CHECK LIST OF FOREST TEEES 215 



NAMES IN USE 



Dogwood (Calif., Oreg., Wash.). Western Dogwood. 



California Dogwood (Calif.). Pacific Dogwood. 



Flowering Dogwood (Oreg., Calif.). 



Cornus alternifolia Linnaeus. Blue Dogwood. 



Range. — From Nova Scotia and New Brunswick (through St. Lawrence 

 Vallev) to Lake Superior (northern shores) and Minnesota; south through the 

 Northern States (and in the Appalachian Mountains) Iowa and southern Mis- 

 souri, southwestern Georgia and Alabama (Covington County), and Florida. 



NAMES IN USE 



Dogwood (Vt., Mass., R. I., Conn., Umbrella-tree (R. I.). 



N. Y., N. J., Pa., Va., W. Va., N. C, Pigeonberry (N. Y.). 



Ga., Fla., Ky., 111., Wis., Minn., Ohio, Alternate-leaved Dogwood (Mich.). 



Ont.). Green Osier (Vt.). 



Blue Dogwood (Pa.). Pagoda Dogwood (lit.). 



Purple Dogwood (Pa.). Alternate-leaved Cornel. 



Cornns asperifolia Michaux. 48 Ronghleaf Dogwood. 



Range. — Southern Ontario (north shores of Lake Erie) to South Dakota, and 

 southward to western Florida; westward to eastern Nebraska and Kansas, and 

 throughout Missouri, southwestern Arkansas and Oklahoma to eastern Texas. 



NAMES IN USE 



Roughleaf Dogwood. Rough-leaved Cornel. 



GARRYA Douglas 



Garrya elliptica Douglas. Tasseitree. 



Range. — Oregon through California to the Santa Lucia Mountains (Monterey 

 County). 



NAMES IN USE 



Quinine Bush. Silk -tassel Tree. 



Fringe-tree. Tasseitree. 



Silk -tassel Bush. 



Family ERICACEAE 

 ELLIOTTIA Muehlenberg 



Elliottia racemosa Muehlenberg. 



Range. — Eastern border of Georgia (vicinity of Augusta, valley of the Savan- 

 nah River, Richmond County, and also in Bulloch, Burke, Telfair, and Coffee 

 Counties). 



** Cornus stricta LaMarck, Stiff Dogwood, occurring from Virginia to Florida and westward to Missouri 

 and Texas, possibly should be admitted to our arborescent flora. It has been recorded as a small tree bv 

 J. K. Small (Flor. So. E. U. S., 853, 1903) under the name Srida stricta (LaMarck) Small, and by Britton 

 and Shafer (North Am. Trees, 742, 1908) under Cornus. As the writer knows this species it is commonly 

 only a shrub, an arborescent form of it not yet having been observed. 



H. O. Calkins, Supervisor of the Coronado National Forest (southern Arizona) has recently (1921) re- 

 ported, through District Forester Frank C. W. Pooler, finding Cornus stolonifera Michaux of tree size in 

 the Santa Catalina Mountains at elevations of from 7,500 to 8,000 feet. This species, heretofore known 

 only as a shrub, previously has not been reported as far south in the Rocky Mountain region as southern 

 Arizona. Further investigations of the arborescent growth of this is to be made. 



