*.W ■■•■,. -ir^,. :.. I THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY S8I.9 73 G-19g V.i coP. 2 $\Qioa mow- Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign http://www.archive.org/details/generafloraeamer01gray the mum OF THE GENERA FLORAE AMERICA BOREALI-ORIKNTALIS ILLUSTRATA. THE GENERA OF THE PLANTS OF THE UNITED STATES ILLUSTRATED BY FIGURES AND ANALYSES FROM NATURE, By ISAAC SPRAGUE, MEMBER OF THE BOSTON NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. SUPERINTENDED, AND WITH DESCRIPTIONS, &c By ASA GRAY, M. D., FISHER PROFESSOR OF NATURAL HISTORY IN HARVARD UNIVERSITY,. CORRESPONDING MEMBER OF THE ROYAL BAVARIAN ACADEMY, MEMBER OF THE IMPERIAL ACADEMY NATURAE CURIOSORVM ; OF THE BOTANICAL SOCIETY OF RATISBON, ScC, &.C. VOL. I. PLATES 1-100. BOSTON : JAMES MUNROE AND COMPANY. NEW YORK AND LONDON: J 0 H N WILEY. 1848. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 184C, by Asa G ra v, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts. CAMBRIDGE: I- T C A I. P AND C O M P A N T , PRINTERS TO THE DNIVERSITi' 56:. G.T v. I // hi u TO FRANCIS BOOTT, M. D., Y. L. S., THIS VOLUME IS INSCRIBED, IN TOKEN OF THE SINCERE REGARD AND ESTEEM "K HIS HUEJII, ASA GRAY ' E R R A T A . Page 11, line 27, dele " Hamad ry as," •' " ;i5, afier " Ficaria" add " Ilarnai/njas.' - 20, " 14, dele " (reversed)." P R K I"' A c i : . The design of this work is to illustrate the Botany of the United States by figures, with full analyses, of one or more species of each genus, accompanied by descriptive generic characters and critical observations. The figures in all cases are drawn directly from nature, by Mr. Sprague, and from the living plant whenever that is practicable. In almost every instance, the whole plant, or a branch or smaller portion, in flower and often also in fruit, is delineated of the natural size ; and the microscopical analyses, as numerous as the compass of an octavo page will allow, are so chosen as to display the principal floral characters of the genus, from the aestivation of the flower-bud to the fruit, the seed, and the embryo. When need- ful, on account of size or of subgeneric diversity, two plates are de- voted to the illustration of a single genus. On the other hand, char- acters which are uniform or nearly so throughout a whole order are not repeated upon every plate. The illustrations are not drawn from various orders and classes at random or convenience ; but the natural families are taken up in regular sequence, according to the arrangement now most prevalent among botanists (following very nearly, though not implicitly, thp order adopted in the Flora of North America by Dr. Torrey and myself), and all our genera of each family are published together, in their proper places ; thus rendering the volumes systematically complete, as they appear. This plan, which has never been carried out, so far as I am aware, in any extensive publication of the kind, while it should increase the immediate usefulness and value of the work, at the same time renders still more onerous what is at best a 6 PREFACE. formidable undertaking. The plan and nature of this publication are obviously such as to preclude all expectation of emolument. It is our determination, however, to carry on the work to its com- pletion (in about ten volumes like the present), if the patronage re- ceived shall warrant the hope of a moderate remuneration to the artist. The ample and rapidly accumulating materials at my dis- posal, both of specimens in the Herbarium, and of living North American plants in the Botanic Garden under my charge, and the prompt assistance offered by a large number of zealous correspond- ents, while they afford unusual advantages for the purpose, render me increasingly desirous to turn them to useful account by prosecut- ing an undertaking which may serve to facilitate the more thorough study of Botany in this country, and perhaps contribute in some de- gree to the general advancement of the science. The higher character of the later as compared with the earlier executed analyses, as well as the further improvement which will be manifest to the experienced botanist in the second volume, — now in an advanced state of preparation, — is attributable to the increasing botanical knowledge of the self-taught artist who is associated with me in the work. And, although I am alone responsible for the text, I must in justice add, that whatever of original value these illustra- tions may be found to possess is largely owing to the scientific in- sight and the careful investigations of Mr. Sprague, as well as to his skill and accuracy in delineation. • The plates are engraved upon stone, in a style (capable of further improvement) well adapted to this class of subjects, by*Mr. Joseph Prestelc, a worthy artist, formerly of Munich, but now and for sev- eral years past resident at Ebenczer, near Buffalo, New York. As to geographical extent, this work is intended to comprise all the genera which have indigenous representatives within the States of the Federal Union as now constituted. It therefore includes Texas, but not the country west of the organized States of Arkansas and Missouri. ASA GRAY. i Iambridge, April 20, 181s. SYSTEMATIC INDEX Ord. RANUNCuiiACE-E, Page 9. Atragene, Page 13, Plate 1. Trollius, 33, Plate 11. Clematis, 15, ' 2. Isopyrum, 35, 12. Pulsatilla, 17, 3. Coptis, 37, 13. Anemone, 19, 4. Aquilegia, 39, 14. Hepatica, 21, 5. Delphinium, 41, 15. Thalictrum, 23, 6. Aeonitum, 43, 16. Trautvetteria, 25, 7. Zanthorhiza, 45, 17. Myosurus, 27, 8. Hydrastis, 47, 18. Ranunculus, 29, 9. ActSn, 49, 19. Caltha, 31, 10. Cimicifuga, 51, 20. Ord. Magnoliace-E, 53. Illicium, 55, 21. Magnolia, 59, 23,24. Schizandra, 57, 22. Liriodendron , 63, 25. Ord. AnonacejE, 65. Asimina, 67, 26, 07. Ord. MENISrERMACE.E 69. Cocculus, 71. 28. Oalycoearpum. 75. 30. Menispermum, 7;!, 29. Ord. Berberidacex, 77. Berberis, 79, 31. Jeffersonia, 85, 34. Leontiee,Caulophyllum,81, 32. Podophyllum. 87, 35, 36. Diphylleia, 83, 33. Croomia. 89, 37. Ord. CABOMBACE.E, 91. Cabomba, 93, 38. Brasema. 95. 39. Ord. Nelumbiackj;, 97. Nelumbium, 97, 40,41. Ord. Nymph.eacex, 99. Nymphsea, 101, 42,43. Nuphar. 103. II Ord. Sarraceniacej:, 105. Sarracenia, 107, 45, 46. b SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Ord. Papaverace*, Page 109. Argemone, Page 111, Plate 47. Sanguinaria, 115, Plate 49. Stylophorum, 113, 48. Ord. Fumariacej: 117. Dicentra, 119, 50. Corydalis, 123, 52. Adlumia, 121, 51. Old. Crucifer*, 125. Nasturtium, 131, 53. Sisymbrium, 151, 64. Iodanthus, 133, 54. Stanleya, 153, 65. Cardamine, 135, 55. Warea, 155, 66. Dentaria, 137, 56. Selenia, 157, 67. Leavenworthia, 139, 57. Draba, 159, 68, 69. Arabis, 141, 58. Vesicaria, 161, 70. Turritis, 143, 59. Subularia, 163, 71. Streptanthus, 145, 60, 61. Senebiera, 165, 72. Barbarea, 147, 62. Lepidium, 167, 73. Erysimum, 119, 63. Cakile, 169, 74. Ord. Capparidace^:, 171. Cleomella, 173, 75. Gynandropsis, 179, 78. Cleome, 175, 76. Polanisia, 181, 79. Cristatella, 177, 77. Ord. Violace.e. 183. Viola, 185, 80. Ionidium, 189, 89. Solea, 187, 81. Ord. DROSERACE.E, 191. Drosera, 193, 83. Parnassia, 199, 86. Dioruea, 195, 84, 85. Ord. Cistace^, 201. Helianthemum, 203, 87. Hudsonia, 207, 90. Lechea, 205, 88, 89. Ord. Hypericace.e, 209. Ascyrum, 211, 91. Elodea, 215, 91. Hypericum, 213, 92, 93. Ord. ELATINACE.E, 217. Elatine, 219, 95, 96. Ord. Portulacacej:, 221. Claytonia, 223, 97. Portulacn. 227, 99. Talinum, 225, 98. Sesuvium, 229, 100. Ord. RANUNCULACE^E. Herbse vel suflrutices (succo aqueo acridi) exstipulatae, plerumque dissectifolias, dicotyledoneas, polypetalas seu mo- nochlamydese, hypogynas, polyandras ; carpellis discretis (in- definitis vel paucis, raro solitariis) ; seminibus exarillatis ; embryone in basi albuminis corneo-carnosi minimo. Randncdlace^, Juss. DC. Syst. 1. p. 127. Endl. Gen. p. 843. The Crowfoot Family presents so many gradations and diversities of form and character, that it cannot readily be defined, although there is no question as to its boundaries, nor any other hypogynous and polyandrous family with which any of the genera are likely to be confounded. The prin- cipal diversities it presents are brought sufficiently into view in the subjoined conspectus of our genera, arranged under their proper tribes. It should be mentioned, as exceptional to the ordinal character, that Zanthorhiza has few and definite stamens, which is also the case, although less constantly, in sev- eral other genera : and in Nigella the ovaries are more or less united. An acrid principle, which is mostly dissipated in drying or by heat, per- vades the whole order; so that the fresh herbage, roots, &c, are poison- ous. Many have showy flowers, and are cultivated for ornament. While engaged in preparing the drawings for these illustrations, during the spring and summer of 1846, Mr. Sprague directed my attention to the fact, that in all our Ranunculaceas with a solitary suspended ovule, the raphe is dorsal, or external, that is, on the side next the dorsal suture of the car- pel, and not on the side of the ovulum which is next the placenta, where it properly belongs, according to the general rule long since laid down by Mr. Brown.* I find that this anomaly has been noticed by Schleiden.f and re- cently by Barneoud, % who, however, has not very clearly indicated the pe- culiarity. It would appear that it arises from the very early reversion of an ovule like that of Ranunculus, developed from the upper part of the ventral suture, at a point which in subsequent growth becomes the summit of the cell; and thus, like the case of later reversion in Euonymus, long since * In King's Narrative, App. 2. p. 549. t In Wiegmann's Archiv fur Naturgesch. 