AEALIACEAE. — ACANTHOPANAX 659 



shan, thickets, alt. 1200-1800 m., August 1908 (No. 1966; bush 2-3.3 

 m. tall, flowers green). 



This variety resembles the preceding variety in its leaflets being pubescent 

 beneath, but the leaves are always 5-foliolate, the leaflets smaller and narrower, 

 generally oblong-obovate, distinctly doubly serrate and furnished with spreading 

 or slightly reflexed bristles on the petiole and on the midrib beneath. Wilson'a 

 No. 323^ and Henry's No. 6503^ differ from the type in the leaves being pubescent 

 only on the midrib, and in Henry's No. 5950^ the bristles are wanting on both the 

 petiole and the midrib; in Wilson's No. 1966 the bristles are nearly wanting. The 

 Btem may be prickly or nearly unarmed. 



XXIX 



XXXVI, Beibl. LXXXII 



Western Hupeh: Fang Hsien, thickets, alt. 1800-2100 m., 

 August and September 1907 (No. 620; bush 2-3 m. tall, flowers white, 

 fruit black); Hsing-shan Hsien, thickets, alt. 1500-1800 m., August 

 1907 (No. 1968; bush 2-2.6 m. tall, flowers white); without precise 

 locality, A. Henry (Nos. 5950^ 6521, 6630). Western Szech'uan: 

 Mupin, thickets, alt. 1500-2300 m., September 1908 (No. 865; bush 

 1.30-3 m. tall, fruit black) ; around Tachien-lu, thickets, alt. 1800-2400 

 m., October 1908 (No. 1044; bush 2-4 m. tall); same locality, August 

 1904 (Veitch Exped. No. 3693); Wa-shan, thickets, alt. 1200-2100 m., 

 August and October 1908 (No. 11 13; bush 1.3-2.6 m. tall, flowers 

 greenish, fruit black); ''Tsaku-lao, K'ou-shan," August 1891, A, von 

 Rosthorn (No. 2573, type No.). Northern Shensi: Tai-pei-shan, 

 1910, W. Purdom (No. 2); Lao-y-shan, 1897, G. Giraldi. 



This species is very closely related to A. lencorrhizus Harms, but is easily dis- 

 tinguished from it by the leaves with almost invariably 3 leaflets (among 18 sheets 

 with approximately 140 leaves we found only three leaves with 5 and one with 4 leaf- 

 lets), by their glaucous under side, their more coriaceous texture and by their more 

 remote and shallower serration; in the type specimens this is restricted to the up- 

 per part of the leaflets, while in almost all other specimens it extends nearly to the 

 base. The inflorescence consists of several usually rather short-peduncled umbels, 

 ^^'hile in A. leucorrhizus there is usually one long-stalked umbel, occasionally with 

 a few short-stalked smaller ones at its base. 



Here is added a species not collected during the Arnold Arboretum Expeditions. 



Acanthopanax Simonii Schneider, III Handb. Lauhholzk. II. 426, fig. 290*= (1909). 

 ■--Purpus in Moller's Deutsch. Gartn.-ZeiL XXV. 25, fig. (1910). — Bean, Trees & 

 Shrubs Brit. IsL I. 133 (1914). 



Eleutherococcus Simoni Decaisne apud Simon-Louis, Cat. 7 (nomen nudum) (no 

 date).—Vilmorin & Bois, Frut. Vilmmn. 141 (1904). — Hesse in MUL 

 Deutsch. Dendr. Ges. XXII. 272, fig. (1913). 



Eleutherococcus leucorrhizus in Gard. Chron. ser. 3, XXXVIII. 404, fig. 152 (non 



Oliver) (1905). 



