1906] Fernald, Streptopus in Eastern America 71 



long: anthers lance-subulate, entire, longer than the filaments ; stigma 

 subentire or 3-lobed: fruit unknown.— Quehec, mossy knolls and 

 damp rocks above timber-line, altitude 1000-1050 meters, Mt. Albert, 

 Gasp6 County, August 8-15, 1905 (J. F. Collins & M. L. Fernald). 



4_ ^_ Perianth-segments with the tips only recurved in age: anthers ovate 

 2-horned, shorter than or about equaUing the filaments: stigma 3-cleft. 



S. ROSEUS Michx. Stem usually forked, rarely simple, 2.5-6 dm. 

 high, often kispidulous above: leaves slightly or scarcely amplexicaul 

 tlie margins ciliate: peduncles simple or forked, 1-2.5 cm. long: peri- 

 anth pink-purple, the lanceolate segments 8-12 mm. long: fruit sub- 

 globose, about 1 cm. in diameter, cherry-red. — Fl. i. 201, t. 18 (1803). 

 'Uvularia rosea Pers. Syn. i. SGO (1805). Ilexorima dichotoma Raf. 

 Med. Rep., Hex. 2, v. 351 (1808) and Journ. de Phys. Ixxxix. 262 

 (1819). Ilekorima dichotoma Kunth, Enum. iv. 20-4 (1843). — In 

 woods, Newfoundland to the mountains of Georgia, west to Wisconsin 

 and Manitoba ; in New England ascending to the subalpine districts. 



* * Rootstock slender and wide-creeping. 



S. longipes sp. n. Rhizomate elongato tenui (2-4 mm. diame- 

 tro); caule furcato apice ciliato-hispido 3-4 dm. alto; foliis ovatis vel 

 ovato-lanceolatis sessilibus ciliatis, subtus pallidis, 4 6.5 cm. longis 

 1.5-3 cm. latis; pedunculis ciliato-hispidulis 1.5-2 cm. longis; peri- 

 anthio campanulato rubello, segmentis lanceolato-attenuatis 10-12 

 mm. longis; antheris lanceolato-ovatis bifidis quam filamenta brevi- 

 oribus; stigmate trifido. 



Rootstock elongate, 2-4 mm. in diameter: stem forked, ciliate-hispid 

 above, 3-4 dm. high: leaves ovate or ovate-lanceolate, sessile, ciliate, 

 pale beneath, 4-6.5 cm. long, 1.5-3 cm. broad: peduncles simple, 

 ciliate-hispid, 1.5-2 cm. long: perianth campanulate, reddish, the 

 lance-attenuate segments 10-12 mm. long: anthers lance-ovate, 2- 

 horned, shorter than the filaments: stigma 3-cleft: fruit unknown. — 

 Michigan, in forest of Acer Saccliarum, Turin, Marquette County, 

 June 5, 1901 (Bronson iJarfou;).— Resembling a pale-flowered S. 

 roseus, but clearly distinct in its slender elongate rootstock. Nearer 

 the northwestern S. brevipes which has simple stems, darker entire 

 or denticulate but scarcely ciliate leaves, shorter peduncles (in fruit 

 rarely 1 cm. long) and shorter perianth (5-9 mm. long). 



Gray Herbarium. 



