4013. 
4014. 
4015. 
4016, 
4017. 
4018. 
4019. 
4020, 
4021. 
4022. 
4023. 
4024. 
4025. 
4026. 
4027. 
4028. 
4029. 
4030. 
4031. 
( 183 ) 
Wild lulo.—The fruiting branches of Solanum sps. Fruit little eaten. 
Collected near El Banco, Colombia, by H. H. Rusby, September, 1917. 
Pepino. Melon pear.—The fruit of Solanum muricatum Ait. Native of 
the Andean region, and cultivated. Acquired by H. H. Rusby in the market 
of Bogota, Colombia, August, 1917. 
Gooseberry tomato.—The fruit of a cultivated form of Solanum nigrum L. 
Native of North America. Grown by Martin Ball at Sparkhill, New York, 
Wonderberry.—The fruiting stems of a cultivated variety of Solanum. 
Grown by J. Lewis Childs at Floral Park, New York, July, 1909. 
Ripe fruits of the preceding. Same donor. 
Unicorn pods.—The fruits of Martynia louisiana Mill. (Martyniaceae— 
Unicorn-pod Family). Native of the southwestern United States and 
Mexico. Collected at the New York Botanical Garden, August 11, 1899. 
Used in pickles. 
Partridge-berry. Twin-berry. Snake-berry.—The fruit of Mitchella repens 
L. (Rubiaceae—Madder Family), Native of eastern North America. 
Collected by H. H. Rusby at Marlboro, New Hampshire, July 15, 1919. 
Jagua. Genipa fruit. Marmalade berry.—The fruit of Genipa americana 
L. (Rubtaceae—Madder Family). Native of tropical America, Collected 
by Percy Wilson in Porto Rico, West Indies, in 1902. 
Black haw. Nanny-berry. Sheep-berry—The flowering branches of 
Virburnum Lentago L. (Caprifoliaceae—Honeysukcle Family). Native of 
eastern and central North America. Collected by R. S. Williams in the 
New York Botanical Garden, May 2, 1919. 
The fruit of the same. 
Another species of the preceding.—The flowering branches of Viburnum 
prunifolium L. Native of the same region. Same locality and collector, 
May 14, 1919. 
The fruit of the same. Same locality and collector, November 2, 1919. 
The fruit of V. cassinoides L. Native of eastern North America. Collected 
by H. H. Rusby at Marlboro, New Hampshire, September, 1919. 
High bush cranberry. Guelder rose.-—The flowering branches of Viburnum 
Opulus L. Native of the north temperate zone, and cultivated for ornament. 
One of the snowball shrubs of the Garden. Collected by H. H. Rusby at 
Manchester, Vermont, October 5, 1912. 
Fruit of the preceding.—Collected in the New York Botanical Garden. 
Another specimen from the same source. 
Common black elderberry.—The fruit of Sambucus canadensis L. (Same 
Family). Native of eastern and central North America. Collected in the 
New York Botanical Garden by W. N. Clute, August 10, 1899. 
Western red elderberry.—The fruit of Sambucus callicarpa Greene. Native 
of northwestern North America. Collected by H. H. Rusby at Sieletz, 
Oregon, July, 1909. 
Blue elderberry.—The fruit of Sambucus glauca Nutt. Native of the Pacific 
slope. Collected by H. H. Rusby at Hornbrook, California, August, 1909. 
