rtt) FLORA OF GRAxN'D KAPIDS. 



ROSA 1.. K'osK. 

 (•7o. R. bianda Ait. 



Occasional nuitli nud «';tst of the C'ity, Mid-iMay- June. 



it growfci on liigii cl.iy l:in<i in tlic Laniberton, Crookml, and 



l-Joed's Lake legionn. 



674. R. Carolina ].. 



Borders of swamps and low ground; common. July. 



075. R. f iNx.A.MoMivA L. Cinnamon Rose. 



I'eiHiftts by roadsides near pioneer dwellings. May. 



«»7i".. R. humilis Mart/ih. 



Common on dry sandy soil. June-July. 



On very dry soil the fruits and pedicels are often glandular- 

 hispid. 



(>77. R. HUBitiiNosA L. ;Sweeti>rier. 



Roadsides and thickets; freijuent. June-July. 



RUBUS L. TiK.v.MHi.K. 



t»78. R. Canadensis L. Dewberry. Low Blackberry. 

 Common and troublesome in dry sandy soil. June. 

 Fruit large and juicy. 



o7{*, R. hispidus L. Running Swamp Blackberry. 

 Abundant on the margins of swamps. June. 



680. R. neglectus Peck. 



Intermediate between J?, occidentalis and ^. strigosxis, and oft- 

 en grows with them; infrequent. June. 



Abundant in woods, west of Bowen Station along the D. G. R. 

 & W. Ry.; Farm of H. C. Smith, Sec. 8, Alpine; north of Round 

 Lake (Prof. R. H. Wolcott); Kalamazoo Ave. at Burton Ave. 

 (M.ifeC); Soldiers' Home. 



681. R. occidentalis L. Black Raspberry. Thimbleberry. 

 Common on uplands. June. 



It oft-en extends into the edges of marshes and grows with 



