256 



ROSACEAE. 



VOL. II 



17. Potentilla effusa Dougl. Branched 

 Cinquefoil. Fig. 2243. 



P. effusa Dougl.; Lehm. Nov. Stirp. Pug. 2: 8. 1830. 



Plant perennial, 6'-i8' high, diffusely branched 

 above. Leaves pinnate, tomentose-canescent, but no: 

 silky; leaflets 5-11, or those of the upper leaves onh 

 1-3, oblong, obtuse at the apex, commonly cuneatt 

 at the base, incised-dentate, i'-ii' long; flower 

 yellow, 3"-s" broad, loosely cymose, yellow ; bractlet.- 

 much shorter than the lanceolate acuminate calyx 

 lobes; petals obovate, emarginate, exceeding tht 

 calyx-lobes; stamens about 20; achenes glabrous. 



Prairies, western Minnesota to Saskatchewan, Al- 

 berta, Nebraska and New Mexico. Summer. 



18. Potentilla Hippiana Lehm. Woolly 

 Cinquefoil. Fig. 2244. 



P. Hippiana Lehm. Nov. Stirp. Pug. 2: 7. 1830. 

 Potentilla leitcophylla Torr. Ann. N. Y. Lye. 2 : 197. 

 1825. Not Pall. 1773. 



Erect or ascending, perennial, branched above, 

 rather stout, i-2$ high, densely floccose as well 

 as silky. Stipules lanceolate, acuminate, entire ; 

 lower and basal leaves petioled, pinnately 5-11- 

 foliolate; leaflets oblanceolate or oblong, obtuse, 

 narrowed or cuneate at the base, 6"-i8" long, 

 incisely dentate, very white beneath, the lower 

 ones smaller than the upper, and no smaller ones 

 interspersed ; flowers terminal, yellow, loosely 

 cymose, 3"-6" broad; petals obovate, retuse, a 

 little exceeding the lanceolate acute calyx-lobes 

 and slightly narrower bractlets; stamens about 

 20; style filiform; achenes glabrous. 



Dry soil, northwestern Minnesota and Assiniboia 

 to British Columbia, south to New Mexico and Ari- 

 zona. June-Aug. 



19. Potentilla multifida L. Cut-leaved 

 Cinquefoil. Fig. 2245. 



Potentilla multifida L. Sp. PI. 496. 1753. 



Perennial, stems several or many from the caudex, 

 low, asceding or spreading, appressed-silky. Stipules 

 large, lanceolate, acuminate, scarious, brown; leaves 

 pinnately 5-9-foliolate, grayish-tomentose beneath, 

 glabrate above ; leaflets finely divided to near the 

 midrib into linear acute segments, with more or 

 less revolute margins ; petals yellow, a little exceed- 

 ing the ovate-lanceolate acute sepals; stamens about 

 20; style terminal, short, not thickened at the base; 

 achenes smooth, or slightly rugose. 



Hudson Bay to Great Slave Lake, 

 alpine Europe and Asia. Summer. 



Also in arctic and 