1839, p. 285. t. 8. t In Ann. Sci. Hat. for November, 1846 (published only in the spring of 1847). 2 10 KANUNCULACE^E. pointed out by Mr. Brown (and which may also be observed in several other instances), serves to confirm the general rule. The analogous eversion of the raphe, in many Rhamneae, is shown by Mr. Bennett to arise from the lateral torsion of the funiculus : but " the object of this displace- ment," lie concludes, " it is difficult to conjecture."' * Perhaps some light may be thrown upon it by the present eases, in which the design of this arrangement may, I think, be distinctly perceived ; namely, to facilitate the fertilization of the ovule, by placing its foramen in juxtaposition with the placenta, or that portion of the carpel (the confluent edges of the infolded metamorphosed leaf) which is in the ovary a direct continuation of the stig- matic surface or lines of the style, f and through which impregnation is ef- fected. A glance at the analyses on Plates 2 to 5, especially those of He- patica (Plate 5, fig. 4) and Myosurus (Plate 8, fig. 6, &c.), will render this evident, and show that, if the ovule were brought into the normal position, its orifice would be thrown to the side of the cell farthest from that through which the fecundating influence is communicated. In the case of Rhamnus, where a solitary anatropous ovule arises from the very base of each cell, a broad ventral funiculus, interposed between the foramen and the placental surface, may readily be conceived to offer an ob- struction to fertilization, while the subsequent lateral torsion of this funicu- lus would bring these parts into the most favorable position. Where there is a pair of ovules, as in Celastrus, no displacement is needful for the attain- ment of this end ; since the raphe is originally lateral in such cases, that is, the two raphes are applied face to face, or very nearly. This equally occurs in horizontal collateral ovules, as in Magnolia, Plate 22, and no less so where they consist of many pairs, as in Helleborineae generally, or even where the numerous ovules are not collateral. Indeed, this may be assum- ed as the typical condition ; the ovules, which are a growth from the pla- cental margins of the infolded leaf, being themselves likewise folded inwards, thus bringing their raphes next the suture. In no instance do we find the pericarp of the monospermous species co- herent with the integument of the seed, as described by De Candolle and by Endlicher. Conspectus of the Tribes and Genera. Tribe I. CLEMATIDEiE. — Sepals valvate-induplicate in iestivation, colored, deciduous. Petals none or stamen-like. Ovaries numerous, form- ing a head of achenia in fruit. Ovule solitary, suspended ; the raphe dorsal. — Chiefly frutescent vines, climbing by their petioles. Leaves opposite. Atragene. (Plate 1.) Petals, or staminodia, shorter than the calyx. Achenia caudate with the plumose-hairy persistent style. Clematis. (Plate 2.) Petals none. Persistent style plumose or naked. " In Horsefield's Plonta Jaron. Rar. p. 131. t Brown, in PI. Juran. Rar. pp. 108- 110, note. RANUNCULACE.E. 11 Tribe II. ANEMONEiE. — Sepals imbricated in aestivation, colored, deciduous. Petals none, or rarely some small and flat staminodia. Ovaries several or numerous, forming- achenia in fruit. Ovule solitary, suspended ; the raphe dorsal (except in Trautvetteria). — Erect perennial herbs. Floral leaves often opposite or whorled, forming an involucre. Pulsatilla. (Plate 3.) Petals small and glandular, like transformed stamens. Achenia caudate with long plumose-hairy styles. Other- wise as in Anemone. Anemone. (Plate -1.) Petals none. Achenia beaked with the naked or hairy style. Cauline leaves forming an (usually compound or dis- sected) involucre, and sometimes involucels, remote from the flower. Hepatica. (Plate 5.) Petals none. Achenia pointed with a short naked style. Involucre of 3 sepaloid leaves placed close under the flower, at the summit of the otherwise naked and simple scape, imitating a calyx. Otherwise as in Anemone. Thalictrum. (Plate 6.) Petals none. Achenia ribbed, 3-winged, or inflated, tipped with a sessile stigma or short naked style. Involucre none, or like the other leaves. (Ovule and seed suspended.) Trautvetteria. (Plate 7.) Petals none. Sepals very caducous. Achenia inflated, 4-angled, tipped with a recurved-uncinate stigma. Involucre none. Ovule and seed erect ; the raphe ventral. Tribe III. RANUNCULEjE. — Sepals imbricated in aestivation, often herbaceous, deciduous. Petals conspicuous, imbricated in aestivation. Ova- ries numerous, forming achenia in fruit. Ovule solitary. — Herbs. Cauline leaves alternate. Subtribe I. Adonide.e. — Ovule and seed suspended ; the raphe dorsal. — § 1. Petals inappendiculate. Adonis, Hamailryas, Knowltonia? §2. Pe- tals with a tubular or glandular base or claw. Aphanostimma, Calliantke- mum, Cyrtorhyncha, and Myosurus. (Plate 8.) Sepals spurred at the base. Petals linear-spatu- late. Achenia spiked on a long receptacle. — Minute annuals. Leaves all radical, linear. Subtribe U. Ficariex. — Ovule and seed ascending or erect ; the raphe ventral. Petals squamiferous or foveolate at the base. — Ceratocepha- lus, Ficaria, and Ranunculus. (Plate 9.) Sepals 5, deciduous. Achenia compressed, pointed, in a globular or cylindrical head. Tribe IV. HELLEBORLNE^E. — Sepals imbricated in aestivation, petaloid, mostly deciduous. Petals tubular, bilabiate, spurred, stamen-like, or none. Ovaries few or several, follicular in fruit. Ovules few or many ; the raphes collateral. — Leaves all alternate. * Flower regular. Follicles several-seeded. Herbs. Caltha. (Plate 10.) Petals none. Follicles several, compressed, ses- sile, many-seeded. — Leaves undivided. 2* 12 RANUNCULACE^E. Tkollius. (Plate 11.) Petals indefinite, small and stamen-like, hollow- ed near the base. Follicles numerous, cylindraceous, pointed with the subulate style, sessile, many-seeded. Leaves palmately-parted. Isopyrum. (Plate 12.) Petals 5, minute and tubular, or, in subgen. Enemion, none. Follicles 2-20, sessile, few - several-seeded. — Leaves 2 - 3-ternately divided. Coptis. (Plate 13.) Petals 5 or 6, small, unguioulate, hollowed at the apex or hooded in the middle. Follicles 3 - 10, conspicuously stipi- tate, several-seeded. — Leaves 1 - 3-ternately divided, all radical. Aquilegia. (Plate 14.) Petals 5, larger than the sepals, produced be- low into a large hollow spur. Follicles 5, sessile, crowned with fili- form styles, many-seeded. — Leaves 2 - 3-ternately divided. # # Flower irregular and unsymmetrical. Follicles several-seeded. Herbs. Delphinium. (Plate 15.) Sepals 5 ; the outer one larger and spurred. Petals small, of two kinds ; two of them produced into a spur which is received into the spur of the calyx ; the two others unguiculate. Aconitum. (Plate 16.) Sepals 5 ; the outer and larger one galeate, in- closing two small incurved-saccate petals raised on long claws : the other petals minute and stamen-like, or none. * * * Flower regular and symmetrical. Follicles several, by abortion 1- seeded. Shrubby. Zanthorhiza. (Plate 17.) Sepals 5, spreading. Petals 5, short, un- guiculate, 2-lobed, hollowed at the apex. Stamens 5 or 10. Style becoming lateral in fruit. Seed pendulous. — Suffruticose ; the pin- natelv-divided leaves and racemes from scaly buds. Tribe V. CIMICIFUGEiE. — Sepals imbricated in aestivation, peta- loid, caducous. Petals small and plane, or none. Ovaries 1 - 15, baccate or follicular in fruit. Ovules 2 - many ; the raphes collateral. — Herbs. Leaves all alternate. Hydrastis. (Plate 18.) Sepals 3, very caducous. Petals none. Ova- ries numerous, imbricated in a head, 2-ovuled, baccate in fruit. Seeds 1 or 2, ascending. — Flower solitary. Leaves palmately lobed. Act^a. (Plate 19.) Sepals 3-5. Petals, or staminodia, 4- 8, oblong or ovate, entire. Ovary solitary. Berry many-seeded. Seeds flat, horizontal. — Raceme short. Leaves 2 - 3-ternately compound. Cimicifuga. (Plate 20.) Sepals 4-5. Petals, or staminodia, 3-5, mostly 2-cleft or forked at the apex. Ovaries 1-8. Follicles sev- eral - many-seeded. — Raceme virgate. Tribe VI. PiEONIEiE, with a coriaceo-foliaceous and persistent im- bricated calyx, ample plane petals, and a fleshy hypogynous disk around the base of the few ovaries, which form leathery follicles in fruit, comprises the genus Paeonia alone ; of which there are no species indigenous within the limits of the United States. ranunculace.e. 13 Plate 1. ATRAGENE, L. Petala (seu staminodia) plurima, angusta, calyce 4-sepalo breviora. Styli persistentes barbati. Gemmae squamosa?. — Castera omnia Clematidis. Atragene, Linn. Gen. 695. Juss. Gen. p. 232. Endl. Gen. 47G9. Clematis, Sect. Atragene, DC. Calyx of 4 petaloid membranaceous sepals, spreading, valvate with the edges more or less induplicate in aestiva- tion, deciduous. Petals, or rather sterile stamens, numer- ous, hypogynous, much shorter than the calyx, spatulate or unguiculate, mostly bearing traces of an anther, passing by gradual transition into the proper stamens. Stamens indefi- nite, hypogynous, in several series : filaments flattened : an- thers fixed by the base, innate, or nearly so, two-celled, opening longitudinally. Pistils numerous (about 20), capi- tate-imbricated on the globular receptacle, distinct : ovary one-celled, one-ovuled, prolonged into a large style, which is densely hairy below : stigma unilateral, occupying the inner (ventral) side of the