An illustrated flora of the 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 ed2illustratedflo02brit Year: 1913 ROSE FAMILY. i6. Rubus procumbens Muhl. Low Running Blackberry. Dewberry. Fig. 2303. ':R. lillosus Ait. Hort. Kew. 2: 210. 1789. Not Thunb. Rubus procumbens Muhl. Muhl. Cat. 50. 1813. R. canadensis invisus Bailey. Am. Gard. 12: 83. 1891. R. canadensis roribaccus Bailey, Am. Gard. 11 : 642. 1890. Trailing, shrubby, s


An illustrated flora of the 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 ed2illustratedflo02brit Year: 1913 ROSE FAMILY. i6. Rubus procumbens Muhl. Low Running Blackberry. Dewberry. Fig. 2303. ':R. lillosus Ait. Hort. Kew. 2: 210. 1789. Not Thunb. Rubus procumbens Muhl. Muhl. Cat. 50. 1813. R. canadensis invisus Bailey. Am. Gard. 12: 83. 1891. R. canadensis roribaccus Bailey, Am. Gard. 11 : 642. 1890. Trailing, shrubby, stem often several feet long, armed with scattered prickles or nearly naked. Branches erect or ascending, 4'-i2' long, more or less' pubescent, sometimes prickly, sometimes slightly glandular; leaves petioled, 3-7-foliolate; leaflets ovate, oval or ovate-lanceolate, thin, deciduous, acute or sometimes obtusish at the apex, rounded or nar- rowed at the base, sharply dentate-serrate, usually sparingly pubescent; flowers terminal, few and race- mose, or sometimes solitarj-, white, about i' broad; peduncles leafy; sepals shorter than or exceeding the petals; fruit black, delicious, often i' long. In dry soil, Newfoundlandf?), Ontario to Lake Su- perior, south to Virginia, Louisiana and Oklahoma. Creeping blackberry. April-May. Fruit ripe June-July. Referred in our first edition, following previous authors, to Rubus canadensis L., long misunderstood Rubus Ensleni Tratt., of the Southern States, differ- ing by crenate leaflets, is doubtfully recorded as far north as Kansas. 17. Rubus trivialis IMichx. Low Bush Blackberry. Fig. 2304. Rubus trivalis Michx. Fl. Bor. Am. i: 296. 1803. Stem trailing or procumbent, several feet long, beset with stout hooked prickles, and sometimes bristly. Branches erect, 3'-9'high, prickly and usu- ally pubescent or setose; leaves petioled, 3-foliolate (rarely 5-foliolate) ; leaflets oval, or sometimes ovate-lanceolate, coriaceous, evergreen, glabrous or v


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