. 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 102nd meridian. ysuckle. 14. Loniccra involucrata (Richards.) Banks. Involucred 3992. Xylosteum invohicratum Richards. App. Frank. Journ. Ed. 2, 6. involucrata Banks; Richards, loc. cit. involucrata Rydb. Bull. Torr. Club 33: 152. 1906. A glabrate or pubescent shrub, 3°-io° short-petioled, ovate, oval, or long, acute or
. 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 102nd meridian. ysuckle. 14. Loniccra involucrata (Richards.) Banks. Involucred 3992. Xylosteum invohicratum Richards. App. Frank. Journ. Ed. 2, 6. involucrata Banks; Richards, loc. cit. involucrata Rydb. Bull. Torr. Club 33: 152. 1906. A glabrate or pubescent shrub, 3°-io° short-petioled, ovate, oval, or long, acute or acuminate at the apex,narrowed or rounded at the base, more or lesspubescent, at least when young; peduncles axil-lary, i-2 long, 2-3-flowered; bracts foliaceous,ovate or oval, often cordate; bractlets alsolarge, at length surrounding the fruit; flowersyellow; corolla pubescent, funnelform, thelimb nearly equally 5-lobed; lobes short, littlespreading; stamens and style slightly exserted ;berries separate, globose, or oval, nearly black,about 4 in diameter. In woodlands. New Brunswick and Quebec to western Ontario and Michigan, west to BritishColumbia and Alaska, south to Arizona, Utah and California. Genus 7. HONEYSUCKLE FAMILY. 283 7. DIERVILLA [Tourn.] Mill. Gard. Diet. Abr. Ed. 8. , with opposite leaves, and yellow axillary and terminal cymose or solitary slender, elongated, narrowed below, the limb with 5 linear persistent lobes. Corollanarrowly funnelform, the tube slightly gibbous at the base, the limb nearly regular, 5, inserted on the corolla; anthers linear. Ovary 2-celled; ovules numerous in eachcavity; style fiUform; stigma capitate. Fruit a linear-oblong capsule, narrowed or beaked atthe summit, septicidally 2-valved, many-seeded. Seed coat minutely reticulated; endospermfleshy; embryo minute. [Named for Dr. Dierville, who brought the plant to Tournefort.] Three species, the following typical one, the othe
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbotany, bookyear1913