naked summit of the style. Ovule suspended from the apex of the cell, anatropous, with the raphe dorsal ! Fruit a head of sessile achenia, bearing the persistent and elongated plumose-bearded styles : receptacle scro- biculate. Seed suspended, conformed to the cell. Albu- men between corneous and fleshy. Embryo minute, next the hilum, oblong : radicle thick, superior ; the cotyledons about their length, approximate. Suffruticose plants, climbing by their leaf-stalks ; with opposite trifoliolate or biternately compound leaves, develop- ed from scaly buds. Leaflets toothed or entire. Flowers large (blue-purple or yellowish-white), solitary on single 14 RANUNCULACE.E. naked peduncles, appearing with the leaves in spring from the same axillary hud, terminating the abbreviated branch, the crowded leaves of which often appear, at first sight, as if verticillate around the stem of the preceding year (whence the improper name of Clematis verticillaris, DC). Invo- lucre none. Etymolocy. Adpayew], a name of Theophrastus, probably for Clematis Vitalba, L. (DC.) Properties. The watery juice is acrid, as in most of the family ; the acridity dissipated in drying. Geographical Distribution. Natives of the northern and cold or moun- tainous regions of the northern hemisphere, in North America extending southward to lat. 36°, both along the Alleghany and the Rocky Mountains. PLATE 1. Atragene Americana, Sims : — a flowering branch, of the natural size. 1. Sepal detached. 2. A petal somewhat enlarged, seen from within. 3. Another petal, seen from without. 4. 5, 6. Stamens somewhat magnified; fig. 5, inside view. 7. Pistils ; the rest of the flower removed from the receptacle. 8. Separate pistil, enlarged. 9. Vertical section of an ovary, more magnified, show-ing the suspended ovule with its raphe on the dorsal side. 10. Pistil in fruit, enlarged to four times the natural size ; the achenium divided to display the seed. RAM'NCl I.ACE.E. 15 Plate 2. CLEMATIS, L. Petala nulla. Sepala 4, petaloidea, sestivatione valvata, marginibus saepe induplicatis. Achenia stylo persistente mi- do seu barbato caudata. — Herbae vel suffrutices oppositifo- lias, saepius petiolis petiolulisve scandentes. Clematis, Linn. Juss. Gen. p. 232. Endl. Gen. 4763. Giertn. Fr. t. 74. Virgin's Bower. Calyx of 4 (or rarely 6 to 8) petaloid sepals, valvate, and usually with the margins induplicate in aestivation, decidu- ous. Petals none. Stamens indefinite, hypogynous : fil- aments filiform : anthers linear or oblong, fixed by their base, innate or slightly extrorse, the cells opening longitudi- nally by a lateral line. Pistils indefinite (15 to 30 or more), crowded on the globular or flattish receptacle : ovary one- celled and one-ovuled, tapering into a hairy or nearly naked style ; the stigma unilateral (on the inner side) at its apex. Ovule suspended from the summit of the cell, anatropous ; the raphe dorsal. Fruit a head of sessile achenia, which are coriaceous, compressed ; the persistent style naked, pubescent, or more commonly forming a plumose-hairy tail. Seed conformed to the cell, usually compressed : testa coriaceous, thickish ; the inner integument membranaceous. Albumen corneous- fleshy. Embryo minute, next the hilum : cotyledons short : radicle thick, superior (pointing to the base of the style). Suffruticose plants, climbing by the twisting of their leaf-stalks, or upright herbs, with fibrous perennial roots ; the opposite leaves either trifoliolate, pinnate, or sometimes simple. Buds not scaly. Flowers axillary or terminal, pan- icled-cymose or solitary (blue, purple, white, or cream-color), perfect, or sometimes polygamo-dicecious; the peduncles na- 16 RANUNCULACE.E. ked, or rarely (in the foreign section Cheiropsis) with two bractlets, forming an involucre under the flower. Etymology. KXq/wirir, a little Vine-branch or twig, applied by Dios- corides to a plant of this, or some other genus, with long- and lithe stems. Properties. Acrid, and even blistering when applied in a fresh state to the skin. Some species are used as rubefacients or vesicants. Geographical Distribution. Widely diffused over the world ; princi- pally in the wanner temperate zone of the northern hemisphere. Division. The native species of the United States are conveniently divid- ed into two sections : the first comprising those which, like our Common Virgin's Bower (C. Yirginiana, L.), bear rather small, white or cream-col- ored, polygamo-dicecious flowers, in clusters or panicled cymes : the second including those with larger and solitary flowers, and more or less thick and leathery sepals ; — of which our plate, drawn from a plant cultivated in the Botanic Garden at Cambridge, affords a good illustration. PLATE 2. Clematis crispa, Linn. ; * — summit of a branch in flower and fruit, of the natural size. 1. Transverse section of the sepals, to show their aestivation and thickness. 2. Vertical section of a flower. 3. 4. Stamens magnified, front and back view. 5. A pistil, magnified. (It should have been more hairy.) G. Vertical section of the ovary, more magnified, with the ovule in place. 7. Ovule detached, and more highly magnified. 8. A ripe achenium, vertically divided, and displaying the seed in place ; with the persistent caudate style : enlarged. 9. Vertical section of a seed, magnified, showing the two integuments, the albumen, and the embryo. 10. Embryo detached, and highly magnified (turned, as in all the ensuing cases of the kind, so as to bring the radicle downwards). * The C. crispa of De Candolle, Syst. 1. p. 162 (spec. hort. Audib.), is a form, or near ally, of C. Viticella or C. campaniflora, and undoubtedly not an Ameri- can plant. This accounts for his placing the species in the section Viticella, and for liis remark under C. campaniflora. The fruit, in the rude figure of Dilleni- us, upon which Linnteus founded the species, is delineated as if the persistent styles were perfectly naked and glabrous, while the description merely states that they are not plumose. They are usually about as hairy as here represent- ed.— Dr. Lindley (in Bot. Reg. for 1846,^01. 32. t. 60) has lately attempted to elucidate this species and its allies, but not, in all respects, with the best suc- cess. There is here merely room to state that C. cylindrica, Bot. Mag. t. 1160. is surely the same as the C Viorna, Andr. Bot. Rep. (which Lindley says is C Hendersonii) ; and that the C. crispa, Bot. Mug. t. 1892, is not C. reticulata, but clearly the same as his own C. crispa (which will be found not to have a "short- tailed mucronate fruit") and the one here figured; of which the C. cordata Bot. Mag. t. 1816, is merely a variety. RANUNCULACE.E. 17 Plate 3. PULSATILLA, Tourn. Achenia stylis elongatis barbato-plumosis caudata. Pela- la, seu staminodia glandulasformia, staminibus breviora, sa> pius plurima. Sepala 6. Castera ut Anemones. Pulsatilla (Bauhin), Tourn. Inst. t. 148. Willd. Enum. p. 580. Ledeb. Fl. Alt. 2. p. 367. Anemones Sp. Linn. Lam. 111. t. 496. Greitn. Fr. t. 74. Sclikuhr, Handb. t. 50. DC. Syst. 1. p. 189. Endl. Gen. 4773. Pritzel in Linncea, 15. p. 565. Pasque-Flower. Calyx of 6 petaloid membranaceous sepals, imbricated in aestivation in two series, silky-bairy externally, at length deciduous. Petals, or rather sterile stamens, gland-like, sessile or unguiculate, very small, shorter than the fertile stamens, or none. Stamens indefinite, in several series, hypogynous : filaments filiform, glabrous: anthers short, fixed by the base, neither extrorse nor introrse ; the cells opening lengthwise laterally. Pistils numerous, capitate on the globular or hemispherical receptacle : ovary one- celled, one-ovuled, prolonged from the apex into a hairy style many times exceeding the ovary ; the stigma unilat- eral at its naked summit. Ovule suspended, anatropous ; the raphe dorsal. Fruit a head of many sessile achenia, which are caudate Avith the elongated and persistent plumose-bearded styles : receptacle (gynophore) hemispherical. Seed suspended from the summit of the cell, oblong. Albumen between corneous and fleshy. Embryo minute, next the hilum, cor- date, the short cotyledons spreading : radicle superior. Herbs, with fusiform or thickened and ligneous perennial roots bearing abbreviated caudexes at their summit ; whence is emitted, from a kind of scaly bud, a vernal, simple, one- flowered, involucrate scape, and soon afterwards, or at the 18 RANUNCULACEiE. same time, a tuft of radical ternately-dissected leaves. Peti- oles dilated at the base ; their withered remains persistent. Involucre distant from the flower, soon remote, from the elongation of the fructiferous peduncle ; in Eupulsatilla simply multifid from the confluence of its three verticillate leaves into a cup or ring at the base, the linear segments uniform ; or, in Pkeonanthus (P. alpina) of three distinct, short-petioled leaves, resembling the radical ones. Flowers large (2 to 3 inches broad) : sepals purplish, violet, white or rarely sulphur-color. Stems and young leaves, &c, villous. Etymology obscure. The popular name of Pasque-flower was given in Europe, because the blossom appears at Easter. Properties. Acrid and poisonous, at least when fresh. Some species have been esteemed in obstinate cutaneous diseases, chronic ophthalmia, &c. Geographical Distribution. Northern and colder regions of the Old World, especially on mountains or elevated plains ; two species (one of each subgenus) extending into North America, of which one reaches the western part of the United States proper. — Pritzel, misled by the name which Nut- tall gave to our species (Anemone Ludoviciana), and not aware that the whole, country which borders on the Missouri River was formerly called Up- per Louisiana, has wrongly extended the geographical range down to the present limits of Louisiana (lat. 33° -29°). Along the Rooky Mountains, however, this plant does extend as far southward as lat. 30° ; Mr. Fendler having gathered fine specimens at Santa Fe. PLATE 3. Pulsatilla patens, Mill. ; — from Wisconsin specimens furnished by Mr. Lapham, of the natural size at the time the flower opens : the leaves as yet scarcely appearing. 