136 
26. eosacej:. 
[iJ. comosa (Rip.) has been described as having more ovate fr., and S. apricorum. 
(Rip.) more globose fr. The name E. umbellala (Leers) has been applied to plants 
with several 11. together, and R. rotundifoHa (Reichb.) to a small form with nearly 
straight prickles and very small Its. ^. R, echinocarpa (Rip.) ; more glandular 
with seta on the fr. and the branches often setigerous. y. JencnHs (51. Schultze 
under R. ruWginosa) ; " ped. reeept. and back of the sep. glandular" Hanb. 
& Marsh., Flor. of Kent. — Bushv places. Sh. V. — VII. St'jeet 
Briar. " E. S. I. 
7. Ji. micran'tha (Sm.) ; prickles uniform hooked, Its. doubly 
serrate [hairy principally on the veins] and glandular beneath, sep. 
subpersistent with long leaflike points and minute lanceolate 
simple pinna;, primordial fr. rounded at the base, disk 
moderate. — E. B. 2490. — St. suberect with long lax branches. 
FI. few pale ; ped. [usually] very setose ; styles glabrous. Fr. 
ovate-urceolate, bright scarlet, ripe in Sept. or Oct. Foliage 
scarcely scented. Its. roimded at the base. \p. R. permizta (Desegi.) ; 
Its. glabrous but very plaudular below, fr. setose. 7. BriggHi (Bak.); more 
lururiant, Its. less glandular beneath, fr. and ped. quite naked. 5. R. hystrix 
(Lem.); Its. narrow, sharply serrate glabrous but densely glandular beneath, ped. 
densely aciculate, fr. naked.— Hedges and] Thickets. Sh. VI. VII. 
E. S. I. 
8. B. acjres'tis (Savi) : prickles rather unequal hooked with 
a fev.' acicvli, Its. [copiously] doubly serrate (usually glabrous or 
slightly hairy on the veins and usually very] glandular beneath, Sep. 
subpersistent closely j-im^^te, primordial fr. ovate or sub- 
globular, disk moderate. — E. B. S. 2653. B. inodora ed. viii. 
B. sepium (Thuill.). — St. suberect with long lax branches. Fl. 
1 — 3, pink ; ped. naked ; styles hairy. Foliage scarcely scented. 
[/3. R. cryptvpuda (Bak.); Its. glabious above, hairy on the main veins 
and thinly glandular beneath, ped. very short, fr. subglobose. 7. 11. Mliietii 
(Pug.) ; Its. small hairy on both sides, petioles very hairy eglandular, sep. 
erect after flowering, fr. ovoid. 5. R. inodora (Fr.); Its. broadly oval, 
less attenuate at the base becoming glabrous above, petioles glabrous, sep. 
reflexed after flowering, fr. ovoid. Prof. Crepin is not satisfied that either 
of the last two occur in Britain.] — Local. Sh. VI. E. 1. 
iv. Canines;, [styles free. Sep. subpersistent or deciduous.] St. 
arching, with scattered uniform hooked prickles becoming 
more slender upwards. [Lts. usually 7 rarely glandular beneath. 
Fr. with a disk.] 
9. R. Musif 'lia (Desv. em. Crop.); prickles equal very strongly hooked, Its. 
ovate-oblong simply or doubly serrate usually hairy with inodorous glands 
on the veins and often on the surface beneath, sep. reflexed deciduous 
pinnate, fr. ovate or subglobose, disk Hat, styles densely hair}'. — Hook. 
Fl. t'jnd. t. 117. R. canhia (L.) vars. tomentella, &c. ed. viii.— a. Lts. 
simply seiTate hairy on both sides. jS. R- frondosa (Spreng.) ; Its. small 
simply serrate much rounded at the base, fr. small subglobose. When 
