Parr 1, 1914] ERICACEAE 55 
deep-green and finely pubescent above, paler and finely pubescent beneath, barely ciliate, 
sessile; pedicels shorter than the leaves, minutely pubescent and glandular-pilose; sepals 
lanceolate to oblong-lanceolate, acute or slightly acuminate, copiously soft-ciliate with gland- 
tipped hairs: corolla light-pink, 17-20 mm. broad; filaments glabrous; capsules not seen. 
Type collected in pinelands, Los Indios, Isle of Pines, Cuba, May 17, 1910, Jennings 324 (herb. 
N. Y. Bot. Gard.). 
DistRiButTion: Isle of Pines, Cuba. 
17. CHAMAEDAPHNE Moench, Meth. 457. 1794. 
Cassandra D. Don, Edinb. New Phil. Jour. 17: 158. 1834. 
Shrubs with irregularly branching stems. Leaves alternate; blades leathery, slightly 
toothed, petioled. Flowers perfect, in one-sided leafy-bracted racemes. Calyx stellate, 
subtended by 2 bractlets; lobes 5, much longer than the tube, persistent. Corolla urceolate, 
white; lobes 5, recurved, much shorter than the tube. Stamens 10, included; filaments subu- 
late, glabrous, adnate to the base of the corolla; anthers shorter than the filaments, the sacs 
awnless, prolonged into tubes which open by terminal pores. Disk 10-lobed. Ovary 5-celled, 
5-grooved; style elongate; stigma entire. Ovules numerous in each cavity. Capsule de- 
pressed, loculicidally 5-valved, the sutures not thickened. 
Type species, Andromeda calyculaia IL. 
1. Chamaedaphne calyculata (L.) Moench, Meth. 457. 1794. 
Andromeda calyculata I,. Sp. Pl. 394. 1753. 
Lyonia calyculata Reichenb. Fl, Germ. Excurs. 414. 1830. 
Cassandra calyculata D. Don, Edinb. New Phil. Jour. 17: 158. 1834. 
Shrub asymmetrical, 1-15 dm. tall, with scurfy foliage; leaf-blades oblong, elliptic, obo- 
vate, or oblanceolate, 1-5 cm. long, obtuse or acute, serrulate or erose, narrowed into very 
short petioles; racemes 2-12 cm. long, conspicuously bracted; bracts similar to the leaves but 
smaller; pedicels 1-3 mm. long; calyx-lobes triangular or triangular-ovate, 1.5-2 mm. long, 
or rarely longer, acute; corolla white, 6-7 mm. long, the lobes ovate, obtuse; capsules spheroidal- 
angular, 4 mm. broad. 
TYPH LOCALITY: Virginia. 
DIstRIBUTION: Newfoundland to Alaska, south to Georgia, Illinois, and British Columbia; 
also in northern Europe and Asia. 
ILLusTRaTIONs: Pall. Fl. Ross. pl. 72; Lam. Tab. Encyc. pl. 365; Sv. Bot. 1. 583; Reichenb. 
Fl. Germ. 17: pl. 1161; Britt. & Brown, Ill. Fl. f. 2772; ed. 2. f. 3236; Meehan, Nat. Fl. 1: ol. 32. 
18. EUBOTRYS Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. II. 8: 269. 1843. 
Shrubs with erect or ascending rigid stems, the branches usually spreading. Leaves 
alternate, deciduous; blades relatively broad, thinnish, finely toothed, petioled. Flowers 
perfect, in secund terminal raceme-like panicles which are partly formed the preceding summer. 
Calyx stellate; lobes 5, narrow or rather broad, very much longer than the tube. Corolla 
narrowly urceolate, much longer than the calyx, the lobes much shorter than the tube. Stamens 
10, included; filaments subulate, lanceolate, or linear, glabrous, straight; anthers narrow, the 
sacs l- or 2-awned at the apex. Ovary 5-celled, lobed, depressed; style columnar, straight; 
stigma slightly dilated, obscurely lobed. Capsule depressed, thick-walled, obscurely or 
prominently lobed, 5-valved, septicidal. 
Type species, Andromeda racemosa L. 
Capsules not lobed; seeds wingless; panicles straight or nearly so. : 
Calyx-lobes of an ovate type, less than 3 as long as the corolla; capsule exceeding 
the calyx. 1. E. racemosa, 
Calyx-lobes of a lanceolate type, } as long as the corolla or longer; capsule 
shorter than the calyx. 2. E. elongata. 
Capsules lobed; seeds winged; panicles curved. 3. E. recurve. 
1. Eubotrys racemosa (L.) Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. II. 8: 269. 
1843. 
Andromeda racemosa L,. Sp. Pl. 394. 1753. 
Leucothoe racemosa A. Gray, Man. ed. 2. 252. 1856. 
A wide-branching shrub 1-4 m. tall, with glabrous or puberulent twigs; leaves firm, the 
blades oblong or elliptic, varying to obovate, 2-7 cm. long, acute or slightly acuminate, serru- 
