PENTANDRIA, MONOGYNIA. 
Round-leaved Sun-dew. 
A very curious and beautiful little plant, about three or four 
inches hig*h. Leaves radical, adpressed. Flowers white- 
Common in sphagnous and cranberry swamps in Jersey, and 
in bogs this side of the river. On and near the Woodlands, 
frequent. Annual? July, August* 
2. D. scapes radicating, sinaple ; leaves spathulate, 
obovate ; petioles long, naked. — Willd. and Fiirsh. 
Icon. Eng. hot. 868. 
Long-- leaved Sun- dew. 
Easily distinguished from No. 1 by its long leaves ; in other 
respects very much resembling it. Also a singular and deli- 
cate plant Flowers, as in the preceding, white. Not so 
common as No. 1, though frequent. In the spot I have parti- 
cularized, page 37, as the habitat of Eriophorum angustifolium* 
Annual ? July, August. 
112. VITIS. Gen.pl. 396. (Vites.) 
Calix minute, 5-toothed or entire. Petals 5, 
mostly cohering above, in the manner of a 
cal) ptrum, coming oflP at the base, and then 
deciduous. Style 0. Stigma capitate. 
Berry 5-seeded, superior, round, or rarely 
ovate. (Flowers mostly dioicous.) — >Nutt. 
1. V. leaves broad-cordate, sublobate, angular, hoary, 
tomentose beneath ; ferule racemes small; berries 
large. — Mich. W'llld, 
V. tanrina, Walt. 
Icon. Jacq. schoenbr. 426. (Pursh.) 
Fox-grape. 
Every body knows the fruit of this plant by the above Eng- 
lish name. Berries crow-black, large. In thickets, common, 
b • Jane, July. 
2. V. leaves broad, cordate, 3 to 5-lobed ; younger 
ones with a brown tomentum beneath ; fertile ra- 
cemes oblong ; berries small. — Mich, and Pursk* 
