SMILACE^. (SMILAX FAMILY.) 519 



*- Peduncles shorter or scarcely longer than the petioles, flattened ; leaves thickish, 

 inclining to be evergreen, at least southward, green both sides. 



1. S. W&lteri, Pursh, Stem low, somewhat angled, prickly near the 

 base or unarmed; leaves ovate and someichut heart-shaped (3' -4' long); berries 

 coral-red. (S.China, Walt.) — New Jersey, and southward. July. 



2. S. rotundifdlia, L. (Common Greenhrier. ) Stem armed with 

 scattered prickles, as well as the terete branches; branchlets more or less 4- 

 angular; leaves ovate or round-orate, often broader than long, slightly heart- 

 shaped, abruptly short-pointed (2' -3' long) ; berries blue-black, with a bloom. 

 (S. cadiica, L., is only a more deciduous and thin-leaved form.) — Moist thick- 

 et- : common, especially southward. June, July. — Plant yellowish-green, often 

 high-climbing. — Passes into var. quadrangularis, with the branches, and 

 especially the branchlets, 4-angular, often square. (S. quadrangularis, MuU.) — 

 Peun. to Illinois, and southward. 



•*- +- Peduncles longer than, but seldom twice the length of the petiole, flattened : leaves 

 tardily deciduous or partly persistent : berries black, with a bloom. 



3. S. glauca, Walt. Terete branches and somewhat 4-angular branchlets 

 armed with scattered stout prickles, or naked ; leaves ovate, rarely subcordate, 

 glaucous beneath and sometimes also above, as well as the branchlets when young 

 (about 2' long), abruptly mucronate, the edges smooth and naked. (S. Sarsa- 

 parilla, L., in part, but not as to the syn. of Bauhin, whence the name was taken. 

 (S. cadiica, Willd. S. spinulosa, Smith ? Torr.fl.) — Dry thickets, S. New York 

 to Kentucky and southward. July. 



4. S. tamnoides, L. Branches and the angular (often square) branch- 

 lets sparsely armed with short rigid prickles ; leaves varying from round-heart- 

 shaped and slightly contracted above the dilated base to fiddle-shaped and hal- 

 berd-shaped or 3-lobed, green and shining both sides, cuspidate-pointed, the margins 

 often somewhat bristly-ciliate or spinulose. (S. Bona-nox, L., S. hastata Willd., 

 S. pandurata, Pursh, &c, are all forms of this.) — Thickets, New Jersey to 

 Illinois, and (chiefly) southward. July. 



•*-•*- -t- Peduncles 2-4 times the length of the petiole: leaves ample (3' -5' long), 

 thin or thinnish, green both sides : berries black : stem terete and branchlets nearly so. 



5. S. hispida, Muhl. Rootstock cylindrical, elongated ; stem (climbing 

 high) below densely beset icith long and weak blackish bristly prickles, the flowering 

 branchlets mostly naked ; leaves ovate and the larger heart-shaped, pointed, 

 slightly rough-margined, membranaceous and deciduous. — Moist thickets, Penn. 

 and W. New York to Michigan. June. — Peduncles l|'-2' long. Sepals lan- 

 ceolate, almost 3" long. 



6. S. Pseudo-China, L. Rootstock tuberous ; stems and branches unarmed, 

 or with very few weak prickles ; leaves ovate-heart-shaped, or on the branchlets 

 ovate-oblong, cuspidate-pointed, often rough-ciliate, becoming firm in texture; 

 peduncles flat (2'-3' long). — Dry or sandy soil, New Jersey to Kentucky, and 

 southward. July. 



* * Leaves varying from oblong-lanceolate to linear, narroived at the base into a short 

 petiole, 3 - b-nerved, shining above, paler or glaucous beneath, many of them 