1 . Diagram of the sestivation of the calyx. 2, 3. Petals, so called, magnified to the same degree as 4. A stamen. 5. A pistil, magnified. fi. Another pistil, with the ovary divided, showing the ovule. 7. Ovule detached, more highly magnified. 8. Receptacle in fruit, with three of the caudate achenia still attached. 9. An achenium, with its persistent style, thrice the natural size. 10. Same divided, showing the seed in place. 11. Vertical section of the seed magnified, showing the embryo, in place 12. Embryo detached, highly magnified. RANUNCULACE.E. 19 Plate 4. ANEMONE, Tourn. Calyx 4 - 20-sepalus, asstivatione imbricatus. Petala seu stamina sterilia nulla. Achenia stylis brevibus (nudis lana- tisve) parum mutatis coronata. Involucrum a flore remotum, foliis radicalibus conforme. Anemone, Tourn. Inst. t. 147. Willd. Enum. |>. 581. Ledeb. I. c. Wind-Flower. Calyx of 5 to 20, rarely 4, petaloid sepals, imbricated in aestivation, spreading, deciduous. Petals none. Stamens indefinite, hypogynous : filaments filiform, glabrous : an- thers fixed by the base, rasher extrorse, or innate, the cells opening longitudinally. Pistils numerous (rarely 15 to 20), capitate-imbricated on the globular, conical-oblong, or cylin- drical receptacle (gynophore) : ovary one-celled, one-ovuled : style short, stigmatose from the apex downward along the inner side. Ovule suspended, anatropous ; the raphe dorsal. Fruit a head of sessile compressed achenia, tipped with the straight or uncinate, short and unchanged or scarcely elongated, naked or woolly styles. Receptacle naked or hairy. Seed suspended from the summit of the cell. Albumen between corneous and fleshy. Embryo minute, next the hilum, cordate : radicle superior. Herbs, with perennial roots or rootstocks, upright stems, which are simple and naked, except the 3-leaved invo- lucre, and one-flowered, or umbellately several-flowered, or sometimes producing lateral involucellate peduncles from the axils of the involucral leaves, which may again fork or branch at the two-leaved involucel. Involucral leaves usually palmately lobed, or tri - quinately compound, remote from the flower (at the base of the peduncles), resembling the proper or radical leaves. Petioles dilated at the base. Flowers 20 RANUNCULACE^E. (sepals) commonly showy and white, or tinged with blue or purple, sometimes red. Etymology. 'Ave/iavrj, the ancient name ; from Svefws, the wind, be- cause the blossom was thought to open only when the wind blows. Properties. The juice is an acrid poison, as in the foregoing genera. Geographical" Distribution. Extratropical in both hemispheres, prin- cipally in the northern ; and more than half the 73 known species are in- digenous between the parallels of 40° and 50°, north latitude. PLATE 4. Anemone Pennsylvanica, Linn., — of natural size early in the season ; without the base of the stem or the radical leaves. 1. A stamen, enlarged. 2. A pistil, enlarged. 3. The same, with the ovary divided, displaying the ovule. 4. Ovule detached (reversed), and more magnified. 5. Head of carpels in fruit, of the natural size. 6. Separate achenium, enlarged. 7. Enlarged achenium divided, so as to show the cell and the seed. 8. Vertical section of a more magnified seed, showing the minute embryo in place. RANUNCULACE.E. 21 Plate 5. HEPATICA, Dill. Involucrum triphyllum, integrifolium, flori proximum, eo- dem minora, calycem referentia. Castera ut Anemones. — Gemmae radicales squamosa?, primo vere scapos unifloros, tandem folia simplicia tri- (rarius 5 — 7-) loba, promentes. Hepatica, Dillen. Nov. Gen. 108. Linn. Hort. Cliff, p. 223. Haller, Helv. 1156. DC. Syst. 1. p. 215. Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 14. Anemone Hepatica, Linn. Sp. Sect. Hepatica, Kocb, Pritzel, 1. c. L.iver-L.eaf. Calyx of 6 to 9, rarely 12, oblong petaloid sepals, imbri- cated in aestivation in two or three rows, spreading, early deciduous. Petals none. Stamens indefinite, hypogy- nous : filaments filiform, glabrous : anthers oval, slightly extrorse, the cells opening lengthwise at or near the mar- gins. Pistils 12 to 20, crowded on the convex summit of the receptacle (gynophore) : ovary one-celled, one-ovuled, apiculate with a very short style, which is stigmatose down the inner side. Ovule suspended from the summit of the cell, anatropous ; the raphe dorsal. Achenia in a small loose head, at length short-stipitate (in H. acutiloba), ovate-oblong, compressed, not margined, hairy, pointed with the short naked style. Receptacle of the fruit nearly hemispherical, pilose-alveolate. Seed suspended, conformed to the cell, which it fills. Albumen, Embryo, &c, as in Anemone. Acaulescent dwarf herbs, with fibrous perennial roofs, producing from radical scaly buds, in earliest spring, simple one-flowered scapes, and soon after several 3 - 5-lobed heart- shaped leaves, which become thick or coriaceous in the course of the summer, and last through the winter, until their successors begin to unfold. Vernation involute-plicate. 22 RANUNCULACE/E. Involucre close to the flower, and imitating a calyx, formed of three ovate and entire sepaloid leaves, rather shorter than the sepals, longer than the head of fruit with its short stalk (the pedicel), persistent. Sepals blue, violet, purple, often pale or nearly white, handsome. Etymology and Properties. From tiwotikos, affecting or belonging to the liver, on account of a fancied resemblance in the shape of the leaves ; whence, according to the old " doctrine of signatures," it was inferred to be a potent remedy for affections of the liver. It is still a celebrated popular remedy for various diseases ; but it is endowed with no active properties beyond the slight acridity of the recent plant, and a mild astringency with a little mucilage. Geographical Distribution. Natives of the colder temperate zone of the northern hemisphere, extending northward to the limit of trees. Grow- ing in rich woods, covered in winter by the fallen leaves, above which the handsome flowers rise and unfold almost as soon as the snow leaves the ground. PLATE 5. Hepatica acutiloea, DC, — of the natural size : the right- hand scape in young fruit. 1. Stamen magnified, seen from without. 2. Inside view of the same. 3. A pistil, magnified. 4. Vertical section of a pistil, magnified, showing the ovule. 5. Ovule detached, equally magnified. 6. Vertical section through an achenium and the included seed, magni- * fied, bringing to view the minute embryo next the hilum. RANUNCULACE/E. 23 Plate 6. THALICTRUM, Tourn. Calyx 4 — 7-sepalus, a^stivatione imbricatus. Petala nulla. Achenia 3 — 15, ecaudata, plurisulcata seu vesiculoso-inflata : stigma pleriuntme sessili. (Semen suspensum.) — Flores ssepe polygamo-dioici. Involucrum nullum, aut (in T. ane- monoide solum) foliiforme, a floribus remotum. Thalictrdm, Linn. Gen. 697. DC. Syst. 1. p. 168. Endl. Gen. 4772. Ruc-Ancnioue. Mcadow-Ruc. Calyx of 4 or 5, rarely (in T. anemonoides) 7 to 10, peta- loid sepals, imbricated in a?stivation, spreading or reflexed, caducous or deciduous. Petals none. Stamens indefi- nite, hypogynous : filaments capillary, filiform, clavate, or petaloid-dilated : anthers fixed by the base, strictly innate, various in form ; the cells opening longitudinally. Pistils 3 to 15, crowded on the small receptacle : ovary one-celled, one-ovuled : stigma usually sessile. Ovule suspended, ana- tropous ; the raphe dorsal. Achenia sessile or stipitate, longitudinally sulcate or many-angled, or inflated (in § Tripterium alate-triquetrous), pointed by the persistent stigma or its base. Albumen be- tween fleshy and corneous. Embryo minute, next the hilum : radicle superior. Herbs, with perennial, usually fibrose roots, erect stems, and ternately-compound or supradecompound leaves ; the petioles and their branches often auriculate-dilated at the base : leaflets falling away separately by an articulation. Involucre none (the cauline leaves alternate), except in T. anemonoides. Flowers usually small, in compound pani- cles or corymbs, rarely racemose or umbellate, greenish, yel- lowish, or white, seldom purplish, often dicecio-polygamous. 24 RANUNCULACE.«. Etymology. BaKucrpov, an ancient name, of obscure derivation. Properties. The roots are scarcely acrid, and often yield a bitter and yellow coloring matter. Geographical Distribution. This genus, of about 50 known species, is widely distributed through the northern temperate zone ; a few are also found, in a corresponding climate, on the Himalaya Mountains and the equa- torial Andes. Division. The genus comprises a variety of forms, and greatly needs revision. The North American species belong to three groups, viz. : — § 1. Thalictrum proper. — Achenia sulcate-angled, ovoid or oblong, chiefly sessile, the seed conformed to the cell. Stigma elongated. Se- pals caducous, shorter than the stamens. — Roots fibrose. Stems most- ly branching and fistulous, alternate-leaved. Involucre none. Flowers small, mostly panicled, often dicecio-polygamous or strictly dioecious. §2. Syndesmon, Hoffmansegg. — Achenia and seed as in § 1. Stigma depressed. Sepals 5 - 10, longer than the stamens, merely deciduous. — Root grumous, or fasciculate-tuberous. Stem simple, leafless, except an involucre at the summit, like that of Anemone ; consisting of 2 or 3 trifoliohite leaves with long-petiolulate leaflets, but destitute of com- mon petioles, thus simulating a whorl of 6 or 9 long stalked simple leaves. Flowers few and umbellate, or single, pretty large, showy, perfect. §3. Physocarpum, DC. — Achenia stipitate, inflated, veiny-striate or even, the cell much larger than the seed. Sepals merely deciduous. — Roots fibrose. Stems usually branching, alternate-leaved. Flowers corymbose, scattered, perfect or polygamous. PLATE 6. Fig. 1-8. Thalictrum (Syndesmon) anemonoides, Michx. 