Sapota achras Mill. Arch Creek, above Miami, Nov. 7, 1904; between 
Cocoanut Grove and Cutler, Nov. 13-23. 
+ Bumelia microcarpa Small. Homestead to Big Hammock Prairie, Feb. 
15-17, 1911; Long Key (Everglades), May 6-7, 1904. 
+ Dipholis salicifolia (L.) A. DC. Miami, Apr. то, 1904; Long Key (Ever- 
glades), May 6-7, 1904. 
— Sideroxylon foetidissima Jacq. Ft. Myers, July and Aug., 1911; Snapper 
Creek, south of Cocoanut Grove, Oct. 27-31, 1901. 
+ Solanum verbascifolium L. Near the Homestead Road, between Cutler and 
Longview Camp, Nov. 9-12, 1903; Miami, Oct. 28-Nov. 28, 1903. 
— Crescentia latifolia Mill. Brickell Hammock, Feb., ıgı1; near Little 
River, Apr. 4, 1909. 
— Guettarda scabra Vent. Ft. Lauderdale, Nov. 19-25, 1903. 
+ Psychotria undata Jacq. Long Key (Everglades), May 6-7, 1904 — 
Miami, Oct. 28-Nov. 24, 1903. 
CYPRESS SWAMP FORMATIONS 
One of the most conspicuous and characteristic plant formations of the 
Southern states, as well as of Florida, is one in which the swamp-, bald-, or de- 
ciduous cypress, Taxodium distichum (L.) L. C. Rich., plays an important róle. 
The cypress is nearly confined to the coastal plain from southern Delaware to 
Southern Florida, westward near the Gulf of Mexico to Texas, and up the 
Mississippi Valley to Missouri and Indiana. Closely related to it is a species, 
Taxodium imbricarium (Nutt.) Harper (=ascendens Brongn.), which grows in 
