REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST Hjl 2 lOj 



Crataegus robesonana Sargent 



Rhodora, v. no (April 1903) 

 Crataegus spissiflora Sargent Proc. Rochester Acad. Sci. IV. 112 (June 

 1903); N. Y. State Mus. Bui. 105. 61 (1906). 



Near Albany, Little Falls, Lenox. Ithaca, Rochester, Hem- 

 lock lake; also in southern Ontario and western Massachusetts. 



Crataegus exclusa Sargent 

 Rhodora V. 108 (1903) ; N. Y State Mus. Bui. 105. 60 (1906). 

 Near Albany, Greenbush, Chapinville ; also in western 

 Vermont. 



Crataegus urbica nov. nom. Sargent 



Crataegus oblongifolia Sargent, N. Y. State Mus. Bui. 105. 60 (not K. 

 Kock) (1906). 

 Near Albany. 



Crataegus anomala Sargent 

 Rhodora III. 74 (1901). 

 Crown Point and Fort Ann ; also in western Vermont and the 

 province of Quebec. 



Crataegus huntiana n. sp. 

 Leaves ovate, acute, rounded or abruptly cuneate at the broad 

 base, coarsely often doubly serrate with straight glandular teeth, 

 and slightly divided into short acuminate lateral lobes ; about 

 one-third grown when the flowers open the middle of June and 

 then thin, light yellow-green and covered by short white hairs 

 longest and most abundant on the lower side of the midribs and 

 veins, and at maturity thin, blue-green, glabrous and lustrous 

 on the upper surface, paler on the lower surface and slightly 

 hairy on the prominent midribs and four or five pairs of primary 

 veins arching obliquely to the points of the lobes, 7 to 8 cm long, 

 6 to 7 cm wide, and on vigorous shoots sometimes 10 to 12 cm 

 long and 8 to 9 cm wide; petioles stout, densely villose early in 

 the season, tinged with red and glabrous in the autumn, 2 to 3 

 cm in length. Flowers 1.8 to 2 cm in diameter, on slender vil- 

 lose pedicels, in small densely villose mostly i2-flowered 

 corymbs, the long lower peduncles from the axils of upper 

 leaves ; calyx-tube narrowly obconic, densely villose, the lobes 

 narrow, acuminate, conspicuously glandular-serrate, slightly vil- 

 lose ; stamens seven to ten; anthers rose color; styles four or 

 five. Fruit ripening early in October, on stout drooping slightly 



