REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I9I2 99 



Crataegus mellita Sargent 

 N. Y. State Mus. Bui. 105. 58 (1906). 

 Sand Lake, near Albany. 



Crataegus luminosa Sargent 

 N. Y. State Mus. Bui. 122. 63 (1908). 

 Buffalo. 



COCCINEAE 



Crataegus holmesiana Ashe 



Jour. Elisha Mitchell Sci. Soc. XVI, pt II. 78 (1900). Sargent Silva 

 N. Am. XIII. 119, t. 676; Proc. Rochester Acad. Sci. IV. 114 (1903). 



Phoenicia, Albany, Ogdensburg, Little Falls, near Utica, Oris- 



kany, Elmira, Ithaca, Syracuse, Rochester, Hemlock lake, Belfast, 



Castile, Buffalo ; also in Quebec and Ontario, New England and 



Pennsylvania. 



Crataegus acclivis Sargent 



Proc. Rochester Acad. Sci. IV. 115 (1903); N. Y. State Mus.. Bui. 122. 

 71 (1908). 



Albany, near Utica, Ithaca, Chapin, Rochester, Hemlock lake, 



Belfast, Niagara Falls and Buffalo. 



Crataegus uticaensis n. sp. 

 Leaves ovate, acute or acuminate, abruptly cuneate or gradually 

 narrowed and rounded or broad and rounded at the base, coarsely 

 serrate with straight glandular teeth, and divided above the middle 

 into four or five pairs of short acuminate lobes; more than half 

 grown when the flowers open about the 20th of May and then el- 

 low-green, roughened above by short white hairs and paler and 

 glabrous below, and at maturity yellow-green, smooth and glabrous 

 on the upper surface, 6 to 7 cm long and 5 to 5.5 cm wide, with thin 

 midribs and primary veins; petioles slender, sparingly villose when 

 they first appear, soon becoming glabrous, glandular with occasional 

 small deciduous glands, 1.5 to 2.5 cm in length; stipules linear, 

 acuminate, conspicuously glandular, caducous ; leaves on vigorous 

 shoots cuneate, rounded or slightly cordate at the wide base, more 

 coarsely serrate and more deeply lobed, often 8 cm long and wide. 

 Flowers 2 to 2.2 cm in diameter, on slender sparingly villose pedi- 

 cels, in compact slightly hairy mostly 8-14-flowered corymbs, the 

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

 obconic, hairy with occasional white hairs or nearly glabrous, the 

 lobes separated by broad sinuses, short, broad, entire or occasionally 

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