. 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. Genus 28. ROSE FAMILY. 277. 4. Rubus strigosus Michx. Wild Red Raspberry. Fig. 2291. Rubus strigosus Michx. Fl. Bor. Am. i: 297. 1803. Rubus idaeus var. strigosus Maxim. Bull, Acad. St. Petersb. 17 : 161. 1872. Stems shrubby, biennial, branched, 3°-6° high, usually densely clothed with weak glandular bris- tles, or the older stems with small hooked prickles. St


. 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. Genus 28. ROSE FAMILY. 277. 4. Rubus strigosus Michx. Wild Red Raspberry. Fig. 2291. Rubus strigosus Michx. Fl. Bor. Am. i: 297. 1803. Rubus idaeus var. strigosus Maxim. Bull, Acad. St. Petersb. 17 : 161. 1872. Stems shrubby, biennial, branched, 3°-6° high, usually densely clothed with weak glandular bris- tles, or the older stems with small hooked prickles. Stipules narrow, deciduous; leaves petiolcd, pin- nately 3-S-foliolate, rarely simple and 3-lobed; leaf- lets ovate or ovate-oblong, acuminate, sharply and irregularly serrate or slightly lobed, rounded at the base, l'-3' long, whitish-pubescent beneath; inflores- cence terminal and axillary, racemose or paniculate, loose; pedicels slender, curving in fruit; flowers 4"-6" broad; petals white, ascending, about equal- ling the spreading acuminate, mostly hispid, velvety sepals; fruit elongated-hemispheric, light red, rarely white. In dry or rocky situations, Newfoundland and Lab- rador to British Columbia, south in the Alleghanies to North Carolina, and in the Rocky Mountains to New Mexico. Ascends to 5500 ft. in North Carolina. The original of the Cuthbert and Hansall raspberries. Mul- berry. May-Iuly. Fruit ripe July-Sept. Northern races closely resemble the Old World Rubus idaeus L, 5. Rubus neglectus Peck. Purple Wild Rasp- berry. Fig. 2292. Rubus neglectus Peck, Rep. Reg. Univ. N. Y. 22 : 53. 1869. Rubus strigosus X occidentalis Aust. Bull. Torr. Club i : 31. 1870. Intermediate between the preceding species and the next, probably originating as a hybrid between them. Stems usually elongated, recurved and root- ing at the tip, glaucous, sparingly bristly and prickly; leaflets ovate, sharply and irregularly incised-serrate, very white-pubescent beneath, i'-t,' long ;


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbotany, bookyear1913