APRIL 1 TO JUNE 30, 1914. 149 



38571 to 38576— Continued. 



"A large, spreading shrub ; stems and branches glabrous, purple, 

 pendulous, and often rooting at the tips ; prickles small, usually few. 

 Leaflets 5 to 11, ovate or ovate-lanceolate, lateral leaflets 1£ to 24 inches, 

 terminal one rather larger, often lobed ; upper surface green, glabrous, 

 lower white tomentose. Flowers dark pink, one-third to two-thirds of an 

 inch in diameter, crowded in small, tomentose panicles. Calyx lobes 

 tomentose inside and out, lanceolate, acute, longer than the petals. 

 Drupelets black, hoary. Throughout the Himalayas, 4,000 to 10,000 

 feet." (Collett, Flora Simlcnsis.) 



38575. Rubus pedunculosus Don. 

 (Rubus niveus Wall.) 



Distribution. — A large rambling bush found on the temperate slopes 

 of the Himalayas at an altitude of 6,000 to 10,000 feet, from Kashmir to 

 Bhutan in northern India. 



"A deciduous shrub, with very stout, erect, biennial stems, 1 to 1$ 

 inches thick and in vigorous plants 4 to 6 yards high, covered with a 

 soft, thick, velvety down, and sprinkled over with minute prickles. 

 Leaves 6 to over 12 inches long, composed of 3 to 5 leaflets. Side leaflets 

 about half the size of the terminal one, stalkless or nearly so, obliquely 

 ovate, coarsely and doubly toothed, slightly hairy above, covered with a 

 close white felt beneath, and with silvery hairs on the veins ; terminal 

 leaflets ovate to roundish heart shaped, long stalked, from 3 to 5 inches 

 long and wide, in other respects the same as the side ones. Flowers 

 white or pale pink, half an inch across, the petals shorter than the 

 sepals. Fruits blue-black, small. 



" Native of western and central China, whence it was introduced about 

 1901 ; the species has, however, been known to botanists as far back as 

 1825 from plants growing on the Himalayas. The Chinese plants are 

 chiefly remarkable for their vigor; Mr. Wilson states that it is occasion- 

 ally 20 feet high. It is the most robust of all Rubi; hardy in Britain, 

 as may be seen by plants in the Kew collection." (W. J. Bean, Trees 

 and Shrubs Hardy in the British Isles, vol. 2, pp. 458-J,59.) 



38576. Rubus paniculatus Smith. 



See S. P. I. No. 23870 for previous introduction and description. 



"A rambling climber; prickles few, very small; branches tomentose. 

 Leaves simple, broadly ovate, 3 to 5 inches, usually cordate, long pointed, 

 more or less lobed, upper surface nearly glabrous, lower white tomentose. 

 Flowers white, in spreading, tomentose, terminal panicles. Calyx white 

 tomentose; lobes narrowly pointed, longer than the petals. Drupelets 

 black or dark purple. Temperate Himalayas, 3,000 to 7,000 feet." {Col- 

 li It, Flora Simlensis.) 



38577. Amygdalus persica L. Amygdalacea?. Peach. 



(Prunus persica Stokes.) 

 From Concepcion and Temuco, Chile. Presented by Mr. G. F. Arms, Con- 

 cepcion, Chile. Received Juno 15, 1914. 

 " Seeds of a very late peach ripening in May, which would correspond to our 

 November." (W. F. "lYight.) 



