REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I907 7I 



slender slightly zigzag glabrous branchlets dark orange color and 

 marked by numerous pale lenticels when they first appear, becom- 

 ing light reddish brown and lustrous in their first season and pale 

 orange-brown the following year, and armed with few stout straight 

 or slightly curved chestnut-brown shining spines 3-3.5 cm long. 



Clay soil near the borders of woods, Rochester, J. Dunbar ( '^ L, 

 type), May 31, 1901, J. Dunbar and C. S. Sargent, September 27, 

 1901, September 19 1902; Rochester (Knickerbocker woods), 

 Baxter antl Dewing (^304), May 21 and September 25, 1905. 



Formerly referred to 'Crataegus pedicellata Sargent, the 

 " L " tree of Rochester is distinct from that species in its larger 

 flowers peculiar in the development of sacklikc cavities at the base 

 of the petals, by its pink not dark rose colored anthers, by the much 

 larger and more lustrous fruit usually mammillate at the base and 

 ripened 10 to 12 days earlier, and by its convex leaves. In habit, 

 in its large and abundant flowers, and in the large and bril- 

 liant abundant fruits. C. g 1 o r i o s a is not surpassed in beauty 

 by any North American Crataegus. 



Crataegus sejuncta vSargent 



N. Y. Stale Mus. Bui. 105. 62 (1906). 



Bufifalo, J. Dunbar ("^js 34), May 28 and September 30, 1905; also 

 near Alliany, New York, and in western New England. 



Crataegus holmesiana Ashe 



Jour. Elisha Mitchell Sci. Soc. XVI. pt ir. 78 (1899), Sargent, Bot. 

 Gazette XXXI. 10; Silva N. Am. XIII. 119, t. 676; Rochester Acad. 

 Sci. P.roc. IV. 1 14; ]\Ian. 449, f. 366. 



Buffalo, J. Dunbar ("^35), September 30, 1904, May 28, 1905; 

 also near Rochester, New York and eastward to eastern Massa- 

 chusetts and eastern Pennsylvania. 



Crataegus acclivis Sargent 

 Rochester Acad. Sci. Proc. IV. 115 (1903); Man. 459, f. 367. 



Niagara Falls, J. Dunbar, September 28, 1905, May 28, 1906; 

 also near Rochester and Albany, New York. 



VII DILATATAE 



Fruit medium size, subglobose, scarlet; calyx much enlarged; 

 nutlets 5, prominently ridged on the back; corymbs many-flowered; 

 stamens 20 ; anthers rose color ; leaves thin, on vigorous shoots as 

 broad or broader than long. 



