VITIS 



The stnu'tiir.' of ilu- key f.. tlu- foU.nviui; species, 

 when slaiuliiig uhiiie. is as iVtllews: 



(N"S. 1-4) 

 ( Xu. 1 I 

 (No. 21 

 (Xos. :;, 41 



A ^"/). .■(,,-.■ firoicii irliolhi lor oniii iii, iil : 



Dh! n\'rl,l '. 



B. Lis. sIwiiI,. i-;n.so,.s-/,7,-, 



BB. Lvs. xi))ii,], . vitis-lih, 



BBE, Lr.<. ivitli ■'—:> !/ts 



AA. i!i:,ri','s ,i,;,,cii [tri lint ril ij fur tli.ir 

 imiinil.Hjirul i I, I f r.: ..< t : nil Sur 



W.irhl IX,; lit X.I. JS ,Xos. 5-28) 



E. Skni K. i,.n:iln,,i fi;uii tli, rlllr.... (Nos. r,-27) 



I. Kin-k not slir,,hrt 11,1 I Xos :, ci 



CO /.•-,/,■ shi;,hl,i„j ,X,,,. 7_.X| 



1.. Ci:, ii-l,,u;,l Gi-,ij„s iN"s. 7-];i) 



K. r,lipui,,^lik ,X,,,. 7_l;;| 



F. /.,■.-,. hi:. ,1,1, I- 111, III I,. I,. I iX.i. 7l 



»'!•■ /.'■-■• "'■"''■ - (Xos, b-l:i) 



o. I'm itlinvjiiis tliiii (X.is. S-12) 



oo. [li.ii.lir.i.iii.s r, r.i Ihi.-]; .. |Xo. l:;| 



EE. (•.o./,/-,,;,-„-/;A'.' (Xos. 14-18) / 



F. Pl.iiit sli-.iiui .i„.l .■iii,.i„i,.i_ (Xos. 14-17) ' 



.:. Y.i.iii.j „1. ....!.. tcr.t.' ,X,,. 141 



.oi. )„,,»„..;,,.,,/,< .,i,.,i.,i ... . (X^.s. 1,1-17) 



FF. ri.li.t s.-,ii:-.hi .■Hiiil.lii.i . ... iXo. IS) ,; 



EEE. (>i-l.i.;il.ir-x.-.iU..p - I, .11-. ,1 .y 



■■''■■' iXo, KM <t;' 



DD. C..!..i:.l^l..ii;.] r,-,-,,/„.s- (X..s. 20-17) 



E. M.lt.n; Ir.^. ..I. hi fl.. .-.■III. Ill ..!■ 



,.;.l..r.hl.,i ..r' ,,l.iii.:.„s h.^ ' 



"'■''J> (Xos. 20-24) ^'-"'' 



F. Kii.l.s' .-.f ,1 i;. ir ; II .J xji....l.^ 



ichiU'^fipi.,,! (Xos. 20, 211 



FF. Eii,U,if sh,-...l:> rnxlii-lij, /,.■,]. (Xos. '12-'14) 

 EE. M.il.ir. l.-n. .l.iiisel.i I..III, iil..se 



I; ",,'tJ, (Xns. 2,'-27) 



F. T,ii,li-il.< iiit.Tiiiilf, .,1 (Xos. 2."i, 26) 



FF. T, 11,-1 r!U ..■.mini. I. ..IS i.it 



'rn-il j,-.ii.t , (Xo. 27) 



BB. Skin aiul pulp firiiihi ,:,.!, . rimj .. . (Xo. 28) 



VITIS 1949 



4. pter6phora, Kalier i r. .p.ii.iiiHi.lin, Lviirli, Dot 

 Baker 1. A njost reliiarkalile sj.ocies, the i.l-alieljes 'liear- 

 mu' eyini.lrieal or eluh sliajie,) ruljors at thi-ir ends 

 "lll.-h Call ali.l l.rn.luer li.-w plalits: tall, clilllhiu^' l,y 

 means of loni; torkinf,' dis.-iferons tendrils, tlie stem 

 wniy-ed and hairy: Ivs. larf,'e, of 1! Ifts., whieh may be 

 ■au'ain I.djoil, the stiimles larfje and purple on one ,s'i,le, 

 the petiole win.ije.l : cymo ]iedunfulate : fl.iral envcdo]H.s 

 of a thk'kened calyx and 4 minute |ietals. Hrazil, (),('. 

 II, 10:."i;!. B.M. 080:;. (in. ,'i.~i, p. 170,-(>ll,.red in s! 

 L'ali t. 



A. Spe,:if.,, ,ji::.rn ivJi.iJlii f.-.r 

 ductd fioiii vi' i-i..-iti.^ jia rt 



B. Zr.s\ .^iiiip'l'/, c/,^',s' 

 1. antarctica, Benth. (Ci.^su 

 Vitis Ba ml i III,} 11,1. F. JIuell. 

 Brouss.). Vigorous tall wcjtuh- 

 growths red-hairy or sometimes i: 

 oblong, on hairy petioles, tontli, 

 axils of veins beneath : lis. lti 



>,/iiii-iif. r,-ri)itlii iiiti-O' 



f III,' Old ]Yo>dd. 



