. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions, from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia, and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102d meridian. Botany; Botany. 2. GROSSULARIA [Tourn.] Mill. Card. Diet Abr. Ed. 4. 1754. Shrubs, with erect ascending or trailing branches, the nodes armed with simple or 3-forked spines, rarely spineless. Racemes i-few-flowered. Pedicels not jointed. Hypan- thium evident. Fruit not disarticulating from the pedicel. [Ancient name of the gooseberry.] About 55 species, natives of the north te
. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions, from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia, and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102d meridian. Botany; Botany. 2. GROSSULARIA [Tourn.] Mill. Card. Diet Abr. Ed. 4. 1754. Shrubs, with erect ascending or trailing branches, the nodes armed with simple or 3-forked spines, rarely spineless. Racemes i-few-flowered. Pedicels not jointed. Hypan- thium evident. Fruit not disarticulating from the pedicel. [Ancient name of the gooseberry.] About 55 species, natives of the north temperate zone. Besides the following, some 30 others occur in the western states. Type species : Ribes Grossularia L. Ovary bristly ; fruit prickly. Ovary glabrous, pubescent, or with stalked glands. Flowers white ; filaments long. Flowers green or purplish ; filaments shorter. Stamens equalling the petals. Calyx-tube (hypanthium) tubular. Calyx-tube (hypanthium) campanulate. Stamens twice as long as the petals or longer. Ovary villous. Ovary glabrous or with some stalked glands. Calyx-lobes twice as long as the tube. Calyx-lobes about as long as the tube. 1. G. Cynosbati. 2. G. missouriensis. 3. G. sctosa. 4. G, oxyacanthoides, 5. G. reclinata. 6. G. rotundifolia. 7. G. hirtella. I. Grossularia Cynosbati (L.) Mill. Wild Gooseberry. Dogberry. Fig. Ribes Cynosbati L. Sp. PI. 202. 1753. Grossularia Cynosbati Mill. Card. Diet. Ed. 8, No. 5. 1768. Ribes Cynosbati glabratum Fernald, Rhodora 7: 156. 1905. Nodal spines slender, solitary or sometimes 2-3 together, erect or spreading, 3"-6" long, or often wanting. Prickles of the branches few and weak or none; petioles 6"-l8" long, slender, generally pubescent; leaflets nearly orbicular, i'- 2' broad, pubescent, at least when young, truncate or cordate at the base, deeply 3-5-lobed, the lobes crenate-dentate or incised; peduncles and pedicels slender; flowers 1-3, green, 3"-4" long; calyx- lobes oblon
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbotany, bookyear1913