304 ARBORETUM ET FRUTICETUM BRITANNICUM. 
thickish. Leaves ovate-rounded; the whole margin crenated. A 
native of the Ural Mountains. 
gw 8. h. 2 Plukenetiana Ser. S. hypericifotia 
Lin. Sp. Pl. 701., and. Don’s Mill. ii. 
p.519.; S.A. var. B Dec, Fl. Fr. v. 
' 645. (Pluk. Phyt., t. 218. f.5.)— 
eaves perfectly entire, glabrous. 
Flowers in sessile corymbs. A native 
of Canada. 
a S. h. 3 acita Ser. S. acutifolia Willd. 
Enum. 540., Camb. Monog., and Don’s 
Mill. ii. p. 519.; S. sibirica Hort. Par., 
according to Camb. Monog.; S. am- 
bigua Pall. (Our jig. 505.) — Leaves 
spathulate, elongate, acute, perfectly 
entire, or rarely 3—5-toothed, rather glabrous. Flowers in sessile 
corymbs. 
w S.h.'4 crenata Ser. S. obovata Waldst. et Kit.? in Willd. Enum. 
541., Camb. Monog., Barr. Icon. Rar, n. 1376. t. 564.; S. hyperici- 
folia y Dec. Fl. Fr. v. p. 645.; S. crenata Lin. Sp. 701., Camb. 
Monog., Don’s Mill. ii. p. 519., Lodd. Cat. (Our jig. 506.) — 
Leaves obovate. oh 
Gos 
505. S.A. achta. 
506. S. h. crenata, 507 S. 4. savranica, 508. S.h. Besseridna. 
g@ S. h. 5 savrdnica Ser. S. savranica Besser in Litt., Don’s Mill. ii. 
p. 519.; 8. crenata Pall. Fi. Ross. i. p. 35. t.19.; S. Aypericifolia 
var. 8 longifolia Led. Fi. Ross. Alt. Ill, t.429. (Our jig. 507.) — 
All parts pubescent. Leaves entire, or, at the tip, toothed. Flowers 
minute, disposed in dense terminal corymbs. It is wild about Bar- 
naoul, and in Podolia. 
aw S.h. 6 Besseriana Ser. S. crenata Besser in Litt.; S. savranica B 
Besseridna Don’s Mill. ii. p. 519. (Lodd. Bot. Cab., t. 1252; and our 
Jig. 508.)—All parts rather glabrous. Leaves mostly entire. Flowers 
disposed in rather lax terminal corymbs. A native of Podolia and 
Caucasus. 
Other Varieties or Synonymes. The following kinds, in Messrs. Loddiges’s 
collection, and in the Hort. Soc. Garden, appear to be either identical with, 
or varieties of, S. hypericifolia: — S. infléxa Wendland (Hort. Soc. Gard.), 
S. cbovata Wendland (Hort. Soc. Gard.), S. argéntea, S. cuneata, S. nana, 
S. alpina, S. acutifolia, S. decambens. 
This species has small hard stems, with numerous side branches, clothed 
with a desk green bark, and with numerous wedge-shaped leaves, like those of 
St. John’s wert, with glands in their substance, which give them the appear- 
ance of being punctured on the surface; whence the name. The flowers are 