1. A stamen, magnified. 2. A separate pistil, magnified. 3. Transverse, and 4, vertical section of the same. 5. Detached ovule, magnified. 6. Head of ripe achenia, enlarged. 7. Separate achenium, enlarged. 8. Vertical section of the same, and of the seed, showing the embryo. 9. Enlarged flower of T. (Physocarpum) clavatum, DC. (Gray, in Sill. Jour. 42. p. 17) ; — from the mountains of North Carolina. 10. A magnified stamen, from the same. 11. A pistil, magnified. 12. Vertical section of the same, showing the ovule. 13. Ovule, more magnified. 14. Vertical section of an achenium, seed, and embryo. 15. Embryo detached and much more magnified. RANUNCULACE-E. 25 Plate 7. TRAUTVETTERIA, Fisch. <$• Mey. Calyx 3 — 5-sepalus, aestivatione imbricatus, sepalis conca- vis caducissimis. Petala nulla. Achenia plurima, utriciilata, membranacea, dolabriformi-quadrangulata. Semen e basi adscendenti-erectum ! Embryo majuscula ! — Folia palma- tifida. Involucrum nullum. Trautvetteria, Fischer & Meyer, Ind. Sem. Petrop. 1835. p. 22. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 37. Endl. Gen. 4798. Hydrastis, Lam. 111. t. 500; non Linn. CiMiciFcca: Sp., Miclix. Fl. 1. p. 316. Calyx of 3 to 5 orbicular and strongly concave sepals, imbricated in aestivation (when four in number, as is most common, two are exterior and two interior in the bud, but sometimes two are overlapped on one edge by the outer one, and the fourth is interior), petaloid (greenish-white), very caducous. Petals none. Stamens indefinite, hypogy- nous, in several series, much longer than the pistils, all per- fect, white : filaments thickened upward or clavate : an- thers short, pointless ; the elliptical cells separate, some- what extrorsely adnate, opening longitudinally. Pistils indefinite (20 or more), capitate on the short receptacle : ovary compressed, gibbous, one-celled, one-ovuled : stigma recurved, unilateral. Ovule erect, ascending from the base of the cell, anatropous ; the strong raphe ventral. Achenia capitate, numerous, sessile, broadly ovate, gib- bous, beaked by the recurved-uncinate persistent stigma or short style, utricular and membranaceous, entirely smooth and even, except the four prominent narrow ribs, which are one dorsal, the other ventral, bordering the acute angles, and the two others lateral, forming obtuse angles, the transverse section exactly rhombic : the ripe fruit inclines to open at one of the sutures. Seed very much smaller than the cell, 3 26 RANUNCULACE^E. erect or ascending from next its base at the inner angle, ob- ovate-oblong, smooth. Embryo oblong-linear, fully one third the length of the firm fleshy albumen : radicle inferior, next the hilum : cotyledons narrowly oblong. Herbs, smooth throughout or nearly so, perennial, with simple, or sparingly corymbose, fistulous stems from matted fibrose rootstocks, few alternate leaves, the upper small and bract-like, and rather handsome corymbose flowers. Radi- cal leaves ample, long-petioled, palmately veined, palmately 5- 11-cleft, with the lobes irregularly incised and toothed; the veins and veinlets conspicuous underneath, freely reticu- lated. Etymology. Dedicated to E. R. Trautvetter, a well-known botanist, now Professor at Kiev, in Southern Russia. Geographical Distribution. The original species is found along- shad- ed streams, throughout the Alleghany Mountains from Virginia southward, and along their western confines : it also occurs sparingly in Illinois, and ap- parently reappears in Northern Oregon. A second, but imperfectly known species has been recently indicated by Siebold and Zuccarini in Japan. Observation. The genus seems to be about equally allied to Thalictrum and to Hydrastis. PLATE 7. Trautvetteria palmata, F. df M. ; — the upper part of a flowering plant, of the natural size. (From living specimens in- troduced into the Cambridge Botanic Garden from the mountains of Carolina.) 1. Diagram of the customary aestivation of the sepals. 2. Enlarged head of pistils, with one stamen remaining. 3. Stamen enlarged, seen from the inside. 4. Same, seen from the exterior. 5. Detached pistil, enlarged. 6. Same, with the ovary vertically divided, showing the ovule in place. 7. Ovule magnified. 8. Heads of fruit, natural size. 9. Utricular achenium, enlarged. 10. Transverse section of the same, and of the seed, 11. Vertical section of the same ; the seed in place. 12. Magnified vertical section of the seed, showing the slender embryo, which is unusually large for this order, in the albumen. RANUNCULACEiE. 27 Plate 8. MYOSURUS, Dill. Sepala basi deorsum calcarata. Petala calyce breviora, angusta, ungue filiformi ad apicem tubuloso-nectarifera. Achenia plurima, trigona, supra gynophorum elongatum spi- cata. Semen suspensum. — Acaulescentes, annua?, pusillas ; foliis linearibus integerrimis, scapo unifloro. Mvosurus, Dillen. Nov. Gen. 106. Linn. Gen. 394. Gasrtn. Fr. t. 74. Schknhr, Handb. t. 88. DC. Syst. 1. p. 229. Endl. Gen. 4780. 9Iouse-tail. Calyx somewhat petaloid, imbricated in aestivation : se- pals 5, rarely 6 or 7, regular, oblong or spatulate, sessile, the base prolonged downward below the insertion into a pen- dent spur, deciduous. Petals as many as the sepals and alternate with them, smaller than they, hypogynous, raised on a slender claw which is somewhat tubular and nectarif- erous at its summit ; the narrowly oblong lamina plane, not longer than the claw. Stamens 5 to 20, hypogynous : fil- aments filiform : anthers oblong, slightly extrorse, the cells opening longitudinally. Pistils very numerous, or 20 to 25, imbricated-spiked on a prolonged receptacle (gynophore) : ovary inserted by the whole length of the ventral suture, compressed, one-celled, one-ovuled : ovule anatropous, sus- pended from the summit of the cell ; the raphe dorsal : style subulate, as long as the ovary, naked, stigmatose from the apex downward on the inner side. Fruit an elongated (cylindrical, linear, or oblong) spike of achenia imbricated on the filiform and angled recepta- cle, thickened and somewhat corky in texture at maturity, broadest on the back, which is rhomboidal with thickened edges and a somewhat carinate medial line ; the sides cunei- formly converging to the ventral edge, winch is minutely 28 RANUNCULACE^E. hairy, and inserted by its whole length, blunt in M. mini- mus (the short style not enlarging in fructification but incorporated with the back of the carpel), or in M. aristatus, Bcnth., forming a projecting beak. Seed oval, conformed to the cell, suspended from its upper outer angle. Albumen fleshy. Embryo minute, next the hilum, cordate, the short cotyledons separated : radicle superior. Acaulescent annuals or biennials, small and inconspicu- ous, with narrowly linear and entire radical leaves, and a naked one-flowered scape. Flower small, greenish-yellow : the receptacle very early exserted and prolonged. • Etymology. Name composed of pis, a mouse, and oipd, tail ; from the appearance of the long spike of carpels in fruit. Geographical Distribution, &c. The species of the valley of the Mississippi and northwestward, from which our figure is derived, appears not to be distinct from the common European and North Asiatic plant : but a second species, remarkable for its few and aristate carpels, has recently been detected in the Rocky Mountains by Mr. Geyer, as well as on the Andes of Chili. PLATE 9. Myosurus minimus, Linn. ; — from Missouri specimens; of the natural size. 1. Flower, enlarged. 2. Detached sepal, enlarged. 3. Detached petal, equally enlarged. 4. A stamen, enlarged ; outside view. 5. Detached pistil, magnified. 6. Vertical section of the same, showing the ovule. 7. Receptacle in fruit, enlarged ; all the upper achenia removed. 8. Achenium detached, seen laterally. 9. Transverse section of the same, more magnified. 10. Vertical section of the same, showing the seed in place. 11. Vertical section of the seed, magnified, showing the embryo. 12. Embryo, highly magnified. ranunculace^e. 29 Plate 9. RANUNCULUS, L. Sepala exappendiculata. Petala plana, dilatata, basi intus squamula vel foveola instructa. Achenia plurima, compres- sa, mucronata seu rostrata, supra gynophorum globosum cy- lindricumve capitata. Semen erectum. Ranunculus, Linn. (excl. sp.) Hall. Helv. 2. p. 68. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 26. