2;', 



o 



Cyanococcus^ Gray. 



Corolla cyjindraceous to campanulate-oblong or ovoid, 5- 

 toothed ; filaments hairy ; anthers awnless, included ; ovary and 

 "berry more or less lo-celled by false partitions; berry blue or 

 black, usually with bloom, edible, many seeded; flowers, short 

 pedicelled, (white or rose) in fascicles or very short racemes, 

 developed with or a little before the leaves ; buds separate, large, 

 scaly ; bracts and bractlets caducous or deciduous. 

 C. Foli"age evergreen, coriaceous. 



D. Calyx-teeth roundish and very dense. V. nitidxim 



DD. Calyx-teeth acute F. Myrsinites 



CC. Foliage deciduous (sometimes tardily so in southern 

 forms) . 



D. Corolla cylindraceous V. Virgatum 



DD. Corolla short and usually broad. 



E. Branchlets hirsute V. hirsutum 



EE. Branchlets glabrous or glaucous (except in 

 V. Canadense). 

 F. Leaves glaucous and pale beneath. 



V. vacillans 

 FF. Leaves strongly pubescent both sides. 



V. Canadense 

 and var. atrococcum of corymbosum 

 FFF. Leaves glabrous, often hairy on mid- 

 rib beneath. 

 G. Margin of leaves bristly-serru- 

 late. 

 H. Fruit mostly blue. glaucous. 

 V. Pennsylvanicum 

 HH. Fruit black . . . F. nigrum 

 GGr. Margin of leaves entire or at 

 most ciliate. F. corymbosum 



A HORTICUIvTURAL CLASSIFICATION. 



As already indicated, the genus under consideration includes 

 many species of particular importance as food plants, others 

 which are useful only for ornament, and some which are valuable 

 for both purposes. The following key to the more commonly 

 known species is based upon leading horticultural characters. 



