RHODOPENDRON. LXXVII. ERICACEZ. 375 
cumbent shrub, with opposite, petiolate, evergreen, entire lus. Pedicels 
terminal, solitary, \-flowered. Cor. rose color. 
A. PROcUMBENS. (Loiseleuria. Desv. Rhododendron. 1st edit. 
An exceedingly delicate shrub, native on the alpine summits of the White 
Mts., N. H.! Stems 3—6’ long, very branching and leafy. Leaves elliptical, 
thick, shining, not more than 3” by 1’, margin strongly revolute. Flowers 
glabrous, on very short, purple pedicels, in the midst of the leaves. Jn. Jl. 
12. RHODORA. 
Gr. jodov, a rose; the shrub bears only flowers at flowering time. 
Calyx 5-toothed, persistent ; cor. adnate to the calyx, deeply divided 
into 3 segments, upper one much the broadest, 2—3-lobed at the 
apex, in estivation enfolding the 2 lower, entire segments; sta. 10, 
declinate ; fil. unequal; anth. opening by 2 pores; caps. 5-celled, 5- 
valved; cells many-seeded ; dissepiments formed by the introflexed 
margins of the valves—A shrub with deciduous, alternate leaves, and 
pale purple flowers. | 
R. Canavensis. (Rhododendron Rhodora. Don.) 
A handsome, flowering shrub, in bogs, mountain or plain, Can. to Penn., 
frequent. Stems 2—3f high, clothed with a smooth brown bark, each dividing 
at top into several erect, flowering branches. Each branch, while yet naked of 
foliage, bears a terminal cluster of 3—5 sessile flowers. Corolla 1’ long, about 
equaling the deflected stamens and style. Leaves obovate-oblong, downy- 
canescent beneath. Apr. May. 
13. RHODODENDRON. 
Gr. jodov, arose, devdpor, a tree. 
Calyx deeply 5-parted, persistent; cor. infundibuliform or cam- 
panulate, regular or irregular, 5-lobed ; sta. 5—10, mostly declinate 
and exserted; anth. opening by 2 terminal pores; capsule 5-celled, 
5-valved, opening at the summit; dissepiments introflexed from the 
margin of the valves.—Shrubs with alternate, entire, evergreen or decidu- 
ous leaves. Fs. mostly in terminal, corymbose clusters. Cor. variously 
shaded from blue through purple to white. 
§ 1. Corolla infundibuliform, tube long, cylindric, more or less viscid ; 
- limb unequal, spreading ; stamens 5 or 6. Lvs. deciduous. AZALEA. 
1. R. nupirLorum. Torr. (Azalea nudiflora. Linn.) Swamp Pink. 
Las. oblong-lanceolate and oblanceolate ; fs. rather naked, slightly viscid ; 
tube of the corolla longer than the lobes; sta. much exserted.—A beautiful and 
fragrant flowering shrub, 4—6f high, rather frequent in the forests and thickets 
of the Northern States as well as the Southern. Stems crooked, much branched. 
Leaves 2—3’ by 13’, margins ciliate, upper surface with minute, scattered hairs, 
lower paler and pubescent, with the midvein hispid. Flowers appearing before 
the leaves are fully grown, in rather naked umbels. Pedicels 6—8” long. 
Calyx minute, with rounded, ciliate segments. Corolla tube 8—10” in length, 
hairy, and, with the spreading, unequal limb variously shaded from pale pink 
to purple. Stamens purple, declinate, twice as long as the corolla. Style nearly 
3 times as long. It varies in the number of stamens, color of corolla, &c. 
Apr. May. ft 
2. R. viscdsum. Torr. . (Azalea viscosa. Linn.) Clammy Swamp Pink. 
Lvs. obovate and oblong-lanceolate; fls. accompanied with leaves, very 
viscid ; tube of the corotla twice as long as the lobes; sta. a little exserted.—Less 
frequent than the last, in rocky woods, Can. to Ga., W. to Ky. Shrub 4—6f 
high, much branched above, the branches hispid. Leaves 1—2’ long and about 
half as wide, smootiish; hispid, ciliate on the petiole, midvein and margin. 
32’ 
