MOSELEY. 109 



C. YERNA, L. 



Birmingham and Kimball ; rare. 



LIMNANTHACE^. 



FLCERKEA, Willd. False Mermaid. 

 F. PROSERPINACOIDES, Willd. 



Common in alluvial soil. 



ANACARDIACE^. 



RHUS, L. Sumach. 



R. AROMATiCA, Ait. Fragrant Sumac. 



Cedar Point and Marblehead ; common.^ Other 

 parts of the Peninsula, Islands, Margaretta, 

 western Perkins; frequent. 



R. COPALLINA, L. Dwarf Sumac. 



Oxford and southei^n Perkins ; common. South- 

 east of Milan. 



R. GLABRA, L. Smooth Sumac. 

 Common. 



R. RADiCANS, L. (R. TOXICODENDRON,) Poison Ivy. 



Everywhere except on Green Island. Common. 

 Berries eaten and seeds distributed by birds. 



R. TYPHiNA, L. Staghorn Sumac. 



Islands, Peninsula and Cedar Point; abundant. 

 Lester Carpenter of Kelley's Island has book- 

 shelves of this wood, and says that one tree was 

 sixteen inches in diameter near the ground, and 

 about fourteen inches, at a height of six feet. 

 Where else does sumac attain such a size ? 



R. VENENATA, DC. Poison Sumac. 



Vermillion; almost exterminated. "Formerly in 

 old huckleberry swamp near Axtel" A. A. Blair 

 and L. W. Washburn. 



