HEATH FAMILY. 265 



G. fronddsa, Torr. & Gray. Blue Tangle or DANOLiiBERRT. 



Branche.s diverging, slender ; leaves pale, white beneath ; racemes and 

 pedicels slender ; corolla short ; sweet blue-black fruit with a bloom. N. 

 Eng., 8. 



G. resindsa, Torr. & Gray. Common or Blacic II. l°-3° high, 

 clammy-resinous when young, with rigid branches, oval leaves, short one- 

 sided racemes in clusters, rather cylindrical corolla, and black fruit with- 

 out a bloom. Woods. 



2. VACCINIUM, BLUEBERRY, CRANBEURY, &c. (Ancient Latin 

 name, of obscure meaning.) (Lessons, Fig. 274.) 



* FARKLEBEnRY and Dr,ERi?p;KT!v ; erect shrrihs with single axillarij or 

 racemed flotoers on slemhT iinlicch, in. earl;/ unmmer, open bell-shaped 

 corolla, 10 stamens, iDiilnrs n-itlt rertj slender tubes, and 2 airns on the 

 back, and i)isipid berri(s rijiiininj late, each of their o cells divided in 2, 

 and maturinij few seeds. 



V. arb6reum, Marsh. FAitKLEBEunv. Open woods from Va. and 8. 

 111. 8.; 8*^-15° high, evergreen far 8., with oval, glossy leaves, anthers 

 included in the -5-toothed, white corolla, and black mealy berries. 



V. stamineum, Linn. Deerberhy or Squaw Huckleberry. 2°-3° 

 high, rather downy, with dull and pale ovate or oval leaves, anthers much 

 longer than the greenish or whitish 5- cleft corolla, and large greenish 

 berries. Me., W. and S. 



* * Evergreen Blueberries of the South, in low pine barrens, pro- 



cumbent or only \°-l° high, with 5-toothed corolla and 10 stamens. 



V. Myrsinites, Lam. Stems 6'-25' high ; leaves lanceolate or lance- 

 obovate h'-\' long and mostly pale beneath ; berries black or blue. 



V. crassifdlium, Andr. Stems procumlDent. slender ; thick and shin- 

 ing oval or oblong leaves V or less in length, their margins revolute ; 

 globular-bell-shaped corolla ; berries black. 



* * * Blueberries, beyond New England commonly called Huckle- 

 berries, rvith leaves deciduous at least in the Northern States ; flowers 

 in spring in clusters from .^calt/ htids .'separate from and rather earlier 

 than the leaves ; corolla oblong or short cylindrical, b-toothed. inclosing 

 the 10 anthers; berries ripe in summer, sweet,blue or black with a bloom, 

 each of the 5 many-seeded cells divided into two. 



V. virgatum, Ait. Low, pubescent ; leaves ovate or cnneate-oblong, 

 acute and minutely serrulate ; flower clusters on naked branches ; corolla 

 rose-color; berry black. S. Car., S. 



Var. ten^Uum, Gray. Low grounds from \'a. 8.; small-leaved, with 

 smaller nearly white flowers in shorter clusters. 



V. Pennsylvdnicum, Lam. Dwarf Early Blueberry. Dry or 

 barely moist grounds N. ; 6'-15' high, with green, angular branches, 

 mostly lance-i)l)long leaves, bristly-serrulate and smooth and shining both 

 sides, the sweet berries earliest to ripen. 



V. Canad^nse, Kalm. Taller. l°-2° high, the broader entire leaves 

 and branelilets downy. X. 



V. vacillans, Solander. Low Pale B. Dry woodlands, N., and 8. 

 to N. C; l°-3° high, with yellowish branches, smooth and pale or glau- 

 cous leaves obovate or oval and entire, and berries ripening later than V. 

 Pennsylvanieum. Fruit much prized. 



V. corymb68um, Linn. Common Swamp B. 3°-10° high, with oval 

 or oblong leaves, either smooth or downy, pale or green, and sweetish 

 berries ripening in late summer ; in one downy-leaved variety, pure black 

 without a bloom. Swamps. Much gathered for market. Very variable. 



