POTEXTIILA. 
95 
teeth about 4 on each side, dip. all ovate. — B. B. 561. P. salis- 
burffensis (Haenke) St. 17. 10. — Larger than the preceding. All, 
the teeth of 1. equal.— Mountains. P. \l. \U. E. S. 
6. P. rep'tans (L.) ; st. filiform prostrate rooting, I. quinate 
stalked, leaflets obovate bluntly senate, peduncles solitary, pet 
obcoixlate, carpels asperous. — E. B. 862. — L. on long stalks", often 
with a bunch of small 1. in their axils, sometimes soUtarv, usually 
in pairs. Leaflets blimt, rough or hairy on their ribs and m<ar- 
gins. El. on long stalks, yeUow. — Sometimes the 1. and cal. are 
covered with long silky hairs on both sides. — Roadsides and 
banks. P. IX. E. S. I. 
7. P. TortnerdiVla (Nesl.) ; st. procumbent or ascending, 1. ter- 
nate sessil& or shortly stalked, lower 1. quinate on long stallcs, 
Its. lanceolate or obovate-cimeate incise-serrate, pet. obcordate, 
carpclslongitudinally wrinkled. — Tonnentilla officinalis (L.) E. B. 
863. St. 34. 12. — Rootstock large, woody. L. all nearly sessile, 
except the lowest which are often temate; Its. acute, rather 
hairy. Stip. deeply cut. Fl. small, yellow, usually with 8 sep. 
and 4 pet. — P. mixta (Nolte); 1. stalked, Its. obovate-oblong 
acutely seiTate, stip. entire. A hybrid between Sp. 6 and 7.— 
|9. P. procumbcns (Sibth.); leaflets obovate-cuneate deeply cut, 
1. o-uate or 3-nate stalked, stip. entire or trifid. Fl. usually 
larger. T. reptans L., E. B. 864. — In dry places. /3. "Woods 
and hedge-banks. P. M;n. E. S. I. 
** Hairs on the receptacle long, carpels haiiy at the scar or 
all over. 
8. P. fridicdsa fL.) ; shrnhby, I. pinnate, leaflets mostly 5 ob- 
long acute entire haiiy with revolute margins. — E. B. 88. — St. 
3—4 feet high. Fl. large, yellow, terminal.— Teesdale. Wast- 
dale. Galway. Clare. S'h. yL \'n. E. I. 
[P. al'ba (L.) ; st. weak ascending, I. quinate, leaflets eUiptic- 
oblong narrowed below silky beneath tipped with converging 
teeth, liLaments and carpels glabrous except at the scar of the 
latter.—^. B. 1384. -S^. 4. 2.— Fl. white. Stem-1. temate.— 
Said to have been foimd in Wales. Huds. P. E. ? 
[P. tridentdta (Sol.) ; st. woody creeping at the base, I. temate, 
Icajlets oblong-cuneate jcith 3 teeth at the end glabrous above 
hairy beneath, filaments glabrous, carpels downy. — E. B. 2389. 
—St. prostrate. Fl. white. — Wen-on HiQ, and East rocks Loch 
Brandy," Clova. Mr. 6. Don. P. ^'L] S. 
9. P. fragarias'tmm (Ehrh.) ; st. procumbent, /. temate 
greyish gi'een, leaflets rouwJish obovate serrate silky on both sides, 
pet. narrowly obcordate not contiguous, carp, glafcrous except at 
the scar smooth or wrinkled transversely. — E. B. 1785 — Hairs 
