68 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



Crataegus foetida Ashe 



Ann. Carnegie Mus. i. pt. iii. 389 (1902). 



Crataegus baxteri Sarg., Proc. Rochester Acad. Sci. iv. 107. 

 (1903)- 



North A'banv, Charles H. Peck (# 50), May and October 1903; 

 Lansingburg. Charles H. Peck, 1904; also western Massachusetts 

 to western New York and eastern Pennsylvania. 



Crataegus modesta Sarg. 



Rhodora, iii. 28 (1901); Proc. Phil. Acad. 635 (1905). 



Crataegus premora Ashe, Ann. Carnegie Mus.i. pt. iii. 391, (1902). 



North Albany, West Albany, Greenbush, Menands and Lansing- 

 burg, Charles H. Peck (# iii), May and October 1902; also 

 western and southern New England to eastern Pennsylvania. 



Crataegus verecunda Sarg. 

 Proc. Rochester Acad. Sci. iv. 109 (1903). 



Lansingburg, Charles H. Peck, June and September 1904; also 

 at Rochester, New York. 



Anthers pink 



Crataegus peckii Sarg. 



Rhodora, v. 63 (1903). 



Hills; Lansingburg, Charles H. Peck (# 11), May and October 



1 902. 



TOMENTOSAE 

 Mature leaves thin 

 Stamens usually 20 

 ; ^ Anthers dark rose color or red 



Crataegus tomentosa Linnaeus 



Spec. 476 (1753)— Sargent, Silva N. Am. iv. loi, t. 183; Man. 492, f. 406. 



Watervliet, H. G. Jesup, June 18, 1869 (not seen in recent years) ; 

 also westward to Michigan and Missouri, and south to eastern 

 Pennsylvania and along the Appalachian moimtains. 



Crataegus menandiana n. sp. Sarg. 

 Leaves elliptic to rhombic or rarely obovate, acute or short- 

 pointed at the apex, gradually narrowed and concave cuneate at the 

 entire base, finely doubly serrate above, with straight glandular 

 teeth, and slightly divided above the middle into five to seven small 



