HOFFMANN: FLORA OF BERKSHIRE COUNTY. 331 
LONICERA. Honeysuckle. 
L. caerulea L., var. calvescens Fernald & Wiegand. Mountain 
Fly Honeysuckle. — (L. cacndea, var. villosa Man. ed. 7 in part.) 
Swamps; occasional. Lanesboro; Pittsfield (Knowlton); Stock- 
bridge. 
Leaves only sparingly pilose or glabrate; the new twigs glabrous or 
merely puberulent or sparingly pilose, becoming glabrate {vid. Rhodora, 
12: 210, 1910). 
var. villosa (Michx.) T. & G. — Bogs and wet hillsides; common, 
especially on the plateau. 
L. canadensis Marsh. American Fly Honeysuckle. — Woods; 
frequent. 
L. dioica L. — Rocky woods and swamps; frequent. Common in 
thickets in the sand-plain, Sheffield. 
L. hirsuta Eat. — Bullock's Ledge, Williamstown. 
This species was discovered " on a rocky hill, two miles west of the 
college " in Williamstown in 1817 by a pupil of Amos Eaton and 
described in the second edition of Eaton's Manual of Botany in 1818. 
The species was later found in Vermont, Pennsylvania and as far north- 
west as Manitoba, but no additional stations were found in Massa- 
chusetts, nor were botanists able to rediscover Eaton's station. In 
1920 the writer had the good fortune to find the plant growing in some 
abundance at the above locality, probably the type station. 
L. sempervirens L. Trumpet Honeysuckle. — Escaped on 
rocky hillside. Great Barrington. 
L. TATARiCA L. Tartarian Honeysuckle. — Occasional as an 
escape in thickets, Stockbridge. 
L. Xylosteum L. European Fly Honeysuckle.— Locally fre- 
quent as an escape in thickets about Stockbridge Bowl, Stockbridge. 
SAMBUCUS. Elder. 
S. canadensis L. Common Elder; Elderberry. — Low ground; 
common. 
S. racemosa L. Rkd-hkrried Elder. — Rocky woods, banks and 
clearings; coiiuuou. 
SYMPHORICARPUS. Snowberry. 
S. albus (L.) Blake. — (S. raccmosus Man. otl. 7 and 111. Fl. ed. 2; 
rid. Rhodoni, 16: 118, 1914.) 
