14 MISC. PUBLICATION 16 2, U. S. DEFT. OF AGRICULTURE 



forests of the North has been the mainstay of the eastern and central 

 lumber markets. The production of high-quality southern yellow 

 pine, however, has passed its peak. In addition to being valuable 

 timber trees, the longleaf and slash pines are highly important as the 

 source of the gum from which turpentine and rosin are manufactured. 

 Other species found in the pinelands are southern red, turkey, black, 

 post, laurel, and willow oaks blackgum ; pond, spruce, and sand pines. 



Another tree of commercial importance, found in the southern for- 

 est, is the baldcypress. It grows mostly in the swamps and 

 lowlands and is one of the few coniferous trees that shed their leaves 

 in the fall (fig. 8, B). The supply of this species also is gradually 

 dwindling after years of heavy cutting. 



Perhaps the most important hardwood tree of the southern forest 

 is sweetgum, or red gum. At one time its wood was considered of 

 little importance because of its tendency to warp and twist. With 

 the introduction of proper seasoning methods and the diminishing 

 supply of finishing woods, the sweetgum has risen from a position 

 of comparative obscurity to a rank of seventh among all lumber- 

 producing trees (1942). Sweetgum is second only to Douglas-fir in 

 the production of veneer and ranks second among all woods as a 

 source of slack cooperage. It also goes into many other products. 



Both baldcypress and sweetgum are inhabitants of the alluvial 

 bottoms and swamps. Also growing in bottom-land portions of the 

 southern forest region are tupelo and blackgums : water, laurel, live, 

 overcup, Texas red, and swamp white oaks; yellow-poplar; hickories 

 (including pecan); beech; ashes; red and silver maples; cottonwood 

 and willows; elms; sycamore: hackberry. honeylocust; bays; mag- 

 nolias ; spruce pine ; and southern white-cedar. 



Tropical Forest Region 



The tropical forest region is so small as to be of almost negligible 

 commercial importance. It consists of two fringes of forest along 

 the coast in extreme southern Florida and extreme southern coastal 

 Texas. Its total area is probably not more than 400,000 acres and 

 the density of the forest varies greatly. Many kinds of hardwoods 

 are found in this region, but most of them are small and bear ever- 

 green leaves and pulpy berries or stone fruit. A few, like the mastic 

 or "wild olive,*' are of some commercial or economic importance. 

 The mangrove is also valuable because the impenetrable thickets it 

 forms hold the muddy banks, cause new land to be built up, and act 

 as a windbreak against tropical hurricanes. 



The principal trees of the tropical forest region are mangrove, 

 royal and thatch palms, Florida yew, wild fig, pigeon plum, blolly, 

 wild tamarind, gumbo limbo, poisonwood, inkwood, buttonwood, 

 mastic or wild olive, Jamaica dogwood, and cabbage palmetto (fig. 9). 

 The tropical species in this region are at the northern limits of their 

 natural ranges which include mostly some or all of the West Indies, the 

 Bahamas. Central America, and South America. The trees probably 

 grew from seed washed ashore during storms or distributed by birds. 



Rocky Mountain Forest Region 



The forests of the Rocky Mountain region occupy the high eleva- 

 tions of the various ranges of the Rocky Mountain system between 



