CAPRIFOLIACE-E. (HONEYSUCKLE FAMILY.) 203 



2. SYMPHORICARPUS, Dill. Snowberry. 



Calyx-teeth short, persistent on the fruit. Corolla bell-shaped, regularly 4 - 

 6-lobed, with as many short stamens inserted into its throat. Ovary 4-celled, 

 only 2 of the cells with a fertile ovule ; the berry therefore 4-celled but only 2- 

 seeded. Seeds bony. — Low and branching upright shrubs, with oval short- 

 petioled leaves, which are downy underneath and entire, or wavy-toothed or 

 lobed on the young shoots. Flowers white tinged with rose-color, in close 

 short spikes or clusters. (Name composed of avp(pope(o, to bear together, and 

 Kapnos, fruit ; from the clustered berries.) 



1. S. OCCidentalis, R. Brown. (Wolfberry.) Flowers in dense ter- 

 minal and axillary spikes ; corolla much bearded within ; the stamens and style 

 protruded; hemes white. — Northern Michigan, Blinois, and westward. — Flow- 

 ers larger and more funnel-form, and stamens longer, than in the next. 



2. S. racembsus, Michx. (Snowberry.) Flowers in a loose and some- 

 what leafy interrupted spike at the end of the branches ; corolla bearded inside ; 

 berries larye, bright white. — Rocky banks, W. Vermont to Pennsylvania and 

 Wisconsin : common in cultivation. June -Sept. — Berries ripe in autumn. 



Yar. paucifldrus, Bobbins. Low, diffusely branched and spreading ; 

 leaves smaller (about 1' long), the spike reduced to one or two flowers in the 

 axils of the uppermost. — Rocky woods of L. Superior, Dr. Bobbins, and north- 

 westward. Alleghanics of Pennsylvania, J. B. Lowrie, Mr. Boding. 



3. S. vulgaris, Michx. (Indian Currant. Coral-berry.) Flowers 

 in small close clusters in the axils of nearly all the leaves ; corolla sparingly 

 bearded ; berries small, dark red. — Rocky banks, W. New York and Penn. to 

 Illinois and southward • also cultivated. July. 



3. LONICEKA, L. Honeysuckle. Woodbine. 



Calyx-teeth very short. Corolla tubular or funnel-form, often gibbous at the 

 base, irregularly or almost regularly 5-lobed. Stamens 5. Ovary 2-3-celled. 

 Berry several-seeded. — Leaves entire. Flowers often showy and fragrant. 

 (Named in honor of Adam Lonitzer, latinized Lonicerus, a German herbalist of 

 the 16th century.) 



§ 1. CAPRIFOLIUM, Juss. Twining shrubs, icith the flowers in sessile whorled 

 clusters from the axils of the {often connate) upper leaves, and forming interrupted 

 terminal spikes: calyx-teeth persistent on the (red or orange) berry. 



* Corolla trumpet-shaped, almost regularly and equally 5-lobed. 



1. L. sempervirens, Ait. (Trumpet Honeysuckle.) Flowers in 

 somewhat distant whorls ; leaves oblong, smooth ; the lower petioled, the up- 

 permost pairs united round the stem. — Copses, New York (near the city) to 

 Virginia, and southward: common also in cultivation. May -Oct. — Leaves 

 deciduous at the North. Corolla scentless, nearly 2' long, deep red outside, 

 yellowish within or rarely throughout. 



* * Corolla ringent : the lower lip narroiv, the upper broad and \-lobed. 



2. L. grata, Ait. (American Woodbine.) Leaves smooth, glaucous be- 

 neath, obovate, the 2 or 3 upper pairs united ; flowers whorled in the axils of 



