Ii8 Wyotning Experiment Station. 



CORNACE^. 



Cornus stolonifera, Michx. Fl. i, 92 (1803). 



An exceedingly common shrub in thickets on most of our 

 streams. 



Wallace Creek, July 29, 1894 (No. 663); Little Sandy, August 

 31. 1894 (No. 1125); Table Mountain, July 1, 1895 (No. 1407). 



CAPRIFOLIACE^. 



Sambucus melanocarpa, Gray, Proc. Am. Acad, xix, 76 (1883). 

 Frequent in rocky canons throughout the state. 

 Telephone Canon, June 15, 1894, (No. 253); Union Peak, 

 August 13, 1894 (No. 1026); Centennial Valley, August 18, 1895 

 (No. 1690). 

 Viljurnum pauciflorum, Pylaie. T. & G. Fl. N. A. ii, 17 (1841). 



Reported abundant near Sundance, specimens communicated by 

 Mr. H. J. Chassel, September 1, 1895. 



Symphoricarpos occidentalis, Hook. Fl. Bor. Am. i, 285 (1834). 

 On sandy creek banks as an undershrub in the thickets. 

 Blue Grass Creek, July 8, 1894 (No. 324); Laramie Peak, August 

 8, 1895 (No. 1565). 



Symphoricarpos oreophilus, Gray; Journ. Linn. Soc. & Bot. Calif. 

 In the hills and mountains only at considerable elevations. 

 Casper Mountain, July 26, 1894 (No. 608); Cummins, July 29, 

 1895 (No. 1509). 



Symphoricarpos racemosus pauciflorus, Robbins, Gray, Man. Ed. 5, 



203 (1867). S. pauciflorus, (Robbins) Britton. 



A few specimens secured on the eastern slope of the Tetons, 

 August 21, 1894 (No. 958). 

 Lonicera involucrata, Banks, Richards. Bot. App. Ed. 2, 6 (1823). 



Very common on little mountain streams ; frequently called 

 Grouse Berries. 



Upper Wind River, August 10, 1894 (No. 758); Cummins, July 

 30, 1895 (No. 1482). 



Lonicera Utahensis, Wats. Bot. King Surv. 133 (1871). 

 This I think to be very rare in the state. 

 Teton Mountains, August 21. 1884 (No. 934). 



