DIVISION 2. GAMOPETAL.E. 



CAPRIFOLIACE^E. 



Shrubs, trees, woody climber or trailing plants. Leaves opposite: calyx adherent to 

 the ovary, the limb 5-toothed or obsolete: corolla 4-5 lobed or cleft: ovary 2-5 celled: 

 fruit a berry. Key to genera and species, p. 131. 



SAMBUCUS. 



S. maritima, of the Bay-Reg. Bot., seems to be only a form of S. glauca; and S. 

 callicarpa, Greene, is S. racemosa of this book, an Old World species, probably 

 distinct from ours, making Greene's the better name for the Red-fruited Elder. 



SYMPHOBICABPOS. 



S. ciliatus, Nutt., is the name given, in Bay-Reg. Bot., to the small Snowberry of 

 the Oakland Hills, which is perhaps only a variety of S. racemosus, the most common 

 species, or, perhaps, the only one of the Coast Ranges. 



LONICEBA. (CAPBIFOLIUM, in Bay- Beg. Bot.) 



Li. interrupta, Benth., is distinguished from !L. hispidula (in Bay-Reg. Bot.) by 

 erect bushy habit, white bark of branches, and glabrous yellow flowers, smaller. 



L. Ledebourii, Esch., is distinguished in Flora Frandscana from L. involucrata by 

 larger size, often 10-15 feet high, while the latter is only 2 or 3 feet high: more gibbous 

 corolla, salverform rather than funnelform, and orange to scarlet, instead of yellowish. 

 Named Distegia LedebQurii in Bay-Reg. Bot. 



Li. subspicata, H. & A. Bushy, many branched, densely glandular-hairy, except 

 on the upper side of the leaves, which are small, narrowly oblong, tapering to a petiole, 

 none of them stipulate or connate: corolla 6 lines long, yellowish. Usually considered 

 a variety of L. hispidula. 



KUBIACE^B. 



Known by having opposite entire leaves with intervening stipules, or whorled leaves 

 without stipules, along with an inferior ovary and regular 4-5 merous flowers; the 

 teeth of the calyx sometimes wanting. Stamens alternate with the lobes of the corolla 

 and borne on its tube, distinct. Key to genera and species, p. 133. 



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