Ruzvs. "XLVI. ROSACER. ae) 
scarcely serrate; stip. deciduous; jis. umbellate ; fr. globular, nearly black.— 
From China. Thornless shrubs, with small, cup-shaped flowers. Not hardy. 
Obs.—This beautiful genus includes, according to Seringe, 146 species; but the varieties produced by 
cultivation amount to near 2000. 
11. RUBUS. 
Celtic rub, red ; the color of the fruit of some species. 
Calyx spreading, 5-parted; petals 5, deciduous; stamens 00, in- 
serted into the border of the disk ; ovaries many, with 2 ovules, one of 
them abortive; achenia pulpy, drupaceous, aggregated into a compound 
berry ; radicle superior. —% Half shrubby plants. Siems usually @, and 
armed with prickles. Inflorescence vmperfectly centrifugal. Fr. esculent. 
§ Fruit inseparable from the juicy, deciduous receptacle. BLACKBERRIES. 
, 1. R. vinuésus. Ait. High Blackberry. 
~~Pubescent, viscid and prickly; st. angular; /fts. 3—5, ovate, acuminate, 
serrate, hairy both sides; petzoles prickly ; cal. acuminate, shorter than the petals; 
rac. loose, leafless, about 20-flowered—A well known, thorny shrub, Can. and 
U.S. Stems tall and slender, branching, recurved at top, 3—6f high. Leaflets 
24—4’ by 14—23’, terminal one on a long petiolule, the others on short ones or 
none. Pedicels slender, 1’ long. Petals white, obovate or oblong, obtuse. 
Fruit consisting of about 20 roundish, shining, black, fleshy carpels, closely col- 
lected into an ovate or oblong head, subacid, well-flavored, ripe in Aug. and Sept. 
B. frondosus. Torr. (R. frondosus. Bw.)—Lfts. incisely serrate; rac. with a 
few simple leaves or leafy bracts at base; fls. about 10 in each cluster, the ter- 
minal one opening first, as in all the species, the lowest next, and the highest 
but one last. Fruit more acid and with fewer carpels. 
2. R. wispipus. (R. sempervirens. Bw.) Bristly Blackberry. 
St. slender, reclining or prostrate, hispid with retrorse bristles ; vs. 3-foliate, 
rarely quinate, smooth and green both sides; /fts. coarsely serrate, obovate, 
mostly obtuse, subcoriaceous; ped. corymbose, many-flowered, with filiform 
pedicels and short bracts; fls. and fr. small—tIn damp woods, Can. to Car. 
Stems slender, trailing several feet, with suberect branches 8—12/ high. Leaflets 
1—2’ long, 4 as wide, nearly sessile, persistent through the winter, on a (1—3’) 
long, common petiole. Flowers white. Fruit dusky-purple, sour. May, Jn. 
B. setosus. T.& G. (R. setusus. Bw.)—Lfts. oblanceolate, rather narrow, 
13—2} long, tapering, and (like the variety a) entire at base, sharply serrate 
above. Fruit red. 
3. R. Canapensis. (R. trivialis. Ph.) Low Blackberry. Dewberry. 
St. procumbent or trailing, subaculeate; Jvs. 3-foliate, rarely quinate; Ufts. 
elliptical or rhomboid-oval, acute, thin, unequally cut-serrate; pedicels solitary, 
elongated, somewhat corymbed ; fr. large, black.——Common in dry, stony fields, 
Can. to Va., trailing several yards upon the ground. Leaflets light green and 
membranaceous, nearly sessile, 1—14’ long, 4 as wide, common petioles 1—2/ 
long, pubescent or a little prickly. Flowers large, on slender pedicels. Petals 
obovate, white, twice as long as the calyx. Fruit 4—1/ diam., very sweet and 
juicy, in July and Aug. Fl. May. 
4. R. cungirouius. Ph. Wedge-leaved Blackberry. 
St. erect, shrubby, armed with recurved prickles; lwvs. 3-foliate, and with 
the young branches and petioles pubescent beneath; Jfts. cuneate-obovate, en- 
tire at base, dentate above, subplicate, tomentose beneath; rac. loose, few-flow- 
ered.—A low shrub, 2—3f high, in sandy woods, Long Island, Torrey, to Flor. 
Petioles often prickly. Leaflets rarely 5, 1—2’ long, 4 as wide, obtuse, or with 
a short acumination. Petals white or roseate, 3 times as long as the calyx. 
Fruit black, juicy, well-flavored, ripe in Jl. Aug. FV. May. Jn. 
§§ Fruit concave beneath, separating from the dry, conical, persistent 
receptacle. RASPBERRIES. 
* Leaves sumple. 
5. R. oporitus. Rose-flowering Raspberry. Mulberry. 
St. erect or reclining, unarmed, glandular-pilose; Jvs. palmately 3—6-lobed, 
