574 AMYGDALACEAE 



lanceolate or oval, 3-8 cm. lon^, obtuse or slightly acuminate but blunt, glabrous, serrate 

 with appressed teeth, briglit green above, pale green beneath, slender-petioled : racemes 

 drooping, 5-7 cm. long, glabrous : pedicels 4-8 mm. long, thickened upward : sepals del- 

 toid, slightly broader than long : corolla 10-12 mm. broad : petals orbicular-ovate : drupes 

 globular, 8-10 mm. in diameter, purple, sweet. [FriDtus eximia Small.] 

 In river valleys, Texas. Spring. 



3. Padus serotina (Ehrh. ) Agardh. A forest tree, reaching a height of 35 m., with 



a maximum trunk diameter of nearly 2 m. , the bark aromatic and bitter. Leaf-blades firm, 



oblong or elliptic, varying to obovate, or lanceolate, 5-15 cm long, acuminate or acute at 



both ends, or rounded at the base, finely serrate with callous teeth, glabrous or nearly so ; 



petioles 1-1.5 cm. long : racemes often dense : pedicels less than 1 cm. long: sepals ovate, 



longer than broad : corolla 8-10 mm. broad : drupes globose, 8-10 mm. in diameter, dark 



purple or nearly black, sweet but slightly astringent. 



In woods or clearings, Ontario to North Dakota, Florida and Texas. Spring and early sum- 

 mer. — A variety with ample leathery coarsely serrate leaf-blades pale or whitish beneath, stout, few- 

 flowered, diverging racemes and pubescent sepalsand filaments, is P. serotina neomontnna(Su6v:.) Small, 

 [Priuuis serotina neomontana Sudw.] ; it is confined to high summits in the southern Alleghenies. Wild 

 Cherry. Black Cherry. Rum Cherry. 



4. Padus Cuthb6rtii Small. A tree 6 m. tall and sometimes 1.5 dm. in diameter near 

 the base, with tomentose twigs. Leaf -blades leathery, normally obovate, varying to oval or 

 fiddle-shaped, 4-9 cm. long, blunt or notched at the apex, shallowy serrate, not markedly 

 biglandular at the often cuneate base, dull green above, pale or glaucesent beneath, the 

 midrib and petioles copiously tomentose and the lateral veins slightly so : racemes 5-8 cm. 

 long, terminating short leafy branches, the rachis and pedicels pubescent like the twigs : 

 pedicels clavate, 3-5 mm. long during anthesis, becoming 8-11 mm. long: sepals broader 

 than long, obtuse, shorter than the hypanthium : petals suborbicular, about 2 mm. in di- 

 ameter, crisped : drupes subglobose, 8-9 mm. in diameter, red. {^Prunus Cuthbertii Small.] 



In rich or sandy woods, Georgia. Spring. 



5. Padus Alabam^nsis (C. Mohr) Small. A tree rarely over 10 m. tall, with a 

 maximum trunk diameter of about 1-5 dm., the bark rough. Leaf-blades leathery or 

 thick, ovate, oblong to elliptic, 6-12 cm. long, sliort-acuminate but sometiuies obtuse at the 

 apex, serrate with blunt appressed gland-tipped teeth, paler beneath than above and finely 

 pubescent with simple or forked hairs, rounded or slightly narrowed at the base : racemes 

 10-15 cm. long, spreading, peduncled, the rachis and peduncles, like the calyx, pubescent. 



On mountain slopes, Alabama and Georgia. Spring. 



6. Padus australls Beadle. A tree 10-20 m. tall, the trunk sometimes 3-4 dm. in 

 diameter near the base. Leaf-blades obovate, oval or elliptic, 4-10 cm. long, 2-6 cm. 

 wide, abruptly and rather bluntly pointed at the apex, or occasionally obtuse, either 

 rounded or obtusely narrowed at the base, finely serrate, dark green and glabrous above, 

 densely and permanently clotlied on the lower surface with tawny or rufous tomentum, not 

 not at all glaucous ; petioles 1 cm. long or less, tomentose : raceme-racliis and pedicels, 

 like the young shoots, pubescent : drupes globose, 5-8 nmi. in diameter, purple. 



In clay soil. Evergreen, Alabama. Spring. 



5. LAUROCERASUS Reichenb. 



Shrubs or trees manifestly pervaded with prussic acid. Leaves alternate, persistent: 



blades leather}', simple, entire or remotely toothed. Flowers perfect, in racemes from the 



axils of the per.sistent leaves. Hypanthium white. Sepals 5, various, deciduous. Petals 5, 



white, deciduous. Stamens 15-30 : filaments slender, distinct. Ovary sessile, 1-celled : 



style simple. Ovules 2, {)endulous. Drupe subglobose or slightly elongated, with a dry 



exocarp, not glaucous, the stone turgid. Seed solitary. 



Drupe subglobose : petals larger than the sepals. 1. L. spliaerocarpa. 



Drupe oblong or oval : petals smaller than the sepals. 2. L. CaroUniana. 



1. Laurocerasus sphaerocdrpa (Sw. ) Roem. A small evergreen tree, sometimes 



12 m. tall, with glabrous foliage. Leaf-blades leathery, lustrous, elliptic, 5-10 cm. long, 



entire, acuminate at the apex, acute or rounded at the base ; petioles slender, about 1 cm. 



long : racemes shorter than the leaves, rather dense : pedicels slender, 4-8 mm. long, 



subtended by early deciduous bracts : sepals acute, laciniate, deciduous : petals much larger 



than the sepals, reflexed at maturity, yellowish near the base within : drupes subgloliose, 



apiculate, 8-12 mm. in diameter, orange: stone subglobose. 



In sandy soil, southern peninsular Florida, also in the West Indies and Brazil. Fall, fruit ripening 

 in the spring or summer. 



