100 THE SUBSECTION EU-CANINZ OF THE GENUS ROSA 
fruit, and the styles appear to be villous, but not densely so. His 
specimen from Lynham, South ea similarly labelled, is very 
similar, but the leaflets are & good deal more hairy, and the styles 
only rather thinly hispid. Mr. Baker’s R. coriifola from Dunkeld 
—. small, somewhat biserrate, densely pubescent leaflets ; petioles 
; peduncles short, fruit quite ovoid, sepals reflexed, styles 
Bacaely woolly. His Thirsk plant has leaflets of medium size, 
rather broadly ovate, subacute, thinly hairy above, not = so 
beneath, coarsely simply serrate. eee ioles pubescent, 
them prickly. Peduncles very short. Fruit large, subpart 
Sepals rising. Styles not visible. 
Rosa IMPLEXA 
_ Grenier in Revue de la Fl. des Mts. Jura, p. 62 (1875). 
Leaves glabrous both sides, the midrib of the lower surface 
ena: The rest as in R. solstitialis Bess.” 
Grenier previou Bape escribed re Jura, p. 238, 1864) as a 
by many a authors synonym ous with R coriifolia Fr., but it has 
ovoid, not pabelobeas fruit. Gr mee there says of var. denudata: 
“ Leaves GSbrone both lie: Petioles tomentose. Peduncles 
naked.” It will be noticed that he does not mention the hairy 
As with some others of Grenier's species, an unsatisfactory 
rats is that 5. Paige cag? pesmi by him differ ow 
from his description. 
may be a ee g us form i his species. 
aking th B poole and descriptions as a whole, it is evident 
that R. amplexa is just a subglabrous coriifolia, i.e., its leaflets 
are rather large, close-set, quite glabrous above, eglan dular beneath, 
and hairy only on midribs, as well as often densely so on petioles. 
Peduneles short. Fruit rather large, ovoid, with erect persistent 
sepals, and a large woolly head of styles. 
ere is a sheet in herb. Déséglise, collected by Webb at Raby, 
Cheshire. Though he placed it in this cover, Déséglise has not 
written its name on it, in accordance with his almost universal 
cmos nor does he quote it in his Cat. Raison. Its leaflets being 
elongate and fly mgenicae tn there is, I think, much — <> 
hehe it should be accepted as — though it agrees 
most other respects with that species, and Grenier himself en 
specimens almost equally biserrate. 
