REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I907 IO7 



pedicels, in compact mostly 6-15-flowered corymbs, the elongated 

 lower peduncles from the axils of upper leaves ; calyx-tube narrowly 

 obconic, glabrous, the lobes long, slender, red and acuminate at the 

 apex, finely glandular serrate, glabrous on the outer, slightly villose 

 on the inner surface, reflexed after anthesis ; stamens 5-8; anthers 

 dark rose color; styles 2-4, usually 3. Fruit ripening from the 

 middle to the end of September, on slender drooping pedicels, in 

 few-fruited clusters, short-oblong, full and rounded at the ends, 

 scarlet, lustrous, marked by large pale dots, 1.3-1.5 cm long, 8-10 

 mm in diameter; calyx little enlarged, with a narrow deep cavity, 

 and elongated spreading and incurved lobes slightly hairy on the 

 upper side ; flesh orange-yellow slightly tinged with pink, thick and 

 juicy; nutlets 2 or 3, full and rounded at the ends, or when 3 

 gradually narrowed at the ends, ridged on the back, with a broad 

 low slightly grooved ridge, marked on the inner faces by broad 

 depressions, 6-y mm long, and about 4 mm wide. 



A shrub 2-3 m high, with stems covered with gray-brown bark, 

 ascending and spreading branches, and stout slightly zigzag glabrous 

 branchlets light orange-green and marked by pale lenticels when 

 they first appear, becoming light olive-green, lustrous and marked 

 by small pale lenticels in their first season and dull gray-brown 

 the following year, and armed with stout slightly curved light red- 

 brown ultimately dark gray spines 3.5-4 cm long. 



Rich hillsides, Coopers Plains, G. D. Cornell ( ;?$i^20, type), Sep- 

 tember 21, 1905, May 24, 1906 {^26, with less deeply divided 

 leaves and nearly glabrous pedicels), September 21, 1905, May 

 14, 1906. 



Crataegus repulsans n. sp. 



Leaves ovate to rhombic, acuminate and long-ix)inted at the 

 apex, abruptly or gradually narrowed and concave-cuneate at the 

 entire base, finely often doubly serrate above, with straight or in- 

 curved glandular teeth, and slightly divided usually only above the 

 middle into short broad acuminate spreading lobes; nearly fully 

 grown when the flowers open in the last week of May and then thin, 

 yellow-green and strigose above and pale and glabrous below, and at 

 maturity thin but firm in texture, dull yellow-green, glabrous and 

 scabrate on the upper surface, paler on the lower surface, 4-5 cm 

 long and 3-3.5 cm wide, with thin yellow midribs and primary 

 veins; petioles slender, slightly wing-margined at the apex, spar- 



