ACCOUNT OF GENUS SEDUM AS FOUND IN CULTIVATION. 221 
both in having opposite leaves ; from the former also in its flat 
(not subterete) leaves and yellow (not white) flowers ; from the latter 
in its smaller, thicker leaves and wide-spreading (not nearly erect) 
shorter petals. 
Description. — A small, creeping, glabrous, evergreen perennial. Stems 
slender, prostrate, rooting, with barren and flowering ascending reddish branches ; 
barren branches many, leafy, 2 to 3 inches, flowering stems 3 to 6 inches, with larger 
similar leaves. Leaves opposite, smooth, green, often flushed red, j by ^ inch 
or a little more, half as thick as broad, very fleshy, sessile, obovate to obovate- 
spathulate, rounded at apex or with a blunt point on the under side, those of the 
flowering shoots often alternate. Inflorescence of 2 (sometimes 3) once or twice 
forked branches, with flowers in the forks, flattish, not very dense, 1-2 inches 
across, branches ascending in fruit. Buds ovate, bluntly pointed, strongly 
ribbed. Flowers f inch across, longer than the pedicels. Calyx cup-shaped, 
lobes triangular, acute, fleshy, pale-green or reddish, separate nearly to the base. 
Petals bright yellow, patent, oblong-lanceolate, acute, thrice the sepals, keeled on 
back, deeply grooved on face. Stamens yellow, wide-spreading, equalling the 
petals. Scales very small, retuse, yellow to orange. Carpels greenish, shorter 
than the stamens, tapering into the slender styles, at first erect, soon spreading, 
stellate in fruit. 
Flowers June. 
Habitat. — Western N. America from Oregon to British Columbia. 
I have had in cultivation two wild gatherings sent from British 
Columbia, and also garden plants from about a dozen sources. The 
species appears very constant in its characters. 
102. Sedum Stahlii Solms (fig, 127). 
S. Stahlii Solms, " Samml. Bot. Gart. Strassburg," 1900, 4. " N. 
Amer. Flora,'' 22, 66. 
Illustrations. — Bot. Mag., pi. 7908. " Gartenwelt," 8, 6, 1904 (photo). 
Though described less than twenty years ago, this species is 
already very widely spread as a greenhouse plant. It cannot be 
confounded with any other Sedum, its rather large, egg-shaped, downy, 
red-brown opposite leaves being alone sufficient to distinguish it. 
These leaves fall off easily, and young plants arise from them very 
readily. 
Description. — Evergreen perennial, finely downy. Stems many, erect or 
spreading, slender, woody below, 4 to 8 inches long, seldom branched save at the 
base, finely hairy above. Leaves opposite, egg-shaped, slightly flattened on face, 
sessile, very blunt, finely downy, about i by | by J inch. Inflorescence a terminai 
cyme of 2 to 3 forked branches with flowers in the forks, 2 inches across, leafy, with 
bracts similar to the stem-leaves but smaller. Buds lanceolate, rather acute, 
ribbed. Flowers subsessile, ^ inch across. Calyx bell-shaped, nearly erect, 
sepals green, fleshy, hairy, lanceolate, free nearly to the base. Petals yellow, 
twice the sepals, lanceolate, shortly acuminate, wide-spreading in upper part. 
Stamens yellow, erect, slightly shorter than the petals. Scales small, yellow, 
spreading, emarginate, as broad as long. Carpels yellow, erect, slender, equalUng 
the stamens, styles short. 
Flowers August-September (cold frame). Hardy at Cork (R. H. 
Beamish), Warley (Miss WiUmott), Waltham Cross (E. A. Bowles), 
and Rostrevor (Sir John Ross). Nearly hardy at Dublin. 
Habitat. — Puebla, Mexico. 
Named after Professor Ernst Stahl of Jena. 
