VACCINIUM. LXXVIII. ERICACEE. ; 369 
3. V. vircitum. Muhl. (V: Pennsylvanicum. Darl. Beck. and 1st. edit. 
in part.)\—Blue Whortleberry— Branches angular, green; lvs. oblong or elliptic- 
lanceolate, sessile, mucronate, often serrulate, smooth and shining on both sides; 
rac. numerous, dense-flowered, subterminal, sessile, mostly naked; cor. ovoid. 
—Hilly woods and thickets, N. Eng.! to Va. W. to Wis. Lapham! Stem 1— 
3f high, bushy. Leaves pale green, 12—18’ by 7—10”, often slightly pubes- 
cent when young, thin, at length very smooth. Flowers in numerous, small 
racemes, on the upper, nakedish branchlets; pedicels shorter (1—3’’) than the 
corolla. Corolla yellowish and reddish-white, longer than the stamens, but 
equaling or shorter than the styles. Berries bluish-black, sweet.. May, Jn. 
4. V. PennsyLvaNicum. Lam. (V. tenellum. Azt.) Common Low Blue- 
berry— Branches green, with 2 pubescent lines; Jvs. subsessile, crowded, 
elliptic-oblong, acute at each end, minutely serrulate, thin, glabrous and shin- 
ing, with the veins beneath puberulent; fs. in short, bracteate, dense, subter- 
minal racemes; cor. ovoid-cylindrical—Thickets and pastures in hard soils, 
Can. to Penn., common in N. Eng. A low under-shrub, 6—12’ high, growing 
in dense patches. Leaves 8—12” by 4—6”. Flowers reddish-white, 3” long. 
Bracts mostly colored. Berries large, blue, sweet and nutritious. May. 
&. Lws. dark green; berries black and shining, destitute of bloom.— With va- 
riety a. 
5. V. ticustrinum. Michx. Privet Whortleberry. 
Branches angular, slender, strict, erect ; Ws. subsessile, erect, thick, lance- 
olate, veiny, pubescent, mucronate, serrulate; fascicles sessile; pedicels very 
short, glomerate; cor. ovoid-oblong.—Mountains, Penn. to Va. Pwrsh, who re- 
marks that the leaves are very variable, the corolla reddish-purple, and the 
berries black. May, June. 
6. V. BUXIFOLIUM. Salisb. 
St. low ; lvs. obovate, crenate-aentate, smooth; rac. axillary and terminal, 
dense, subsessile; cor. orbicular-ovoid; ji. glandular; stig. capitate—Near 
Winchester, Va. Stem 6—10’ high. Corolla white, with purple lines. Calyx 
bracteate. 
§§ Flowers solitary. Corolla wrceolate. 
7. V. uLiciIndsum. Mountain Blueberry. 
Procumbent; /vs. obovate, very obtuse, entire, smooth, glaucous and veiny 
beneath ; fls. mostly solitary, axillary; cov. ovoid-globose, 4-cleft; sta. 4; anth. 
awned at the base.—A low, alpine shrub, White Mts. Stems with numerous, 
rigid branches. Leaves 3’ by 2’, broadest near the apex, scarcely petiolate, 
crowded near the ends of the branches, and of a bluish-green. Flowers half 
as long as the leaves, subsessile, sometimes 2 together. Berries oblong, deep- 
blue, crowned with the style. June, July. (Apr. May. Beck.) 
8. V. czspitésum. Michx. Turfy Vaccinium. 
Dwarf, cespitose; dvs. obovate, attenuate at the base, thin, serrate, reticu- 
Jate with veins, shining ; ped. subsolitary, 1-flowered; cal. very short; cor. ob- 
long, suburceolate ; pores of the anthers long-tubular— White Mts., N. H. Oakes, 
N. tc Hudson’s Bay. Stem afew inches high. Flowers numerous, nodding, 
on short pedicels. Anthers with 2 long awns at the back. Berries large, gla- 
brous, blue, eatable. 
§$§ Corolla campanulate. Leaves deciduous. 
9. V. sTtaMINeuM. (V.stamineum and album. Ph.) Deerberry. 
Young branches pubescent; lvs. oval-lanceolate, acute, glaucous beneath; 
pedicels solitary, axillary, nodding; cor. campanulate-spreading, segments 
acute, oblong; anth. exserted, 2-awned near the base——Dry woods, Can. to 
Flor. Shrub 2—3f high, very branching. Leaves 1—2’ long, 3—4 as wide, 
broadest in the upper half, mostly rounded at base and on very short petioles; 
those on the slender, flowering branches very much smaller. Flowers on long, 
slender pedicels, arranged in loose, leafy racemes. Corolla white, spreading, 
stamens conspicuously exserted, but shorter than the style. Berries large, 
greenish-white, bitter. May, June. 
B. (V. elevatum. Banks.) Lws. pale, pubescent beneath; fls. smaller. N. J. 
