124 FLORA OF MOUNT DESERT. 



CAMPANULA, L. BELLFLOWER. 



C. RAPUNCULOIDES, L. 



Occasionally by roadsides, etc.; escaped from cultivation. 

 Oak Hill (Redfield, Annie S. Downs) ; High Head; Somes- 

 ville (Eand). Adventive from Europe. 



C. rotundifolia, L. BLUEBELL. HAREBELL. 



Cliffs on seashore, and frequently on the mountains; common. 



Forma albiflora. 



Flowers white. Ovens (Annie S. Downs) ; Otter Cliffs 

 (Annie S. Downs, Kand). 



ERICACEAE. HEATH FAMILY. 



GAYLUSSACIA, HBK. HUCKLEBERRY. 

 G. dumosa (Andr.), T. & G. BOG HUCKLEBERRY. 



Frequent in sphagnum bogs. Bog near Somesville (William 

 H. Dunbar) ; Somes Pond ; Sunken Heath ; The Heath, 

 Great Cranberry Isle; Great Heath (Kand). 



G. resinosa (Ait.), T. & G. COMMON HUCKLEBERRY. 

 Dry or wet ground; common. 



VACCINIUM, L. BLUEBERRY. CRANBERRY. 

 V. Pennsylvanicum, Lam. DWARF BLUEBERRY. 



Very common everywhere in dry soil; abundant on the hills 

 and mountains. Variable. A form with bluish-red and white 

 fruit, Jordan Mt. (Rand). A well marked form with dark blue- 

 green leaves, reddish shoots, and dark blue fruit with little or 

 no bloom, Great Cranberry Isle (R. & R.). 



V. Canadense, Kalm. CANADA BLUEBERRY. 



Common in woods or moist ground. Fruit ripening later 

 than that of the preceeding species, and more acid. 



