CATALOGUE OE PLANTS. 
125 
U'li- 
3V 
1 
Y. corymbosum, L. High-bcsh Bj.tieberry. 
Swamps and low thickets; frequent. Somesville and vicinity 
(E. & E.); — Witch Hole (Eand); — Hulls Cove (F. M. Day, 
J. H. Curtis). 
Var. amoennm (Ait.), Gray. 
Somesville (Eedfield, M. L. Fernald); — Breakneck Ponds 
(Eand). 
This species and variety seem to he rare except in the central 
and northern parts of the Island. 
XfJi. 
V. Vitis-Idsea, L.^ Moottain Crauberry. _ (/■_ 
Common everywhere, shore and mountains, and on the islands. c,sy.-fc. 
Fruit much used for sauce, largely taking the. place of V. macro- ^ g, 
carpon for this purpose. 
V. Oxycoccus, L. Small Cranberry. ^ 
Common in sphagnum bogs, and in wet places on mountains ? 
and shore. Also on Cranberry Isles. hA-A s.fG 
Y. macrocarpon, Ait. Large Cranberry. 
Bogs; common, but rarely in great abundance. Also 
Cranberry Isles, whence their name. 
OHIO GENES, Salisb. Creeping Snowberey. 
/r - 
C. serpyllifolia, Salisb. C. hispidula (L.), T. & G. ^ S 
Deep mossy woods; common. ^ ^ 
iCc, fR- ^ X T 
ARCTOSTAPHYLOS, Adans. Beaebeery. 
A. Uva-ursi (L.), Spreng. Common Bearberry. 
Open, rocky places; infrequent and local. Browns Mt. . 
(William C. Lane);—Beech Cliff; Dog Mt. (Eand);—Barr 
Hill; Newport Mt. (Eedfield); — “Somes Sound, Southwest 
Harbor ” (Elizabeth G. Britton) ; — Eobiiison Mt. (Anna H. 
Bee); — near Bar Harbor (W. H. Manning), 
OvAA- 
