1084 APPEKDTX. 



P. 690, after Cornus asperifblia, insert: 



6a. Cornus Priceae Small. Miss PRICE'S CORNEL. A shrub, 2 m. 

 high or less, the young twigs red, finely pubescent. Leaves ovate to 

 ovate-elliptic, 5-12 cm. long, acuminate at the apex, rounded or nar- 

 rowed at the base, roughish-puberulent above, paler and softly pubes- 

 cent beneath; petioles 1-2 cm. long, pubescent; fruit white, subglobose, 

 only about 3 mm. in diameter, the stem a little longer than thick, faintly 

 ribbed. River-banks, Ky. and Tenn. May-June. 



P. 703, after Leucothoe racemdsa, add: 



5. Leucothoe elongata Small. LONG SWAMP LEUCOTHOE. A 

 shrub, similar to L. racemosa in size, habit, and foliage, the racemes 

 longer, 1-2 dm. long; pedicels 1-3 mm. long; sepals narrower, linear- 

 lanceolate, about half as long as the corolla, longer than the capsule 

 (in L. racemosa one-quarter to one-third as long as the corolla, and not 

 longer than the capsule). Swamps, S, E. Va. to Fla. April-May. 



P. 704, after Xolisma ligtistrina, add: 



2. Xoltsma foliosiflbra (Michx.) Small. Similar to X. ligustrina, 

 but leaves thicker, and usually more pubescent, somewhat shining on the 

 upper surface; panicles leafy-bracted ; sepals ovate; corolla 2-3 mm. in 

 diameter. In wet soil, Va. to Fla. and La. Apr.-June. 



P. 708, after Polycodium stammeum, add: 



2. Polycodium negle"ctum Small. SMOOTH DEERBERRY. A shrub, 

 1-1.5 m. high, differing from P. staminewn in having leaves and in- 

 florescence glabrous. Woods and thickets, Va. to Fla., Ky., Kans. and 

 La. 



3. Polycodium candicans (C. Mohr) Small. GLAUCOUS DEERBERRY. 

 A shrub, 2 m. high or less, differing from P. stamineum in having the 

 leaves white-glaucous beneath and the fruit glaucous, and from P. neg- 

 lectum in having finely pubescent leaves and inflorescence. Woods 

 and thickets, N. Y. and Pa. to Ohio, Ga. and Ala. April-May. 



P. 708, after Batodendron arbbreum, add: 



2. Batodandron andrachnefdrme Small. MISSOURI FARKLEBERRY. 

 A much-branched shrub, the twigs finely pubescent. Leaves oval, 

 1-2 cm. long, serrulate, obtuse, strongly reticulate-veined on both sides, 

 dark green and shining above, pale, dull, and pubescent beneath; flowers 

 solitary in the axils of the leaves, on short pedicels only 2-6 mm. long; 

 corolla globular-campanalate, its lobes only about one-fourth as long 

 as the tube. On bluffs, Mo. and Ark. May-June. 



P. 710, after Vaccinium atrocdccum, insert: 



7a. Vaccinium simufttum Small. SERRULATE-LEAVED BLUEBERRY. 

 A shrub, 3 m. high or less. Leaves elliptic to oblong-lanceolate, 2.5-7 

 cm. long, acute or short-acuminate at the apex and usually acute at 

 the base, bright green and glabrous above, pubescent, at least on the 

 veins beneath, the margins serrulate; corolla urn-shaped, 3.5-4.5 mm. 

 long; berries globular, about 7 mm. in diameter, glaucous. In moist 

 woods and thickets, N. Y. to Va., Ga. and Ala., mostly in the mountains. 

 May-June. 



P. 719, aftsr Dodecatheon Me*adia Fre*nchii, add: 



2. Dodecatheon brachycarpa Small. SHORT-FRUITED SHOOTING- 

 STAR. Similar to D. Meadia, the corolla pink-purple. Filaments united 

 at the base into a very short tube, this much shorter than in D. Meadia; 

 capsule ovoid, i cm. long, little longer than the calyx (that of D. Meadia 

 narrowly ovoid or oblong, 1.21.5 cm. long and much longer than the 

 calyx). In fields, Md. to Mo., Ala. and Ark. May-June. 



