-
Nyssa sylvatica,
commonly known as
tupelo,
black tupelo,
black gum or sour
gum, is a medium-sized
deciduous tree
native to
eastern North America from...
-
commonly called the
water tupelo, cottongum, wild olive,
large tupelo,
tupelo-
gum, or water-
gum, is a large, long-lived tree in the
tupelo genus (Nyssa) that...
- Sour
gum can
refer to:
Black tupelo (Nyssa sylvatica), a medium-sized
deciduous tree
occasionally referred to as "sourgum".
Water tupelo, a long-lived...
- Mississippi.
Tupelo was
incorporated in 1870. The area had
earlier been
settled as "
Gum Pond"
along the
Mobile and Ohio Railroad. On
February 7, 1934,
Tupelo became...
- aquatica,
Water Tupelo". edis.ifas.ufl.edu.
Retrieved 2016-02-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint:
multiple names:
authors list (link) "Black
Gum and
Tupelo" (PDF). Purdue...
- postmaster.
Tupelo was
named for
Tupelo, Mississippi,
which itself was
named for the
tupelo gum tree. At the time of
their founding, Jeffs, and
later Tupelo, were...
- the
residential areas of
north Tupelo,
destroying many homes, and
killing whole families. The
Gum Pond area of
Tupelo was the
worst hit.
Homes along the...
-
common swamp habitat in
Florida Strand swamp Floodplain swamp Titi
swamp Tupelo gum swamp Mangrove swamp Green Swamp (Florida) (including the
Green Swamp...
-
Cunningham Brake and
Saline Bayou.
Cunningham Brake is a
large cypress-
tupelo gum swamp that also
protects flows in
Kisatchie Bayou.
Saline Bayou has mixed...
- and
tupelo gum hardwood forest and
swamp with
approximately 1,800
acres (7 km2) of old-growth forest. It is the
largest virgin stand of cypress-
tupelo forest...