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MARGOLIN Louis.'' Yield from Eucalyptus Plantations in California." 
California State Board of Forestry, Bull. No. 1, Sacramento, 1910, 8vo, p. 38. It 
chiefly deals with the yield of E. globulus from a number of stations. The other 
species are relatively unimportant. 
ZON, RAPHAEL, and BKISCOE, JOHN M. " Eucalypts in Florida." U.S. Dept. 
of Agric., Forest Service, Bull. No. 87, 1911. 
Most of the United States literature on Eucalyptus refers to California, and 
this publication has a special value, if only for the reason that it refers to Florida. It 
is, however, valuable on its own merits. The date of the introduction of Eucalypts 
into Florida is quoted as 1878, when Rev. A. H. White planted six or eight species 
at Georgiana, on Merritt's Island. They soon appeared in seedsmen's catalogues, and 
the largest trees of the early sowings are E. goniocalyx, E. rcsinifera, and E. robusta, 
though E. rostrala and E. amygdalina succeeded well. The record of introduction 
of various species is useful, and Florida experience is not on all fours with that of 
California. 
A list, and particulars of sixteen species growing in Florida is given. The species 
most promising, tested so far, are E. resinifera, rostrata, viminalis, robusta, and tereti- 
cornis. At the same time it is stated that the planting of Eucalypts in Florida is still 
in the experimental stage. 
