1110 



ARBORETUM AND FRUTICETUM. 



PART III 



vered with brown, umbilicate, bran-like scales, as is every other part of the 

 plant. Flowers axillary, 3 or 5 together, upon pedicels. Corolla small, 

 ovate, globose, white inside, rusty-looking outside. (Don's Milium, p. 830.) 

 A native of Georgia, Florida, and Mexico, in pine woods, where it grows to 

 the height of from 3 ft, to 5 ft., and flowers in June and July. It was in- 

 troduced in 1 784, and is occasionally to be met with in collections. There 

 are plants at Messrs. Loddiges's, which are kept under glass during winter. 



in 2. L. ri'gida Nutt. The rigid-leaved Lyonia. 



Identification. Nutt. Gen. Amer., 1. p. 2f>6. ; Don's Mill., 3. p. 830. 



Synonymcs. Andr6med<? ferrugfnea Willd. Sp., 2. p. 609. ; Ait. Hort. Kew., 2. p. 67. ; A. ferrugfnea 



1 arborescens Michx. Fl. Bor. Amer., 1. p. 252. ; A. rigida Pursh Fl. Amer. Sept., 1. p. 292., Lodd. 



Bot. Cab., t. 430. 

 Engraving. Bot Cab., t. 430. 



Spec. Char., fyc. Arborescent, evergreen. Leaves crowded, coriaceous, rigid ; 

 their petioles short ; their disks cuneate-lanceolate, acute, entire, convex, 

 with revolute edges, and clothed with brown, umbilicate, bran-like scales, 

 as is every other part of the plant. F'lowers produced, in Britain, in April 

 and May, axillary, several together. Corolla globose, white inside. Closely 

 akin to L. ferrugfnea; but the two are distinguishable by their different 

 habits, especially by their times of flowering. (Don's Mill., iii. p. 831.) 

 There are plants at Messrs. Loddiges's kept under glass during winter. 



«- 3. L. marginaVa D. Don. The marginated-fetfm/ Lyonia. 



Identification. D. Don in Edinb. New Phil. Journ., 17. p. 159. ; Don's Mill., 3. p. 830. 



Synonymes. Andr6med« marginata Du Ham. Arb. ; A. coriacea Willd. Sp., 2. p. 613., Ait. Hort. 



Kew., 2. p. 70., Sims Bot. Mag., t. 1095.; A. lucida Lam. Encyc, 1. p. 157. ; A. mariana Jacq. 



Icon. Rar., 3. t. 465. 

 Engravings. Bot. Mag., t. 1095. ; Jacq. Icon. Rar., t. 465. ; and our fig. 902. 



Spec. Char., eye. A small shrub, evergreen, glabrous. Branchlets indistinctly 



ous, punc- 



3-sided. Leaves coriaceous, oval, acuminate, quite entire 



tured with very fine punctures ; the mid-rib 



running through the deflexed margin. Flowers 



upon pedicels, axillary, aggregate. Calyx of 



a dark red colour, its segments long, linear. A^ 

 Corolla cylindrical, J| (i 

 pale red. (Don's Mill.,§m^i 

 iii. p. 830.) A native ^ 

 of Carolina and Flo- 

 rida, in sandy forests ; 902 

 flowering in June and 

 July. It was intro- 

 duced in 1765, and, in 

 British gardens, grows 

 to the height of 2 ft." 



Variety. 



tL L. m. 2 rubra Lodd. Bot. Cab.,t. 672. ; and oxxvfig. 901.— Flowers deep 

 red. (Don's Mill.) 



B. Leaves deciduous. 

 jtk 4. L. maria v na D. Don. The Maryland Lyonia. 



Identification. D. Don in Edinb. New Phil. Journ., 17. p. 159. ; Don's Mill . 



I p. 

 Syrumymc. Andromeda mariana Lin. Sp., 564.. Sims Bot. Mag., t. 1579., 



Pluk. Maul , 448. 

 Engravings. Hot. Mag., t. 1579. ; and our fig. 903. 



Spec. Char., cfc. Leaves deciduous, oval, acutish at both ends, 

 entire, glabrous, rather coriaceous, paler beneath, Flower- 

 bearing branches almost leafless. Flowers on pedicels, 

 regate, large, white, sometimes tinged with red. Calyx 

 leaf?. Corolla ovate-cylindrical. Capsule conoid. (Don's 

 Mill., iii. p. 631.) A native of North America, from New 



903 