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 26. Endl. Gen. 47S3. Crowfoot. Buttercups. Calyx herbaceous or slightly colored, imbricated in aesti- vation, regular; the sepals 5 (rarely 3 or 4), concave, decid- uous. Petals 5 (rarely more or fewer), alternate with the sepals, usually much larger than they, imbricated in aestiva- tion, hypogynous, plane, dilated, the contracted base fur- nished on the inner side with a nectariferous depression or small adherent scale, deciduous. Stamens hypogynous, indefinite, rarely few (5 or more) : filaments filiform : anthers short, extrorsely adnate, the cells opening longi- tudinally. Pistils indefinite, capitate on a globular or cy- lindrical receptacle (gynophore) : ovary compressed, one- celled, one-ovuled : style short, subulate : stigma occupying the inner side at its apex. Ovule erect or ascending from the inner angle next the base of the cell, anatropous ; the raphe ventral. Fruit a head of compressed or turgid achenia, pointed or beaked with the persistent and naked style. Seed erect, conformed to the cell. Embryo minute at the base of the corneous-fleshy albumen, next the hilum : radicle inferior. Herbs of various habit and foliage, the cauline leaves, when present, alternate. Petioles dilated at the base. In- volucre none. Flowers solitary, terminating the stem and branches, usually showy, yellow or sometimes white, very rarely purple. 30 RANUNCULACE.E. Etymology. An ancient Latin name, the diminutive of Rana, a frog, also applied by Pliny to aquatic species of this genus, which inhabit similar places. Properties. The fresh juice is my acrid and poisonous, so much so in many species as to blister the skin or produce ulcers. But the acrid princi- ple is so far dissipated in drying, that the Buttercups, which abound in every old meadow, are apparently innocuous in the hay. Geographical Distribution. A genus of about 200 described species, dispersed over almost every paft of the world ; but chiefly belonging to temperate and frigid regions, and to the northern hemisphere. Division. The white-flowered aquatic species bear a nectariferous pit on the yellowish base of the petal, in place of the adherent scale ; and the achenia are wrinkled transversely ; these form the section Batrachium, DC. The sections Ranunculastrum, Hecatonia, and Echinella, of De I mi- ddle, which all have the squamula on the base of the petals, are distin- guished by characters of less moment, and may rather be taken as subdivis- ions of the higher group, Ranunculus proper. Note. The genus Hamadryas, which on p. 11 was referred to the Sub- tribe Adonidese, on the authority of the character " ovulo unico pendulo " by Endlicher, has an erect ovule, and must stand nest to Ranunculus ; as is well shown by Dr. Hooker (Flora Antarctica, p. 227. t. 85). PLATE 9. Ranunculus fascicularis, Muhl. ; — natural size, with its fasciculate thickened roots. (From a plant indigenous at Cam- bridge : a common vernal species ) 1. Sepal detached and moderately enlarged. 2. Petal, equally enlarged ; inside view. 3. Stamen enlarged ; inside view. 4. Same, seen from the outside. 5. A pistil detached and magnified. 6. Same, with the ovary divided, showing the ovule. 7. Ovule, more magnified. 8. Vertical section through a head of pistils in fruit, enlarged. 9. An aehenium, magnified. 10. Vertical section of an aehenium and the inclosed seed, magnified, show- ing the embryo. RANUNCULACE.E 31 Plate 10. CALTHA, L. Calyx 4-10-sepalus, petaloideus, regularis, deciduus. Pe- tala plane nulla. Folliculi 5-15, sessiles, compressi, pa- tentes, polyspermi. — Folia rotundata vel cordata, indivisa. Caltha, Linn. Gsrtn. Fr. t. 118. DC. Syst. 1. p. 306 (excl. § 1). Populago, Tourn. Inst. p. 273. t. 145. Marsh Marigold. Calyx regular, imbricated in asstivation : sepals petaloid, ovate or oblong, spreading, plane, deciduous. Petals en- tirely wanting. Stamens indefinite, hypogynous : fila- ments filiform : anthers oblong, innate or slightly extrorse, the cells opening longitudinally at the margins. Pistils 5 to 15, sessile on the small or depressed receptacle, one-cell- ed, many-ovuled : style none, or a short point stigmatose on the inner side. Ovules indefinite, occupying the ventral suture in two rows, horizontal, anatropous ; their raphes col- lateral (next the suture, or face to face). Fruit follicular. Follicles as many as the ovaries, or by abortion fewer, verticillate, or when numerous capitate, soon divergently spreading, sessile, short-pointed, coriaceo- membranaceous in texture, compressed, dehiscent by the whole length of the ventral suture, soon opening flat, bear- ing a row of seeds upon each margin. Seeds horizontal, oval, the smooth and rather thick testa extended into a wing-like border at the raphe and chalaza. Alhumen fleshy. Embryo minute, next the hilum : cotyledons very short, separate. Herbs smooth, with simple or sparingly branched fistu- lous stems, or scapes, rising from perennial and often creep- ing rootstocks, and bearing several or solitary, terminal , large and showy vernal flowers. Calyx golden-yellow, or rarely white. Leaves ample, rounded, crenate-toothed or entire. 32 RANUNCULACEiE. veiny, mostly cordate or reniform ; the few cauline or the uppermost nearly sessile, alternate ; the radical ones long- petioled. Petioles dilated and sheathing, and often stipu- liform at the hase. Etymology. From Ka\a6os, a goblet, in allusion to the golden flower- cup, or calyx, of the common species. Properties. Somewhat acrid when fresh. The vernal herbage of the common C. palustris is largely used in this country as a pot-herb, under the erroneous, but widely diffused, name of Cowslips: the acridity is destroyed by boiling. Geographical Distribution. A genus of few species, widely distrib- uted through the colder temperate and frigid zones ot the northern hemi- sphere, inhabiting wet places. — The singular, oligandrous and oligosper- mous, antarctic species are surely of a different genus. PLATE 10. Caltha palustris, Linn.; — upper part of a flowering plant ; of the natural size. 1. Stamen, magnified ; inside view. 2. The same, outside view. 3. A pistil, enlarged. 4. Vertical section through the ovary of the same. 5. Ovule, magnified. 6. Head of follicles, of the natural size. 7. Follicle, opening by the ventral suture. 8. Same, after dehiscence, the seeds discharged. 9. Seed, magnified. 10. Vertical section of the same, showing the embryo in the albumen. 1 1 . Embryo, more magnified. RANUNCULACE^E. 33 Plate 11. TROLLIUS, L. Calyx 5 - polysepalus, petaloideus, regularis, deciduus. Petala 5-20, parva, nectariformia, ligulata, basi intus subtu- bulosa. Folliculi sessiles, plurimi, cylindracei, polyspermi. — Herba3 Ranunculi facie, foliis palmatifidis. Tkollius, Linn. Gen. 780. Gfertn. Fr. t. 118. Lam. 111. t. 499. Salisb. in Linn. Trans. 8. p. 302. DC. Syst. 1. p. 311. Endl. Gen. 47»7. Geissenia, Raf. in New York Med. Rep. (5.) 2. p. 450. Globe-Flower. Calyx petaloid, regular, imbricated in aestivation : sepals 5 to 20, orbicular or obovate, remaining incurved, so as to give a globular form to the flower (whence the popular name for T. Europasus), or spreading, deciduous. Petals 5 to 20, hypogynous, small, little exceeding or shorter than the stamens, which they somewhat resemble, ligulate or linear-spatulate, thickish, gland-like, slightly unguiculate, somewhat excavated or tubular on the inner side next the base, deciduous. Stamens indefinite, hypogynous : fila- ments filiform : anthers short, innate, the cells opening lat- erally, or slightly introrse. Pistils 9 to 30, sessile on the globular summit of the receptacle (gynophore) : ovary one- celled, many-ovuled, tapering into a short style ; the stigma unilateral at its summit. Ovules numerous, anatropous, horizontal in two rows occupying the whole length of the ventral suture ; their raphes collateral (face to face). Fruit follicular. Follicles 9 to 30, capitate, closely sessile, erect or barely spreading, coriaceous, nearly cylindra- ceous, transversely veiny from the dorsal rib, from which is exserted the subulate short style, dehiscent through the ven- tral suture from the apex downward. Seeds horizontal, in two rows, 5 to 10 in each, ovoid or angled : the smooth and 34 RANUNCULACEvE. coriaceous testa conformed to the nucleus ; the raphe not appendaged.. Embryo minute at the base of the fleshy al- bumen, cordate ; the radicle next the hilum. Herbs smooth, with much the aspect of Ranunculus ; the mostly simple and fistulous stems rising from fibrose-- fascicled blackish roots, .and terminated by solitary large flowers. Leaves alternate, palmately 5 - 7-parted, with the cuneiform divisions incisely cleft and toothed ; the upper- most nearly sessile. Petioles dilated at the base, and more or less clasping. Flower yellow. Etymology. Thought to be derived from the German tiollrn, to roll, from the globular shape of the flower in the original European species, the Globe-floioer of the gardens ; — a name by no means appropriate for the other species, in which the floral envelopes are more or less widely expanded. Properties. Slightly acrid. T. Europaeus, especially, is cultivated for its showy vernal flowers. Geographical Distribution. Natives of the colder portion of the northern hemisphere, in moist and shady places ; one species in Europe, five in Northern Asia, and one in North America. PLATE 11. Trollius laxus, Salisb. ; — summit of a flowering plant (Botanic Garden, from W. New York) ; natural size. 1. A petal, magnified ; seen externally. 2. Same, seen from within. 3. Side view of the same (badly engraved). 4. A stamen, magnified ; seen externally. 5. Same, seen from the inner side. 6. Pistils, the rest of the flower removed from the receptacle ; enlarged. 7. A pistil, detached. 8. Transverse section of the ovary of the same. 9. Vertical section of the same. 10. Head of fruit ; of the natural size. 1 1 . Detached follicle, dehiscent ; inside view. 12. A seed, magnified. 