28 . SEEDS AND PLANTS IMPORTED. 



40406 to 40496— Continued. 



" Wilson No. 4212. A bush 2 to 3 meters high, with black fruits, from 

 Mupin, western Szechwan, altitude 2,300 to 2,800 meters. October, 1910. 

 (E. H. Wilson.) 



40465. Ribes moupinense Francliet. Currant. 

 " 7444." 



" Shrub from 1 to 2 meters or more high (according to David), 2 to 5 

 meters (according to Delavay). Somewhat twisted branches, with young 

 shoots glabrous. Leaves very variable, sometimes rounded. 5 lobed, with 

 base deeply cordate (from Tibet), sometimes trifid, with lobes very 

 sharp and acuminate, with base truncate or subcordate (from Yunnan, 

 Hupeh, and Kansu), length in that case up to 14 cm. and breadth up to 

 16 cm., glabrous, dotted with glandular bristles above and on the nerve 

 below. Flowers turbinate, greenish, red or washed with red. glabrous, 

 subsessile. Fruits sessile, round, rather large for a currant, black 

 (Delavay), glabrous, shining, crowned with fleshy collarette and the 

 withered flower. Native of the high mountains of eastern Tibet, Prov- 

 inces of Muping, Yunnan, Kansu. Shensi, and Hupeh. We do not know 

 this species except from herbarium specimens, but believe that we have 

 distinguished two sufficiently characteristic varieties, var. looatum, with 

 rounded leaves, lobed, with short thin racemes, native of eastern Tibet; 

 var. tripartitu)i) (Batalin) with tripartite leaves and medium-sized or 

 lengthened racemes. It is a plant more widely spread, known from 

 Kansu, Yunnan, Hupeh, and Shensi." (E. Janczewski, MonograpMe des 

 Groseilliers, p. 299.) 



40466. Ribes multiflorum Kit. Red currant. 

 " 7435." 



"This is one of the red-currant group, and, as regards its flowers, the 

 most striking; they are yellowish green, crowded on slender, cylindrical, 

 pendulous racemes, sometimes 4 to 5 inches long. When well furnished 

 with these the shrub is quite ornamental. For the rest it is vigorous, up 

 to 6 feet high, and has stout unarmed branches, stouter perhaps than 

 those of any other currants; leaves of the red-currant shape and size. 

 gray with down beneath. Fruit roundish, red when ripe, one-third inch 

 diameter. Native of southern and eastern Europe: introduced about 

 1818." (W. J. Bean, Trees and Shrubs Hardy in the British Is/, s, vol. 2, 

 p. .',05.) 



40467. RlBES nevadense Kellogg. Currant. 



" 7301." 



A shrubby wild western American currant with thin, 3 to 5 lobed leaves, 

 green on both sides, spreading, nodding, or ascending racemes, usually 12 

 to 2d flowered; small (lowers with the white petals softer than the rose- 

 colored sepals; and subglobose, blue berries. 



40468 and 40469. Ribes NIGRUM L. Blackcurrant. 



40468. " 7350." 



"An unarmed shrub, 5 to G feel high, distinguished by its peculiar 



Odour, due to small yellowish glands sprinkled freely over the lower 

 surface of the leaf, which is conspicuously 3 lobed. deeply notched 

 at the base, long stalked, coarsely toothed. Flowers bell shaped, 

 dull white, in racemes, each flower from the axil of a minute bract; 

 i ru ii black. Native of Europe and Siberia, possibly of Britain. 



