30 



LIFE ZONES AND CROP ZONES. 



Concord. 

 Isabella. 



Hale. 



Bartlett. 

 Bosc (s). 

 Boiissock. 

 Clairgeau (s). 

 Clapp Favorite. 



FRUITS — continued. 



Gooseberries. 



Grapes. 



Moore Early. 



Peaches. 



Pears. 



Flemish Beauty. 

 Seckel (.s). 

 Tysou (.s). 

 Winter Nelis (s). 



Plums {including prunes) . 



Agen {French, Petite, etc.) (s). 



Columbia. 



Dosch. 



German Prune. 



Golden Drop, Coe (s). 



Golden Prune (s). 



Bubacli, No. 5. 

 Clark Seedlinfj.' 

 Crescent. 

 Everbearing. 

 Jessie. 



Italian {Fellenberg) {s). 

 Pond {Hungarian Prune). 

 Silver Prune {s). 

 Tragedy (.s). 

 Yellow Egg. 



Strawberries. 



Monarch. 



Perry. 



Sharplesa. 



Vick. 



Wilson Albany. 



MISCELL.VNKOUS. 



Alfalfa {s). 



Hops. 



Sugar beef {s). 



Sweet corn. 

 White jyotatiK'.'i. 



5. THE UPPER AUSTRAL ZONE. 



The Upper Austral zone (colored yellowish on the map) may be 

 divided into two large and important faiinal areas — an eastern humid 

 or Carolinian area and a Avostern ai-id or U^^per Sonoran area^ which 

 pass insensibly into one another in the neighborhood of the one hun- 

 dredth meridian, 'i'hey may be described separately. 



{(i) The C'arolinlvn Faunal Area. 



The C-arolinian faunal area (colored yellowisli, si)otted with red, on 

 the map) occupies the larger pai't of th(^ Middle States, except the 

 mountains, covering southeastern South Dakota, eastern Nebraska, 

 Kansas, and part of Oklahoma; nearly the whole of Iowa, Missouri, 

 Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Maryland, and Delaware; more than half of 

 West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, and New Jersey, and large 

 areas in Alabama, Georgia, the Carolinas, Virginia, Pennsylvania, 



'Markedly successful at Hood River, Oregon, where the Pacific or humid divi- 

 sion of the Transition zone merges into the arid Upper Sonoran. 



