Tennessee Flora. 157 



berland Mts., at Cowan. Bluffs of Cumberland River. May- 

 July. 



T. angustifolium L. Parksville, E. Tenn. Knoxville. A. 

 Ruth. May-July. 



SYMPHORICARPUS Juss. 



Symphoricarpus racemosus Michx. Snowberry. Along 

 Holston River. J. K. Small. June-September. 



S. Symphoricarpus (L.) Michx. S. vulg-aris Michx. Coral 

 berry. Indian currant. Abimdant in M. Tenn. 



LONICERA L. 



Lonicera dioica L. L. .g^lauca Hill. L. parviflora Lam. 

 Glaucous honeysuckle. Cliffs, north of Bristol. J. K. Srrtall. 

 Mts. of E. Tenti. 



L. Sullivantii Gray. Woodlands. O. S. May, June. 



L. flava Sims. E. Tenn. April, May. 



L. sempervirens L. Trumpet honeysuckle. Frequent in 

 the cedar glades of M. Tenn. June, July. 



L. Japonica Thunb. Japanese honeysuckle. Naturalized 

 from E. Asia. Banks of Cumberland River, above and below 

 Nashville. June-August. 



DIERVILLA Moench. 



Diervilla trifida Moench. D. Diervilla McM. Cumberland 

 and Alleghany Mts. May, June. 



*D, rivularis Gattinger. Lula Falls, eight miles south of 

 summit of Lookout Mt. July. Vide Bot. Gazette, July, 1888. 



VALERL-\NACE.^ Batsch. 



VALERIANA L. 



Valeriana pauciflora Michx. American wild valerian. 

 Moist soil. Fide Gray's Synopt. Flora. May, June. 



VALERIANELLA Poll. 



Valerianella Locusta (L.) Bettke. V. olitoria L. Euro- 

 pean corn salad. Cultivated and the young plants eaten as 

 salad under the name of " fetticus." March, April. 



♦Branchlets, nearly terate; leaves, subsessite, ovate, or oblong-lance- 

 olate, acuminate, whitish underneath, all parts hirsutely pubescent; 

 cymes, numerous, 3-6 flowered; corolla, slightly bilabiate, the upper 

 three divisions in close contact, middle lobe longest, the lower lobes 

 more spreading; calyx lobes, slender, lance-subulate; flower, larger and 

 brighter than in susilifolia; shrub 3 to 5 feet high, near the edge of a 

 stream. 