Kimdlk,:. 



If .N' ,nit,irclica , Vent. 



( 'ov.soos' Bll lid ill Will, I , 



dier, the young 



nis : Ivs. ovate ti.i 



.;hii)dular in the 



ti;>mentos 



short e^-mes, the petals 4 and fallini.' separately: berrv 

 globular. Australia. B.M. 248,s, — (Offered in southerii 

 (California and said to be suitable for covering rocks 

 and walls. 



L, 



iiiplf, oflt'u 1,.1,,'d, rltis-like 



2. Coignetiae. Pulliat. Very strong-growing vine, cov- 

 ering trees and arlMjrs with a thatch of heavy showy 

 foliage: branches tloecose-tonientose when young: ten- 

 drils intermittent: Ivs. cordate - orbicular, with 3-.5 

 lobe -like points, the margins shallowly apiculate- 

 toothed. dull above, thickly gray-pubescent beneath: 

 thyrse stalked, short: fr. globular, about '3 in. in diam., 

 practically inedible, although said to be eaten after 

 being frozen bv the Japanese. X'. .Tajian. Gn. 49, p. 48: 

 50, p. -149. R.H. 1898, p. 426-28. -One of the best of all 

 strong-growing vines, and hardy in the northern states. 

 Its foliage becomes brilliant scarlet in the fall, whence 

 it has been called the "Crimson Glory Vine." In gen- 

 eral appearance it much resembles i'ifis I/abru.^ca . It 

 is not yet well known. It grows readily from imported 

 seeds. It can also be propagated by layering and by 

 grafting on other stocks. X'amed for Mme, Coi,gnet, 

 of Lyons, France, 



L, 



nil 



hiifhPs 



''■. hypoglaiica, F. Muell. iClsxnx hi/p,.,/!,! ii,;i . Gray), 

 Foliage handsome an<l ptersistent, dark grei--n abi.ive ;nul 

 glaucotis beneath; leaflets usually .5, oliovate to elliptic, 

 acuminate, stalked, entire or toothed towards the a]">ex : 

 fls, yellowish : fr. rather small and nearh" globulai-. 

 Australia. — Offered in S. Calif. 



2696. Vitis rotundifolia. the Muscadine erape of 

 the South ( • '.,1. 



AA. Hpi-cie.,! groirii prl innrll 11 for their piinir.liiiiicnl 

 (fruit) interest, all tiatire except No. US. 



B. Skill of tlie mnliire herri/ iisiiaUij xeparuliiiij fr.-rlii 



from tin: jiiitji (,Vo.s. .j-,'?). 



C. Bark hearing prominent lenticeU. never xlireitd i m; : 



n,.d,-s irilhoiil di,tphr,i,,ms: tendrils sin, pi,: 

 fh.irer-rliist, rs sm.ill ,ind not ninidi . Ion,;,, t,d : 

 s,,,ls oral ..r .il.lon.j. ivilliont a dislinel slip, -like 

 beak. { JI iiscad iniit . ) 



5. rotiindifdlia, Miclix. ( r. fanrina. Bartram. F. niK 

 jAna, Authors, not Linn. F, inus,.adina , angiili'ita, eer- 

 rncisa .peltcita, Florid iDia, Hut. ). Muscadine, Southern 

 Fox Gkape, Bullace or Bullit or Bull C^kafe. Fig. 

 2696. Vine with hard, warty wood, running rampiantly 

 even 60 to 100 ft. over bushes and trees, and in the 

 shade often sending dnwn diohotomftus aerial roots: h-s, 

 rather small to medium (2 to 6 in, long I. dense in tex- 

 ture and glabrous bnth sides (sometimes ['uliescent 

 along the veins beneath), cordate-ovate and not lobed. 

 mostly with a prominent and sometimes an acuminate 

 point (but somewhat contracted above the terminal ion 

 of the two main side vi-ins), the under surface (ini l\- 

 reti<-ulated between the veins, the teeth and the ;ipex 

 angular, coarse and acute, the basal sinus slialbiW, 

 broad and edentate; petiole slender and (like the \()ung 

 growtJl) fine-scurfy, ;ibout the length of the le:if-id:ide": 

 tendrils (or flower-clusters) discontinuous, ever\" third 

 node being bare: fruit-bearing (dusters smaller tloin the 

 sterile ones, and ri]iening from 3 to 20 grapes in a 

 nearly globular bnmdi : bei-ries falling from the clusters 

 when ripe, spherical or nearly so and large ( ^^-1 in. in 

 diameter), with very thii-k and tough skin ami ;i tough 

 musky flesh, dull purple in color witjiout bloom lin the 

 .Scupiiernong variety silvery amber-green), ripe in 

 summer and early autumn: seeds ■'i.t.--^ s in. long, shaped 

 soniething like a coffee berry. River banks, swamps, 

 and ricli woodlands and fhii'kets, S. Delaware to X. Fla. 

 and west to Kans. and Texas. 