13. Vertical section of the same, displaying the embryo. RANUNCULACE^E. 35 f LATE 12. ISOPYRUM, L. Calyx 5 - 6-sepalus, petaloideus, regularis, deciduus. Pe- tala 5, brevissima, nectariformia, basifixa, seu nulla. Folli- culi sessiles, 2 — 20, raembranacei, compressi, oligo-polysper- mi. — Folia ternatim composita, Thalictri facie. Isopyrdm, Linn. Juss. Gen. p. 232. GsErtn. Fr. t. 65. Scbkubr, Handb. t. 153. DC. Syst. 1. p. 323. Ledeb. Fl. Alt. 2. p. 298. Torr. &Gray, FI. N. Am. I. p. C60. Subgen. Enemion. — Petala nulla. Ovula pauca, 1-seriata. Enemion, Raf. in Jour. Pliys. 91. p. 70. Torr. & Gray, 1. c. p. 29. Endl. Gen. 848. Calyx petaloid, regular, imbricated in aestivation : sepals 5, sometimes 6, spreading, ovate, deciduous. Petals, in species of the Old World, very short and tubular, 1-2-lip- ped, in the North American none. Stamens numerous, hy- pogynous: filaments filiform or flattened : anthers innate, the oblong cells opening on the margins longitudinally. Pistils few or several ; sessile on the globular receptacle : ovary one-celled, pointed with the distinct style, which is stigmatose from the apex down the inner side. Ovules anatropous, few (3 to 10) in a single series and more or less ascending, or numerous in two rows and horizontal, with the raphes collateral. Follicles 3 to 20 (rarely solitary), membranaceous, veiny or reticulated, more or less compressed, beaked with the sub- ulate style, dehiscent through the ventral suture. Seeds few or numerous, mostly horizontal ; the testa crustaceous, smooth or minutely pubescent, or sometimes granulate-sca- brous. Embryo minute, next the hilum, at the base of the fleshy albumen. Herbs of small size, with fibrous, and sometimes grumous roots, slender stems, and ternately-compound alternate leaves. 36 RANUNCULACEiE. Leaflets lobed. Petioles commonly auriculate-dilated at the base, forming a small- stipuliform appendage on each side. Flowers white or light yellow, small or middle-sized, ter- minating the stem and branches. Etymology and Properties. A name given by Dioscorides to a Gre- cian plant (probably Fumaria eapreolata), formed of 'Irros, equal, and irvpos, wheat. Slightly acrid plants, of no known importance. Geographical Distribution. A genus of few species, sparingly scat- tered over the northern temperate zone. The two North American species are remarkable for being apetalous : that of the United States has just the aspect of the European I. thalictroides, L. ; while the Californian species is more like the Siberian I. fumarioides, L. Two other species belong to the Altaic and Himalayan Mountains, and a seventh to Japan. Note. The analyses in Plate 12 having been made from dried speci- mens, with aid of a former sketch in which this point was not particu- larly attended to, we are not sure that the raphe is correctly represented as ventral ; but the ovules, which are only two or three in number, are certain- ly superposed in a single series. PLATE 12. Isopyrum (Enemion) biternatum, Torr. lv, a dolphin ; in allusion to the shape of the flowers. Properties. Acrid and bitter, especially the seeds. — The active prop- erties are owing to a peculiar principle, called delp/nnia, which especially abounds in D. Staphysagria, L., of Southern Europe. The seeds of this species, under the name of stavesacre, have long been used as a popular remedy against parasitic vermin. — Several very ornamental species of Lark- spur are common in cultivation. Geographical Distribution. A genus of about 70 known species, dis- tributed throughout the northern temperate zone, chiefly in the warmer and unwooded portions. PLATE 15. Delphinium tricorne, Michx. (from Ohio) ; — natural size, but shortened ; showing both flowers and fruit. 1. Flower with the sepals detached and displayed. 2. One of the upper petals, a little enlarged. 3. One of the lower petals ; inside view. 4. A stamen, enlarged. 5. The pistils and receptacle, magnified. 6. Transverse section of an ovary, magnified. 7. Vertical section of the same. 8. A seed, magnified. 9. Vertical section of the same, displaying the minute embryo at the base of the albumen. RAN UNCI) i.ace.j: 43 Plate 16. ACONITUM, Town. Calyx 5-sepalus, petaloideus, irregularis ; sepalo extimo amplo cassidaeformi, lateralibus orbiculatis, anticis oblongis. Petala 2 superiora longe unguiculata, apice cucullifera, sub casside recondita ; 3 inferiora minima, unguiformia, vel saspe obsoleta. Folliculi 3-5, polyspcrmi. — Folia palinatifida. Aconitum, Tourn. Inst. t. 239, 240. Ga-rtn. Fr. t.65. Sclikiilir, Handb. t. 145. DC. Syst. 1. p. 364. Endl. Gen. 4797. Mouk's-Iiood. Wolf 's-bane. Calyx petaloid, of 5 unequal and irregular sepals, imbri- cated in aestivation, deciduous or marcescent ; the upper one (called the galea) much larger than the others and covering them in the bud, helmet-shaped ; the two lateral broad and rounded ; the two lower smaller and oblong. Petals 2, concealed under the galea, consisting of a very small oblong and emarginate lamina, produced backwards into a short and incurved callous spur, and raised on a very long and slender claw ; the 3 lower minute and resembling sterile filaments, or wanting. Stamens numerous, hypogynous: filaments short, subulate from a membranaceous dilated base, above recurved-spreading : anthers short, innate or slightly in- trorse (extrorse, Ledeb.), the cells opening longitudinally. Pistils 3 to 5, sessile : ovary one-celled, many-ovuled : style subulate : stigma unilateral at the apex, often two- toothed. Ovules indefinite, horizontal in two series, occu- pying the whole length of the ventral suture ; the raphes collateral. Follicles sessile, chartaceous or membranaceous, oblong, tipped with the short style, many-seeded, dehiscent down the ventral suture. Seeds horizontal, in two series ; the thickened and spongy testa rugose, often appearing as if 44 RANUNCULACEvE. squamigerous. Embryo minute, at the base of the fleshy albumen : radicle next the hilum. Herbs, either erect, reclining, or trailing ; with perennial, often tuberous or thickened and fascicled roots, and simple or branching leafy stems, bearing large and showy flowers in terminal racemes or panicles. Leaves alternate, palmate- ly 3 - 5-parted or cleft; the divisions usually incised or many-cleft. Petioles mostly dilated at the base. Pedicels bracteolate. Etymology- 'Akovitov, the ancient name ; by some supposed to be de- rived from Acone, a town in Bithynia. The popular name of Monk's-hood is evidently derived from the shape of the upper sepal, especially in the section Napellus ; and that of Wolf's-bane, from the use which was made of some species in Europe for poisoning wolves. Properties. Deadly narcotico-acrid poisons, especially the root, owing to the presence of a peculiar alkaloid principle, which has been called aco- nita. The leaves of several species have been used in medicine. — Several are cultivated for their showy flowers. Geographical Distribution. A genus of 30 or 40 described species, natives of the northern temperate zone, chiefly in the colder regions or on mountains. The two species of the United States (namely, A. reclinatum, Oral/, which is nearly white-flowered, and allied to the European A. Ly- coctonum, and A. uncinatum, L.) belong to the Alleghany Mountains, or nearly so. PLATE 16. Aconitum uncinatvjm, Linn., — summit of a stem in fruit and flower ; of the natural size. 1. Flower with the sepals and (two) petals detached. 2. Diagram of the aestivation of the calyx. 3. Vertical section through the enlarged flower, dividing the galea, show- ing one petal in place, &c. 4. A magnified stamen ; inside view. 5. The same, seen from the outer side. 6. A.pistil, magnified. 7. The same, with the ovary divided longitudinally. 8. Transverse section of the same. 9. An ovule, more magnified. 10. A seed, magnified. 11. Vertical section of the same. 12. Embryo, detached, and highly magnified. RANUNCULACE.E. 45 Plate 17. ZANTHORHIZA, Marshall. Calyx 5-sepalus, coloratus, regularis. Petala 5, brevia, glandulaaformia, breviter unguiculata, apice dilatata truncato- biloba. Stamina 5—10. Folliculi 5-10, stylum brevem cito dorsalem gerentes, abortu monospermi. Semen pendu- lum, raphe ventrali. — Suffrutex nanus ; caulibus intus fla- vis ; racemis compositis pendulis, deinde foliis pinnatisectis, e gemma terminali squamosa primo vere erumpentibus. Xanthorhiza, Marsh. Arbust. Araer. p. 168. Endl. Gen. 4803. Zanthorhiza, L'Her. Stirp. p. 79. t. 38. Juss. Gen. p. 234. Barton, Elem. Bot. t. 12. DC. Syat. 1. p. 386. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 40. Shrub Yellow-root. Calyx colored (dark and dull purple), imbricated in aesti- vation, regular ; the sepals 5, lanceolate-ovate, acute, spread- ing, deciduous. Petals 5, alternate with the sepals and much smaller than they, hypogynous, gland-like, fleshy, rais- ed on a short claw ; the dilated roundish lamina emarginate- two-lobed, the upper face excavated-glandular. Stamens 5, alternate with the petals, or sometimes 10, hypogynous : filaments short : anthers introrse, the elliptical cells sepa- rated below by the thickened connective, opening longitu- dinally. Pistils 5 to 10, sessile : ovary oblong-ovate, one- celled: style subulate, incurved, stigmatosc down the inner face. Ovules a single pair (rarely more?) borne on the middle of the ventral suture, collateral, anatropous, at first horizontal, soon pendulous, and with the raphes ventral. Follicles 5 to 10, oblong, membranaceous, ventricose- compressed, becoming gibbous by unequal growth, in such a manner that the ovuliferous or middle portion of the ventral suture in the ovary becomes the summit of the pod, and the short persistent style, which marks the original apex, 46 RANUNCULACE.E. becomes deeply dorsal : ventral suture tardily dehiscent. Seed solitary (by the abortion of one of the ovules), pendu- lous from the apparent summit of the pod, scarcely one fourth its length, oblong-obovate, smooth and even, marked with a narrow ventral raphe. Albumen fleshy. Embryo minute ; the radicle next the hilum. Shrub low, with long yellow roots and creeping root- stocks, sending up simple or sparingly branched woody shoots (one or two feet in height), which are strongly mark- ed with half-annular scars left from the dilated bases of the fallen (alternate) leaves, terminated by a kind of scaly bud ; from which arise, in early spring, the panicled or compound slender and drooping racemes, and the pinnately 3-7-folio- late leaves ; the former a little precocious, and occupying the base of the branch of the season. Leaflets membranaceous, sessile, ovate or oblong, incised and toothed, often 2 - 3-cleft or parted. Flowers small, numerous, dark purple, sometimes polygamous. Bracts and bractlets subulate, minute. Etymology and Properties. Name compounded of gavdos, yrlfow, and pi'fa, root ; in allusion to the color of the roots, which, as also the inner bark, wood, and pith, are pervaded with a bright yellow coloring matter, said to have been employed by the aborigines as a dye : it is intensely bitter, and has been used as a tonic. Geographical Distribution. The single species of the genus belongs to the United States alone, and chiefly to the vicinity of the Alleghany Mountains, growing on rocky and shaded banks along streams. PLATE 17. Zanthoriiiza apiifolia, L'Her. ; — the summit of a flower- ing stem ; of the natural size. (Botanic Garden, Cambridge.) 1. A flower, enlarged. 2. A petal, magnified; back view. 3. Same, seen from above. 4. A stamen, magnified ; inside view. 5. The pistils, magnified. 6. Vertical section of one of them, showing the ovules. 7. Vertical section of a fertilized ovary, magnified. 8. The ripe follicles, thrice the natural size. 9. Vertical section of a follicle, magnified, showing the single seed. 10. Seed, more magnified. 11. Vertical section of the same, showing the embryo. ranunculace.e. 47 Plate 18. HYDRASTIS, jL. Calyx 3-sepalus, petaloideus, caducissimvis. Petala nulla. Ovaria plurima, 2-ovulata, in capitulum congesta ; fructu baccata rubiformi. — Caulis uniflorus, e rhizomate flavo, di - triphyllus ; foliis palmatifidis. Hydrastis, Linn. Gen. 704. DC. Syst. 1. p. 217. Barton, Veg. Mat. Med. 2. t. 26. Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 3019, 3232 Torr. & Gray, Fl. l.p. 40. Endl. Gen. 4777. Wakneria, Mill. Ic. 2. p. 190. t. 285. Yellow Puccoon. Orange-root. Calyx of 3 thin and membranaceous ovate sepals, im- bricated in aestivation, greenish-white, caducous when the flower opens. Petals none. Stamens indefinite, hypogy- nous : filaments filiform, somewhat thickened upwards : anthers innate, or slightly extrorse ; the oblong cells sepa- rated by a thickish connective, opening longitudinally. Pis- tils 12 to 20, capitate and sessile on the short receptacle : ovary ovate, fleshy, one-celled, two-ovuled : style short and thick : stigma bilamellate, terminal. Ovules at first collat- eral, borne on the middle of the ventral suture, ascending, between anatropous and amphitropous. Fruit consisting of the baccate matured ovaries densely capitate-imbricated on the oblong receptacle, bright crimson, and resembling a raspberry. Seeds single or two (one above the other) in each carpel, broadly obovate, turgid, in- serted by a linear hilum ; the crustaceous testa smooth and •shining. Albumen fleshy and oily. Embryo minute, next the micropyle : radicle inferior (pointing to the base of the fruit). Herb with a thick, knotty rhizoma (imbued with a yel- low juice), sending up in early spring a long-petiolcd leaf and a simple stem, which is naked below, alternately two- 48 RANUNCULACE^E. (or rarely three-) leaved near the summit, and terminated by a greenish-white flower. Leaves rounded-cordate, becoming large (4 to 10 inches broad) after flowering, and somewhat resembling those of the Grape-vine, palmately 5 - 7-cleft, toothed and doubly serrate, veiny ; the upper near the flower and sessile ; the lower petioled. Petioles dilated at the base. Etymology unexplained. Possibly from vbap, loater, and 8pda>, to act ; in allusion to the medicinal properties of the plant. Properties much like those of Zanthorhiza. The bitter rootstock is ton- ic, and apparently somewhat narcotic. Its yellow juice was used by the aborigines for dyeing. Geographical Distribution. The single species is a native of the Northern United States and Canada, in damp woods. PLATE 18. Hydrastis Canadensis, Linn.; — natural size, in flower; the caducous sepals fallen. (Botanic Garden, Cambridge.) 1. Diagram of the aestivation of the calyx. 2. A fallen sepal, enlarged. 3. A stamen, magnified. 4. A pistil, magnified. 5. Vertical section of the ovary of the same. 6. An ovule, more magnified. 7. Pistils in fruit ; natural size. 8. Vertical section of the same. 9. A seed, magnified. (The hilum in this, as also in the next figure, is wrongly representerJ. It is not so salient, but is linear and longer, and extends downward nearly to the smaller end of the seed.) 10. Vertical section of the same, showing the embryo. 11. Embryo detached, highly magnified. ranunculacEjE. 49 Plate 19. ACTiEA, L. Calyx 3 - 5-sepalus, petaloideus, caducus. Petala seu staminodia 4-10, plana, integerrima, spathulata. Ovarium unicum, baccatum, polyspermum. Semina horizontalia. — Folia bi - tritematisecta. Racemus brevis. Act.s:a, Linn. Gaertn. Fr. t. 114. Fisch. & Meyer, Ind. Petrop. 1835. p. 20. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 35. Endl. Gen. 4799. Actjea, Sect. Christophoriana, DC. Syst. 1. p. 384. « Christophoriana, Tourn. Inst. p. 299, t. 154. Banebcrry. Calyx of 3 to 5 ovate and concave petaloid sepals, imbri- cated in aestivation, regular, caducous. Petals 4 to 10, shorter and much smaller than the sepals, flat, spatulate c* oblong, more or less unguiculate, hypogynous. Stamens indefinite, hypogynous : filaments filiform : anthers in- nate, slightly introrse, the oval cells separated by a narrow comiective, opening longitudinally. Pistil single, sessile : ovary ovoid-oblong, grooved at the ventral suture, one-cell- ed, many-ovnled : stigma sessile, depressed-dilated, some- what two-lobed. Ovules very numerous, horizontal, in two series, occupying the whole length of the ventral suture, anatropous ; the raphes collateral. Fruit a many-seeded oval berry, usually with a groove at the ventral suture. Seeds very numerous, horizontal, flat (depressed), and somewhat semicircular, closely packed in two series, filling the cell ; the thickish and coriaceous testa smooth and even. Embryo minute, next the hilum, at the base of the fleshy albumen, cordate. Herbs, with perennial matted roots, and usually tuberous and knotty rootstocks, sending up in spring mostly simple stems, bearing one or two alternate bi - triternately-com- pound leaves, and an oblong or ovoid terminal raceme of 50 RANUNCULACE/E. white flowers. Radical leaves similar to the cauline, but larger. Petioles dilated at the base. Leaflets ovate, acute, sharply incised and toothed, commonly 2 — 3-lobed. Bracts minute. Raceme more or less elongated in fruit ; the ber- ries bright red, purple, or white. Etymology. 'Aitre'a, an ancient name of the Elder; transferred by Lin- naeus to this genus. Properties. Nauseous and acrid-narcotic, poisonous, especially in a fresh stale, both the root and the berries. Geographical Distribution. A genus of few species, distributed over the cooler portion of the northern temperate zone, chiefly in rich woods. PLATE 19. ActjEa rubra, Willd. ; — summit of a young flowering plant, the leaf as yet small, and a fruiting raceme ; natural size. 1. Expanding flower. 2. Expanded flower. 3. A sepal, enlarged. 4. A petal, enlarged. 5. A stamen, enlarged. 6. The pistil, enlarged, on the receptacle. 7. Same, with the ovary divided vertically. 8. Transverse section of the same. 9. An ovule, more magnified. 10. A fruit, of the size of nature. 11. Same, divided vertically. 12. Same, divided transversely, and down the back, to display the seeds. 13. A seed, enlarged, with the upper face presented to the eye. 14. Section of the same, showing the embryo at the base of the albumen. 15. Embryo, more magnified. ranunculace.e. 51 Plate 20. CIMICIFUGA, L. Calyx 4 - 5-sepalus, petaloideus, caducus. Petala sen sta- minodia 1-8, unguiculata, biloba. Ovaria 1-8. Folliculi polyspermi ; seminibus horizontalibus depressis, aut verticali- bus compressis. — Folia bi - triternatisecta. Racemi virgati. Subgen. Macrotys. — Petala tenuiter unguiculata, fere plana. Stigma sessile, depressum. Folliculi solitarii, rarius 2, sessiles, ovoidei ; seminibus horizontalibus depressis Actaeae. Macrotys, Raf. in Med. Rep. 1. c. & Desv. Jour. Bot. (1808) 2. p. 170. Botrophis, Raf. Med. Fl. 1. p. 85. Fisch. & Mey. Ind. Petrop. 1835. p. 20. Act.ea, Sect. Macrotys, DC. Syst. 1. p. 383. Cimicifuga, Sect. Macrotys, Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 36. Black Snake-root. Black Cohosh. Subgen. Cimicifuga vera. — Petala saspius concava, fundo. pi. m. nectarifera. Folliculi 2-8, stipitati, compressi, stylo tenui apiculati (stigmate min'uto) ; seminibus verticalibus la- teraliter compressis, testa squamulis membranaceis echinata. Cimicifuga, Linn. Gen. 1282, & Amoen. Acad. 7. p. 193. t. 4. Act.«a, Sect. Cimicifuga, DC. I.e. Cimicifuga & Actinospora, Fisch. & Mey. 1. c. