366 CONNECTICUT GEOL. AND NAT. HIST. SURVEY. [BuU. 



(Eames). Mid-May — early June; fruit Aug. — Sept. Na- 

 tive of the Old World. 



Lonicera orientalis Lam. (of the Orient). 



Rare. Escaped from an old nursery to a pasture at 

 Wethersfield (H. S. Clark & Bissell). June. Adventive from 

 Asia. 



Lonicera japonica Thunb. 

 Japanese Honeysuckle. 



Roadsides and thickets. Occasional or local in most dis- 

 tricts, becoming frequent near the coast. June — Oct. 

 Naturalized from Asia. 



Medicinal. Often cultivated for ornament. 



Lonicera sempervirens L. (evergreen). 

 Trumpet Honeysuckle. 



Occasional in woods and copses near the coast ; also es- 

 caped from cultivation inland at South Windsor (A. W. 

 Driggs), East Hartford (Weatherby), Salisbury (Mrs. C. 

 S. Phelps). June; fruit Aug. 



Cultivated for ornament. Medicinal. 



Lonicera dioica L. (dioecious). 

 Lonicera glauca Hill. 

 Wild Honeysuckle. 



Occasional. Woods and thickets. May — mid- June ; 

 fruit July. 



SYMPHORICARPOS Ludwig. Snowberry. 



Symphoricarpos orbiculatus Moench (circular). 

 Symphoricarpos vulgaris Michx. 

 Symphoricarpos Symphoricarpos MacM. 

 Indian Currant. Coral-berry. 



Rare. Roadsides as an escape from cultivation : Water- 

 ford (Graves), Hartford (H. S. Clark & Bissell), Monroe 

 and Seymour (Harger), Bridgeport and Darien (Eames), 

 New Milford (C. K. Averill), SaHsbury (Mrs. C. S. Phelps). 

 July — Sept. ; fruit Oct. — Dec. Introduced from the West 

 or South. 



Cultivated for ornament, as is the following species. 



