ROSA. EOSACEiE. 168 



oblong-obovate by a more gradual attenuation o£ the base, 4-6 lines long. 

 Ou rocky ridges and canyons, Idaho to the Eastern States and Canada. 



B. spithamsea Watson Bot. Cal. ii, 444. Stems slender, 2-12 inches 

 high, sparingly branched: stipules narrow, acuminate, glandular-ciliate: 

 rachis of the leaves glandular and more or less prickly; leaflets 5-9, ellip- 

 tical or oblong, smooth, rather coarsely and doubly serrate, 6-18 lines long : 

 flowers 12-18 lines broad, in few-flowered corymbs, pedicels receptacle and 

 calyx usually densely glandular-hispid ; sepals lanceolate, with or without 

 a foliaceoiis serrate appendage, 6-10 lines long ; petals Isroadly obovate, 

 8-12 lines long ; fruit not seen. Common on wooded hillsides, southwest- 

 ern Oregon and northern California. 



R. pisocarpa Gray Proc. Am. Acad, viii, 382. Stems slender, armed 

 with straight, stout or slender, ascending or spreading spines, sometimes 

 naked, not prickly : leaflets 5-9, oblong to oblong-ovate, shortly acuminate 

 to obtuse, rounded or subcuneate at base, sessile or nearly so, smooth 

 above, paler and pubescent beneath, simply toothed, 4-12 lines long: 

 flowers small, corymbose or ofteji solitary, on short branches ; pedicels 

 slender, smooth or rarely sparingly hispid: sepals more or less glandular- 

 hispid, triangular acuminate, with entire lanceolate appendages; p tals 

 obcordate, 6-» lines long: fruit globose, 3-5 lines in diameter, contracted 

 above to a very short neck. Common in low places, Brit. Columbia to 

 Oregon. 



B. Californlca Cham. & Schlecht. Linnsea ii, 35. Stems often tall, 

 with usually stout more or less recurved or sometimes straight spines, 

 frequently scattered or wanting, often prickly : stipules mostly narrow, 

 usually naked, sometimes glandular-ciliate ; rachis of the leaves pubescent 

 or prickly ; leaflets 3-7, round or broadly elliptical to oblong-ovate, usually 

 sessile, slightly pubescent or glabrous above, villous or toment'ose be- 

 neath, simply toothed, 6-18 lines long: flowers corymbose or sometimes 

 solitary, on slender usually short and naked pedicels; sepals and recepta- 

 cle glabrous or villous or rarely hispid ; petals 5-6 lines long: fruit ovate- 

 globose, with a usually prominent neck, about -6 lines long by 4 broad. 

 Brit. Columbia to California. 



B. fendleri Crepin Bull. Soc. Bot. Belg. xv, 452. Stems often tall, 

 with mostly rather slender straight or recurved spines, often scattered or 

 wanting: stipules mostly narrow, usually naked; rachis pubescent or 

 prickly ; leaflets 5-9,, 'oblong or . oblong-oboyate, more or less cuneate at 

 base often petiolulate, usually glaucous, very finely pubescent beneath or 

 glabrous or somewhat resinous, serrate with usualy simple teeth, 6-18 

 lines long: flowers small, often solitary; the short pedicels receptacle 

 and sepals glabrous; sepals lanceolate, \vith linear-lanceolate entire ap- 

 pendages: fruit globose or broadly ovate, with little or no neck. From 

 the Columbia river to New Mexico and' Texas, and north to beyond the 

 British boundary. 



* * Styles few, distinct, deciduous with the entire calyx from the 



very contracted top of the neck of the receptacle: sepals short and 



entire, 



B. gymnocarpa Nutt. T. & G. Fl. i, 461. Stems slender and rather 

 weak, 2-10 feet high, with straight slender infrastipular and scattered 

 spines and more or less prickly : stipules usually narrow, glandular dil- 

 ate: rachis prickly and more or less glandular; leaflets 5-9, usually 7, 

 from round elliptical and obtuse to narrowly oblong and acute, glab ous, 

 rarely somewhat tomentose or resinous, doubly glandular-serrate,' sessile 

 . or nearly so, usually small, 4-12 lines long : flowers in 1-few-flowered 

 corymbs, on hispid or sometimes glabrous pedicels ; sepals usiially 3-4 

 lines long, lanceolate, the oTiter ones often glandular-ciliate .all aristate 

 and usually smooth; pet3,ls broadly obcorda);e, 6-8 lines long: 'iruit 

 smouth; oblong-obovate to globose, few-seeded. Common in forests arid 

 wooded districts, BHt. Columbiato California anS Montana. 



