North Carolina, cat. p. 2. 1963-64 - upright, bushy, medium growth; lvs. 

 excellent dark green; hardy; "new." 



BIM (Piney Ridge Nurs., Bostic, North Carolina, cat. p. 2. August 1984, 

 without descr.). = ? BIMI. 



BIMI (Magnolia Gdns. Nurs., Charleston, South Carolina, cat. p. 9. 1976, 

 without descr.). = ? BIM. 



BIR (Piney Ridge Nurs., Bostic, North Carolina, cat. p. 2. August 1983, 

 without descr.). = ? BIRMINGHAM. 



BIRMINGHAM (G. Eisenbeiss and T. Dudley, Jour. Holly Soc. Amer. 

 2(2): 10. 1984) - sel. from among 1,000 sdlgs. purchased by Styer Nurs., 

 Concordville, Pennsylvania and introd. 1980; low growing, mound 

 shape; lvs. lanceolate to broadly lanceolate; female; Holly Soc. Amer. 

 Reg. No. 3-84 by J. Franklin Styer, West Chester, Pennsylvania. = ? 

 BIR. 



BLACK BEAUTY (Girard Nurs., Geneva, Ohio, cat. fall 1968) - lvs. dark 

 green, glossy. Ibid., cat. p. 26. 1969 - compact, low growing; very 

 hardy; a Girard sel.; male. Ibid., cat. p. 26. 1972 - sel. most of all for 

 hardiness. Illegitimate, since the name /. opaca BLACK BEAUTY has 

 priority. 



BORDER GEM (Girard Nurs., Geneva, Ohio, cat. fall 1968) - low 

 growing. Ibid., cat. p. 26. 1969 - dense; very hardy; a Girard sel. 

 J. McDaniel, Holly Soc. Amer. Let. 66:12. 1980 - male; hardy in 

 Urbana, Illinois; orig. at Girard Nurs. 



BRADDOCK (Southside Nurs., Richmond, Virginia, cat. p. 2. fall 1960- 

 sp. 1961, without descr). = BRADDOCK HEIGHTS. 



BRADDOCK HEIGHTS (Wister et al., Holly Soc. Amer. Bui. 6:23. 

 1953, without descr.) - sel. at Braddock Heights, Maryland, 1935, by 

 H. Hohman, Kingsville Nurs., Kingsville, Maryland. Valuable in 

 landscape as a tall, narrow screening pit. = BRADDOCK. 



BRUNS (J. Bruns, Baumschulen, Bad Zwischenahn, West Germany, cat. 

 p. 130. 1959-60) - broad compact; winter hardy form; recommended for 

 specimen planting and hedges. 



(Bullata Group) (Hortus Third, p. 591. 1976) - "best considered a large 

 group of clones generally characterized by bullate, convex lvs." 

 Rejected here as a group name on the basis that the cultivar names 

 included in this group are not listed in Hortus Third. While there are 

 many cultivars with convex and bullate leaves, this characteristic is not 

 always clear-cut. Leaf variations from strongly convex to flat occur 

 between the cultivars. Furthermore, the group name Bullata is derived 

 from f. bullata Rehder, which was invalidated many years ago [cf. 

 A. Rehder, Jour. Arnold Arb. 12:(errata and addenda) 1931]. To avoid 

 confusion the word "bullata" in any form should not be used in the 

 cultivar nomenclature of /. crenata, except in syn. 



f. bullata (A. Rehder, Jour. Arnold Arb. 12(1):73. 1931, and 12(4):309. 

 1931) - upright shrub with spreading branchlets; lvs. oval or obovate to 



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