cultivar, without descr. Huttleston also listed PALUDOSA, incorrectly, 

 at cultivar rank. Longwood Gardens received numerous USDA Plant 

 Introd. seed accessions as var. and subsp. radicans [var. paludosa] 

 collected in the wild in Japan. = var. paludosa, RADICANS, 

 /. radicans var. paludosa, but not PALUDOSA of Clarendon, subsp. 

 radicans (Nakai) Tatewaki, var. radicans Nakai. 



PECONIC (G. Eisenbeiss and T. Dudley, Proc. 47th Meet. Holly Soc. 

 Amer., p. 22. 1972) - sdlg. sel. by M. Nosal originated about 1945 at 

 Nosal Holly Nurs., Calverton, New York; mound shape, compact, slow 

 growing; lvs. small, narrow, elliptic; male; Holly Soc. Amer. Reg. No. 

 8-72 by M. Nosal. 



PEKING (Wister et al., Holly Soc. Amer. Bui. 6:37. 1953, without descr.) 

 - introd. about 1947 by Styer's Nurs. D. Wyman, Amer. Nurseryman 

 1 12(9): 122. 1960 - upright, irregular, slow growing; lvs. small; female. 

 Sdlg. orig. about 1932; sel. and named by Styer's Nurs., Concordville, 

 Pennsylvania. 



var. pendula (G. Koidzumi, Act. Phytotax. Geobot. 8:194. 1939) - 

 weeping branches; habitat Mt. Rokkozan, Settsu Prov., Japan. No 

 indication of cult, origin. Most assuredly it does occur in the wild. = 

 f. pendula (Koidzumi) Hara. 



f. pendula (Koidzumi) Hara (H. Hara, Enumeratio Spermatophytarum 

 Jap., p. 71. 1954, without descr.) - changed rank of var. pendula 

 Koidzumi to f. pendula. S.-y. Hu, Nat'l. Hort. Mag. 36(1):49. 1957 - 

 "a variety with pendulous branchlets; native Japan; not yet introd." = 

 var. pendula Koidzumi. Most assuredly originated in the wild; but two 

 plants, PENDULA of Sugimoto and PENDULA of Huttleston, are 

 possible sel. of f. pendula now in cult. 



PENDULA (D. Huttleston, Longwood Gdns., Kennett Square, 



Pennsylvania, Pits. Growing in Conservatories and Gdns., p. 5. 1970, 

 without descr.). Illegitimate, since the name is in Latin form, and since 

 the name /. aquifolium PENDULA has priority. Possibly a clone of 

 f. pendula. 



PENDULA (J. Sugimoto, New Keys to Woody Pits. Jap., p. 227. 1972) - 

 weeping. Illegitimate, since the name is in Latin form and since 

 /. aquifolium PENDULA has priority. Possibly a clone of f. pendula. 



PETITE Orig. unkn. Reported at North River Gdn. Center, Chattanooga, 

 Tennessee, 1989; lvs. dark green, elliptic to broadly elliptic; tips acute 

 to obtuse, bases cuneate. Illegitimate by priority of/, aquifolium 

 PETITE. 



PETITE POINTE (Wight Nurs., Cairo, Georgia, cat. p. 3. fall 1964) - 

 pyramidal, compact, slow growing, shears well; lvs. similar in size to 

 HELLERI; female; new; developed on Eastern Shore, Maryland. 

 A. Knox, Nursery Business 1 1(8):5. 1966 - introd. by Wight Nurs. 



PHYTO ECOLOGY (Phyto Ecology Nurs., Easton, Maryland, cat. p. 15. 

 sp. 1981) - new from Phyto Ecology; dense, mushroom habit; lvs. waxy 

 green. An example of minimal description. 



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