Pinus Laricio 417 



In Herzegovina, according to Beck, the tree grows down the Neretva valley to 

 the Plasa Planina and the southern slope of the Prenj Planina. In Montenegro it 

 is comparatively rare, Pinus kucodermis having been often mistaken for it. It 

 occurs scattered through Albania. In Dalmatia there are peculiar forests of Austrian 

 pine, in which there is a dense undergrowth of evergreen Mediterranean shrubs and 

 Juniperits Oxycedrus ; and Beck describes the most remarkable of these, which occur 

 at about 2500 feet elevation, on the peninsula of Sabioncello and the island of Brazza. 

 The greatest altitude in these regions at which the Austrian pine was seen growing 

 by Beck was 5300 feet on the west slope of Mount Dinara in south-western Bosnia, 

 on the Dalmatian frontier. 



In Greece, Laricto, probably of the Corsican variety, occurs in the mountains, 

 often forming extensive woods, and Halacsy^ mentions various localities in the 

 provinces of Epirus, Thessaly, Eubcea, ^Etolia, Peloponnesus, and in Crete. In 

 Cyprus ^ Laricio is only met with on the summit of Troodos and on some crests to 

 the west, at 4000 to 5000 feet altitude, just above the zone oi Pinus kalepettsis, the 

 two species mingling slightly together at the line of junction, as is the case in 

 Corsica. Mr. Madon, who cut down a hundred trees, says that the timber is of no 

 value, on account of the large amount of sapwood in immature trees, until it has 

 reached the age of 250 years. Hartmann,' who has recently visited Cyprus, gives 

 an elaborate account of the Laricio forest. He states that pure woods of this 

 species are rarely met, as in its lower zone, from 4000 to 4500 feet, it grows mixed 

 with Pinus halepensis ; and above this, to the summit of Troodos, it is accompanied 

 by Juniperus fcettdissima. It attains a height of 80 feet and a girth of as much 

 as 16 feet. 



In Asia Minor, according to Tchihatcheff,* it grows mixed with silver fir on 

 Olympus in Bithynia at 2700 to 5000 feet altitude, and in the same province, on 

 Mount Samanly, at 1600 to 2100 feet, and in the island of Thasos, where it forms 

 mth. Juniperus excelsa a wood in the littoral region. He records it near Soma in 

 the mountains of Mysia ; in the valley of the Meander in Troas ; between Mughla and 

 Eskischer in Caria ; in the Antitaurus, where it forms mixed woods wlih J^uiiperus 

 excelsa, Abies cilicica, cedar, and oak ; and in various localities in Pisidia, Isauria, 

 and Cilicia. . 



In the Crimea"^ it grows on dry, poor, calcareous soil, forming woods on the 

 western slopes of the mountain chain which extends along the coast of the Black 

 Sea. The Crimean pine has been made a distinct variety, pallasiana, but it is 

 probably identical with the Austrian pine. 



According to Radde," Pinus austriaca, as he terms it, is rare in the Caucasus. 

 Steven discovered it in 1840 in the neighbourhood of Gelentschik ; and Kusnezoff 

 has since found it at a place called Wulanskaja, 35 kilometres south-east of 

 Gelentschik, where there is a small open grove with sound trees attaining 2 metres 

 in girth. Radde adds that it grows near the Black Sea at Bulanka. (A. H.) 



1 Consp. Fl. Graca, iii. 452 (1904). 



- Forests of Cyprus ; Parly. Paper, Cyprus, No. 366 of 1S81, E}icl. No. 2, pp. 28, 34. 



2 Mill. Deutscli. Dcncb-ol. Ges. 1905, p. 172. * Asie Mineure, ii. 497 (i860). 



^ Antoine, Conif. 6 (1S40). " PJianzenverh. in Kaukasuslandcrn, 169, 1S4 (1S99). 



II 2 F 



