LXXVI1. 



.7UNI PERUS. 



1081 



ii. Sabitus.- Leaves imbricated in the adult Plants. 



A . Natives of Europe. 

 6. Sabina. 7. phoenicea. 8. lycia. 9. thurifera. 



B. Natives of Asia. 

 10. excelsa. 11. squamata. 12. recurva. 13. chinensis. 



G. Native of South America. 

 14. uvifera. 



in. Species of which little is known. 

 15. tetragona. 18. dealbata. 21. Bedfordzana. 



16. flaccida. 



17. mexicana. 



19. flagelliformis. 



20. gossanthanea. 



22. Hudsonzawa. 



i. Qxycedri. Leaves spreading in the adult Plants. D. Don. 



A. Natives of Europe. 

 1. J. COMMON-IS L. The common Juniper. 



Identification. Lin. Sp. PI., 1470. : Engl. Flor., 4. p. 251. ; N. Du Ham., 6. p. 46. 



Synonymes. J. vulg&ris, &c., Rait Syn. 444. ; J. minor Fuchs Hist. p. 78. ; Genevrier commun, 



Fr. ; gemeiner Wachholder, Ger. ; Ginepro nero, Ital. 

 Engravings. Engl. Bot., t. 1100. ; N. Du Ham., t. 15. f. 1. ; our fig. 2014. to our usual scale; and 



fig. 2013. of the natural size. 



Spec. Char. y $c. Leaves in threes, spreading, mucronate. Berries longish. 

 (Willd.) An evergreen shrub. Europe, on the sides of hills and in sandy 

 plains, and also in North America and Asia. Height 5 ft. to 10ft., rarely 

 15ft. Flowers whitish yellow, from the pollen; ripening in May. Fruit 

 purple or black ; ripe the following spring. 

 Varieties. 



J. c. 1 vulgaris Park. Theat. 1029. J. \. fruticosa Bauh. Pin. p. 488. ; 

 J. c. erectis Pursh Fl. Amer. Sept. ii. p. 646. Leaves, according to 

 Hayne, |in. in length. A bushy shrub, from 3ft. to 5ft. high; but, 

 in favourable situations, growing much higher. 



* J. c. 2 suecica Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 2. v. p. 414. ?7. c. fastigiata 

 Des Moulin's Cat. des Plantes de la Dordogne ; J. strfcta Hort. ; J. 

 suecica Mill. Diet. No. 2. ; J. vulgaris arbor Bauh. ; the Swedish, 

 or Tree, Juniper. ( fig. 2008.) Leaves spreading and acute, 

 1 in. in length ; branches erect, with oblong fruit. This kind was 

 supposed by Miller to be a species 

 because he found it always come 

 true from seed. It generally attains 

 the height of 10 or 12 feet, and 

 sometimes of 16 or 18 feet ; in the 

 Forest of Fontainebleau, it has at- 

 tained the height of 50 ft., and 

 tables, cabinets, and other pieces 

 of furniture have been made from 

 its timber. The branches are more 

 erect than those of the common 

 juniper ; the leaves are narrower, 

 they end in more acute points, and 

 are placed farther asunder on the 

 branches ; the berries are also 

 larger and longer. It is a native 

 of France, Sweden, Denmark, and 

 Norway, and is in common culti- 

 vation in British nurseries, 

 r J. c. 3 ndna Willd. Sp. PI. iv. p. 854. J. communis/3 Fl. Br. 1086.; 



2009. J. c. n&na. 



2008. J. c. suecica. 



