22 >'EW SYLVA 



feet high, with large leaves, and few small flow- 

 ers, often axillary. On the Oquago Mts. of 

 New York, north end of AUeghanies, it blos- 

 soms late in August. 



530. DiERviLLA PAiiviFOLiA Raf. stom or 

 branches decumbent, leaves with short petiols, 

 uncial, ovate acuminate serrulate, lower round- 

 ed, fl. terminal subsessile 1 to 3— in the Mts. 

 Alleghany, leaves seldom over one inch long. 

 The real />. canadensis is a shrub of 5 to 10 

 feet high with ovate leaves, and trichotome co- 

 rymbs of flowers. I noticed in this sp. or de- 

 viation a very long style with a large stigma 

 like the head of an Amanita, convex above, 

 concave beneath. 



531. Sapindiis acuminata Raf. S. saponaria 

 Elliot and North Am. hot. not Lin. and Antil- 

 les ! Leaves with 8 or 9 pairs of fblioles alter- 

 nate lanceolate acuminate obhqual entire, pe- 

 tiols simple striate, calix with 2 larger sepals, 

 4 to 6 petals lanceolate base hairy— in Florida, 

 Carolina, Alabama dj'C, seen alive in Bartram's 

 garden : wrongly mistaken for the Antillian sp. 

 which is very different by winged petiol. A 

 tree 20 to 30 feet high, pistil trigone, 3 united 

 styles, 3 obtuse stigmas, 3 united capsules ven- 

 tricose monosperm. The S, marginata of 

 Wild, and Dec. found also in Florida and 

 Georgia and the S, saponaria of Mx. differs by 6 

 pairs of folioles not acuminate, and half wing- 

 ed petiols as in real S, saponaria, I have both 

 our compilers call them both by that old name. 



Genus VISCUM. 

 532. ViscuM SEROTINUM Raf. purpur. and 

 verticil, of some hot. stem thick terete ru- 

 gose 2-3chotome geniculate, leaves oppo- 

 site evergreen subpetiolate, obovate ob- 

 tuse hardly uninerve thick; flowers trifid 



