282 PROCEEDINGS: BOSTON SOCIETY NATURAL HISTORY. 
Well established on an open hillside, Stockl)ridge. 
C. pedicellata Sarg. — North Adams (Fernald and Long). 
C. polita Sarg.— (C. albicans Ashe.) 
Great Harrington. 
C. Pringlei Sarg. — Savoy; Cheshire; Great Barrington. 
var. lobulata (Sarg.) Eggleston.— Williamstown; Great Barring- 
ton. 
C. pruinosa (Wendl.) C. Koch.— Williamstown; North Adams; 
Sheffield. 
var. latisepala (Ashe) Eggleston. (C. cognata Sarg.) 
Great Barrington. 
forma demissa (Sarg.) Eggleston. — Great Barrington. 
C. punctata Jacq. — Common. 
C. rotundifolia Moench. — - (C. Dodgei Ashe). 
Williamstown; Becket; Great Barrington; open woods, Mt. 
Washington (Knowlton and Schweinfurth). 
C. silvicola Beadle, var. Beckwithiae (Sarg.) Eggleston. — " One 
tree in a dooryard in Lenox. Not known whether native " (Eggleston, 
MS.). 
DALIBARDA. 
D. repens L. — Cool woods and borders of swamps; frequent on the 
plateau. 
FILIPENDULA. 
F. RUBRA (Hill) Robinson. Queen of the Prairie. — Occasionally 
established in thickets, meadows and roadsides. Lanesboro (Church- 
ill); Lenox; Stockbridge; Sheffield. 
F. Ulmaria (L.) Maxim. Queen of the Meadow, — Roadside 
banks and low meadows ; frequent in the valley. 
FRAGARIA. Strawberry. 
X F. GRANDiFLORA Ehrh. Garden Strawberry. — Occasional 
along roadsides or near gardens. An escape from cultivation. 
F. VESCA L. European W' god Strawberry. — Kitchen Brook, 
Cheshire (Churchill) ; persisting and spreading about old house sites, 
Hancock. 
forma albicarpa Britton. — (var. alba Man. ed. 7.) 
Occasionally escaping from cultivation. Hancock, with F. vesca; 
Stockbridge. 
