CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. Bs | 
ERICACE4E. HeatH FaAmiIry. 
GAYLUSSACIA, HBK. Huck Leserry. 
G. dumosa, Torr. & Gray. Boc HucKLEBERRY. 
Swamps and sphagnous bogs. S*, rare; border of Turtle 
Pond. 
G. frondosa, Torr. & Gray. DANGLEBERRY. 
Moist open thickets. 6, frequent; dry slopes and edges of 
wet open ground and in thin shade; sprouts freely from the 
root when cut or burnt off:— M*, occasional: —S*, 
Rooney’s Rock. 
G. resinosa, Torr. & Gray. Common HucKLEBERRY. 
Dry fields and open woods; recovers quickly after fires. B*, 
M, S* and BB, common. 
VACCINIUM, L. Btureserry. CRANBERRY. 
V. Pennsylvanicum, Lam. Dwarr BLUEBERRY. 
Dry hills and open pastures; in dense shade it soon disap- 
pears. B*, M, S and BB, common : — the black-fruited form 
occurs rarely in B. 
V. vacillans, Soland. Low BLuEBErry. 
Dry open places; persists in abandoned pastures. B*, M, 
S * and BB, common. 
V. corymbosum, L. HicH-susH BLUEBERRY. 
Low woods, meadows, borders of ponds, and roadsides; not 
persisting in heavy shade; easily killed by fire, but sprouting 
from the old stumps. Band M, common: — B b*, by lower 
pond : — M* and S*, forms approaching var. ameenum, Gray. 
Var. amoenum, Gray. 
Same habitat as the species. B, by Old Furnace Brook. 
Var. atrococcum, Gray. 
Same habitat as the species. M*, common. 
V. Oxycoccus, L. Smartt CRANBERRY. 
Bogs. S*, rare. 
