250 ERICACEAE. (HEATH FAMILY.) 



tioncd is the most remarkable, and the only one which has any claims to ba 

 regarded us a species 



Var. giabrum. Wholly or nearly glabrous throughout; leaves entire. 



Var. miiuetlimio Leaves bristly-ciliate, shining above, green both sides, 

 beneath somewhat pubescent on the veins. (V. amo3imm, Ait., &c.) 



Var. pallid u in. Leaves mostly glabrous, pale or whitish-glaucous, eapa 

 cially underneath, serrulate with bristly teeth. (V. pallidum, Ait.) 



Var. cllrocOCClim. Leaves entire, downy or woolly underneath evtn 

 When old, as also the branchlets; berries smaller, black, without bloom. (V. 

 fuscatum, Ait. ? Sf Ed. 1.) 



3. CHI 6 GENES, Salisb. CREEPING SNOWBERRY. 



Calyx-tube adherent to the lower part of the ovary; the limb 4-parted. 

 Corolla bell-shaped, deeply 4-cleft. Stamens 8, included, inserted on an 8- 

 toothed epigynous disk : filaments very short and broad : anther-cells ovate- 

 oblong, quite separate, not awned on the back, but each minutely 2-pointed at 

 the apex, and opening by a large chink down to the middle. Berry white, glob- 

 ular, crowned with the 4-toothed calyx, rather dry, 4-cclled, many-seeded. A 

 trailing and creeping evergreen, with very slender and scarcely woody stems, 

 and small Thyme-like ovate and pointed leaves on short petioles, with revolute 

 margins, smooth above, the lower surface and the branches beset with rigid 

 rusty bristles. Flowers very small, solitary in the axils, on short nodding pe- 

 duncles, with 2 large bractlets under the calyx. (Name from x i< ^ v ^ sn <> w , and 

 yews, offspring, in allusion to the snow-white berries.) 



1. C. llispidllla, Torr. & Gr. (Vaccinium hispidulum, L. Gaultheria 

 Bcrpyllifolia, Pursh. G. hispidula, Muhl.) Peat-bogs and mossy mountain 

 woods, in the shade of evergreens ; common northward, extending southward in 

 the Allcghanies. May. Plant with the aromatic flavor of the Boxbcrry, Win- 

 tergreen, or Birch. Leaves J' long. Berries \' broad, bright white. 



SUBORDER II. EUICINEJE. THE PROPER HEATH FAMILY. 

 4. ARCTOSTAPIIYL.OS, Adans. BEARBERRY. 



Corolla ovate and urn-shaped, with a short revolute 5-toothed limb. Stamens 

 10, included : anthers with 2 reflexed awns on the back near the apex, opening 

 by terminal pores. Drupe berry-like, with 5 seed-like nutlets. Shrubs with 

 alternate leaves, and scaly-bracted nearly white flowers in terminal racemes or 

 clusters. Fruit austere. (Name composed of apmos, a bear and ora(vAj, 

 * grape or berry, the Greek of the popular name.) 



1. A. Uva-iirsi, Sprcng. (BEARBERRY.) Trailing; leaves thick and 

 evergreen, obovate or spatulate, entire, smooth; fruit red. (Arbutus Uva-ursi, L.) 

 Rocks and bare hills ; New Jersey to Wisconsin, and northward. May. (Eu.) 



2. A. alpina, Spivng. (ALPINE BEARBERRY.) Dwarf, tufted and de- 

 pressed ; leans (I'cidiioiiK, Kirrate, irrinklid with strong netted veins, obovate ; 

 fruit black. Alpine region of the White Mountains, New Hampshire, Meant 

 Katahdin, Maine, and high northward. (Eu.) 



