19241 REHDER, LIGNEOUS PLANTS OF NORTHERN CHINA, II 191 



Chili: Peking, Imperial gardens, C. S. Sargent, September 17, 1903. — 



Maximowicz 



Hemsley, 1. c., and Bailey, 1. c. 



Shantung 



Hers 



I.e. 



See also Hers, 



Meyer 



(grafts only; plants growing at Chico, California). 



This species is known only as a cultivated plant; also Hers' no. 317 

 from Honan, though there is no statement on the label and it is not 

 marked as cultivated in his published list, is apparently from a planted 

 tree, as it has semi-double flowers. 



Malus baccata Borkh 



Rehder 



in Sargent, PL Wilson, n. 291 (1915).— Loesener in Bot. Centralbl. Beih. 

 xxxvu. abt. II. 132 (1919). 



Pyrus baccata Linnaeus, Mant, 75 (1767).— Hance in Jour. Bot. xm. 132 

 (1875). — Hemsley in Jour. Linn. Soc. xxm. 255 (1887). 



Pyrus baccata a. sibirica Maximowicz in Bull. Acad. Sci. St. Petersb. xix. 

 170 (1873); in Mfl. Biol. ix. 166 (1873).— Franchet in Nouv. Arch. Mus. 

 Paris, s£r. 2, v. 272 (PL David, i. 120) (1883). 



Pyrus baccata p. mandshurica Maximowicz in Bull. Acad. Sci. St. Petersb. 

 xix. 170 (1873); in M6L Biol. ix. 166 (1873), quoad plantam glabratum 

 Pekinensem — Bretschneider, Hist. Eur. Bot. Discov. China, 1053 (1898). 



May 



Meyer, n 

 Warburg 



Weichang, W 



U. S. 



M 



Sep- 



Wu tai shan, alt. 1600 m., F. N. Meyer 



See 



Maximow 



Bretschneider, 1. c. 



Shantung: Tung hu shui and Lau shan (ex Loesener, 1. c). 



Shansi: Wu chai hsien, Ta nan kow, alt. 2000 to 3000 m., Tchuang 

 Kieh, Hers no. 2039, September 7, 1922; Wu tai shan, alt. 1300 m., J. 

 Hers, no. 2612, July 29, 1923; Schao yii, F. N. Meyer, no. 1877, July 

 22, 1914 (Herb. U. S. Dept. Agric). 



Shensi: Yenan fu, W. Purdom, no. 329, 1910; Lung chow, Li kia po, 

 J. Hers, no. 2386, July 4, 1922.— See also Rehder, 1. c. 



Kansu 



Manch 



Malus baccata f. gracilis Rehder in 

 Northern China: (ex Rehder, 1. c). 



stature 



pendent branches, comparatively narrower obtusely serrulate leaves 

 on slenderer petioles, in the smaller flowers with often only 4 styles 

 and in the small fruit. It is known onlv from cultivated nlants raised 



