W ATSON—Plants of Bernalillo County 
3. Puysocarpus, Maxim. Ninebark. 
P. monoeyna, A small shrub; leaves ovate or cor- 
date; 3-lobed and toothed beneath; flowers on short ped- 
icels in simple umbel-like corymbs; ovaries densely to- 
mentose and but 1 or 2. Sandia Mts., high up. 
4. Rusus, Tourn, Bramble, Blackberry. 
R. peticiosus, James. Shrub 3 to 4 ft. high, 
branches, young leaves, and calyx tomentose, not 
glandular, rugose, more or less 3 to 5 lobed, finely ser- 
rate toothed leaves, reniform-oricular; flowers 2 in. 
across; sepals with dilated acumfnation; petals white, 
fruit purplish, large smooth. In spite of its name it is 
not good. Abundant in places among the Aspens of the 
Sandia Mts. Bear Canon. 
5. Cercocurpus, H. B. K. (Mountain Mahoga- 
ny.) <A shrub 2 to 10 ft high or more. 
C. Parvirotius, Nutt. Leaves cuneate-obovate, co- 
riaceous, serrate towards the obtuse or rounded summit, 
more or less silky above, densely tomentose beneath. 
Common on the lower slopes of the mountains in the 
Lil Candelabria and Pinon Societies. 
6. Fariueia, Hndl. Plumed Arroyo Shrub. 
A low shrub; flowers white, solitary. 
F.parapoxa, Hndl. Much branched, 2 ft. high, with 
white persistent epidermis; leaves scattered or fassicled 
somewhat villous and thick 1-4 to 4-5 in. long, sessile, 
cuneate, pinneately 3 to 7 cleft above; flowers few, 
an inch or more in diameter, the plumose tail of the 
achene 1-2 in. long. Very common in the arroyos of 
the mesa when it is usually the most conspicuous plant, 
easily recognized by its plumose fruit. Also very com> 
mon in the mounatins especially on the lower slopes. 
7. Porrentityuas, Cinquefoil. 5 Finger. 
Herbs, often with a palmately 5-foliate leaves 
whence the name “Five Finger.” 
Style thickened and glandular towards the base 
- - . - - - P, PENNSYLVAICA. 
Style filiform, not glandular at base. 
Inflorecence cymose, leaves digitate P. GRACILIS. 
Peduncles axillary, solitary, 1-flowered, leaves 
pinnate - . - - = Pp. aNwsmpina, JD. 
P. Pennsytvansca, ‘DL. Silky-tormentose. Leaves 
pinnate, leaflets 5 to 9, white tomentose beneath, short 
pubescent and greenish above, the segments linear, 
stamens usually 25. Ours seems to be Var. Srricosa, 
(68) 
