. 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. Botany. 2. GROSSULARIA [Toum.] :\Iill. 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.] Es of the north temperate zone. Besides the fo
. 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. Botany. 2. GROSSULARIA [Toum.] :\Iill. 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.] Es of the north temperate zone. Besides the following, some 30 others 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) cariipanulate. 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. G. Cyitosbati, G. setosa. G. oxyacanthoides. I. Grossularia Cynosbati (L.) Mill. Wild (iooseberry. Dogberry. Fig. Ribes Cynosbati L. Sp. PL 202. 1753- Grossularia Cyitosbati Mill. Card. Diet. Ed. 8. Xo. 5- 1768. Ribes Cynosbati glabralum Fernald, Rhodora 7: 156. 190s. 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"-i8" long, slender, generally pubescent; leaflets nearly orbicular, l'- 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 oblong, shorter than the ovoid tube; sta- mens not exserted; berry 4"-6" in diameter, with few or many subulate prickles. In rocky
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbotany, bookyear1913