PENTANDRIA— HEXAGYNIA. Drosera. 121 



S. procumbens. Linn. Sp. PL 406. FL Lapp, eel 2. 82. Willd. 

 V. 1. 1567. FL Br. 345. EngL Bot. v. 13. t. 897. Dicks. H. Sice. 

 Jfasc. 10. 12. Hook. Scot. 97. FLDan. L 32. 



Fragaria n. 1116. HalL Hist. v. 2. 46. 



Fragarise sylvestri affinis planta, flore luteo. Sibb. Scot, p.2.25. 

 t.G.f.l. 



^entaphvlloides pumila;, foliis ternis ad extremitates trifidis. Rail 

 Syn. 256. 



Scotch Cinquefoil. Pet. H. Brit. t.4\.f.7. 



On the summits of the Highland mountains of Scotland^ in a mi- 

 caceous soil, plentiful. 



Perennial. Juhj. 



Roots woody, tufted, much branched at the summit. Stems her- 

 baceous, spreading or procumbent, from 1 to 3 inches long, round, 

 leafy, but little subdivided, clothed with coarse upright hairs, like 

 the rest of the herbage. Leaflets \ an inch to an inch long, 

 bright green, veiny ; the middle tooth smallest ; the lateral 

 ones sometimes cloven. Footstalks longer than the leaflets, with 

 a pair of attached, pointed, parallel, membranous stipulas at the 

 bottom, indicative of the natural order. FL in corymbose leafy 

 tufts. CaL large, hairy. Pet. small, yellow. The whole plant 

 is astringent, like others of the same tribe. Plukenet's ^.212, 

 /. 3, is most evidently Potentilla subacaulis, a much more soft 

 and downy plant, with solitary flowers, of a larger size. To 

 this Bauhin's synonyms, in Linn, and \Mlldenow, belong. 



PENTANDRIA IIEXAGYNIA. 

 182. DROSERA. Sun-dew. 



Linn. Gen. \ 54. Juss.24C>. FLBr.3i6. Lam. t. 220. (iccrtn. t. CA . 



Ilos Solis. Tourn. t.\27. 



Nat. Ord. Gndiialcs. Linn. 1 1-. Allietl to ('apparichs. 



Juss. 64<. Drosei-acccc, DcCaiul. 30. 

 CaL inferior, of 1 leaf, in 5 or more, deep, acute, pcrnia- 



nenl segments. Pet. 5 — S, ohovate-oblong, obtuse, with 



claws, uu)derately spreading, radier longer than the calyx. 



Ji'i/uni. 5 — 8, awl-shaped, the length of the calyx. An//t. 



small, roundish. Gcrmcn roundish. .S/y/ri (^ — 8, simple, 



