MAMMALS OF THE MEXICAN BOUNDARY. 69 



SAMBUCUS GLAUCA Nuttall. 

 PALE ELDER; SANCO. 



On the east, the Mexican sanco was first met with on the Santa 

 Cruz River of Sonora and Arizona, its range extending westward 

 across the Coast Range of California. Specimens were collected in 

 Arizona, California, Lower California, and Sonora, Mexico. Its 

 habitat is along permanent streams and "about springs in the Sonoran 

 Life Zone. At Santo Domingo, on the Sonoyta River, Sonora, Mexico, 

 Don Cypriano Ortejo, alcalde of the village, showed me a tree 

 (specimen No. 2718) measuring 1.5 meters (5 feet) in circumfer- 

 ence and 8 meters (26 feet) in height, which was known to be 34 

 years old in the year 1894. This was the largest one seen, although 

 many in the Santa Cruz Valley were large. 



INTKODUCED SPECIES OF TKEES, NOW GKOWING WITHOUT CULTIVATION ON 

 THE MEXICAN BOEDER OF THE UNITED STATES. 



CHAMAECYPARIS sp. 

 CEDAE. 



An ornamental shade tree which has sparingly escaped from cul- 

 tivation at Brackettville, Kinney County, Texas. 



FICUS sp. 

 FIG.. 



Large trees were found growing without cultivation at Strickland 

 Springs, Kinney County, Texas; in the Pozo Verde Mountains, Ari- 

 zona ; in the neighborhood of Sonoyta, Sonora ; and at Rancho de San 

 Isidro, Lower California. 



MELIA AZEDARACH Linnaeus. 

 OHnfA TEEE; PEIDE OF INDIA. 



A favorite shade tree, introduced from Persia, and now thoroughly 

 naturalized in Texas. The umbrella china-tree {Melia asedarch 

 vmbracuUfera Sargent) grows luxuriantly at Fort Clark, Texas. 



SCHINUS MOLLE Linnaeus. 

 PEPPER TREE. 



A favorite shade tree in southern California, often growing half 

 wild about deserted ranches. 



EUCALYPTUS (several species). 



Shade tiees at Tucson and La Osa, Arizona, and throughout the 

 coast region of southern California. 



