Co 



Ca Gi- 



st 



Be Mc Su R(j Hi Ch 



C. H(jlnu'siana var. 



Holmesiana 



var. villipes 

 C pedicellata 

 C. submollis 

 C. succulenta var. 



succulenta 



var. macracantha 

 Potentilla fruticosa 

 Rosa gallica 

 R. Egianteria 

 R. nitida 

 R. virginiana 

 R. palustris 

 R Carolina var. carulina 



var. villosa 



var. grandiflora 

 R. spinosissima 

 R. rugosa 

 R. cinnainomca 

 R. acicularis var. 



Bourgeauiana 

 R. blanda 

 Prunus insititia 

 P. spinosa 

 P. maritinia 

 P. aniericana 

 P. nigra 

 P. susquehanae 

 P. dcpressa 

 P. pensylvanica 

 P. avium 



X 

 X 



1 



X 



X 



1 



X 

 X 

 X 



1 



X 



i 



X 

 X 



X 



i 



X 



X X 



X 



X 



s 



X 

 X 



X 

 X 



1 



X 

 X 

 X 

 X 



C. succulenta Link. var. succulenta. 



In central Connecticut Valley at Bath. Haverhill, anrl Hanover; in Strafford County 

 at several stations, and one station in Wo'lfeboro in Carroll County. 



\^ar. macracantha (Lodd.) Eggleston. 

 Occasional throughout. 



Potentilla fruticosa L. Shrubby Cinquefoil. 



Of local occurrence in northern New Hampshire and mostly west of Merrimack 

 River in southern New Hampshire, with outlying stations in Londonderry, Windham 

 and Manchester; subalpine areas in Presidential Range, talus slopes, and cliffs in 

 mountains; pastures and bushy meadows at lower elevations. 



Our native species of Rosa while often clearly defined, tend to hybridize, resulting 

 in genetically complex populations often impossible to assign to any particular species; 

 such hybrids are often classed with one or other of the parent species and, like many 

 genera in which hybridization is common, the herbarium collections thus tend to 

 show an unwarranted range of intraspecific variation 



Rosa gallica L. French Rose. 



Occasional in northern, and southwestern parts of New Hampsliire; long persisting 

 around old cellars and escaping to roadsides : introduced from Europe. 



32 



