Solanacete. 
289 
407. Cerinthe. Cerinthe. V, 30. 
1. Anthers as long as their filaments. Ls ciliate. C. aspera 
Roth.-Sion; Wolf (1872 and 1873). 6 * major L. 1574. 
— Anthers 4 times as long as their filaments. Ls not ciliate. 
C. glabra Gaud, not Mill.—Alp. and Jura. 6 
alpina Kit. 1575. 
75. Solancaeae. 
408. Lycium. Lycium. Y, 34. 
1. Cor.-tube almost as long as the limb. Berries oblong. 
Branches pendant, spiny. Cal. bilabiate (L. vulgare Dun.) 
or almost 5-toothed (L. sinense Lam.). — Hedges, sub- 
spontaneous. 6, 7 . . . . f barbarum L. 1576. 
— Cor.-tube almost twice as long as the limb. Berries al¬ 
most globular. Branches stiff', very spiny. L. medi- 
terraneum Dun.—Southern Europe; rarely cultivated. 6 
feuropseum L. 1577. 
409. Solatium. Solatium. Y, 34, 55. 
1. Ls interrupted-imparipinnate. Potato. — Cultivated every¬ 
where. 6.t tuberosum L. 1578. 
— Ls undiv. or (in 1579) the upper auricled-ternate 2 
2. Perenn. pis. Principal stem woody, branches herbaceous, 
climbing or prostrate. FIs violet, rarely white. Berries 
oblong, red. Bitter-sweet.—b. Morale Raab. Stem and ls 
with a short tomentum.—Damp thickets, shores; distrib.; 
b. V. 6 . . . . . . Dulcamara L. 1579. 
— Ann. pi. Stem herbaceous. FIs white, rarely tinted with 
violet. Berries globular. Type of S. nigrum . 3 
3. FI. without much smell, with more or less scattered, 
stiff, hooked or applied hairs, which, on the (often al¬ 
most winged) angles of the stem and branches, spring 
from small tubercles. Berries black when ripe, rarely 
(b. chlorocarpum Spenn.) green or (c. humile Mill.) 
greenish yellow, or red (d. rubrum Mill). — Rubbish- 
heaps, road-sides, gardens; distrib.; b. c. d. in the Cantons 
of Wall., Yaud, and Geneva. 6 . . nigrum L. 1580.. 
— PI. with a scent of musk, hairy, almost gray-tomentoser 
Berries greenish yellow or (b. miniatum Bernh.) orange - o 
minium-red.—As the last; T. V. 6 villosum Lam. 1581.*) 
OBS. S. Lycopersicum Tournef. (Lycopersieum esculentum Mill.), tomato 
has large scarlet fr. like a furrowed apple, and is gen. cultivated ; also S, 
Melongena L. 
*) According to others it is necessary to distinguish : 1. S. alatum Monch 
(miniatum Bernh.). Branches with angles prominent, almost winged and with 
stronger haired tubercles; fr. always red.—2. S. villosum Lam Branches with 
obtuse angles; pi more haity, almost villous-toinentose; fr. orange-coloured ; but, 
it is said also greenish and indeed black. The two species have a scent of musk. 
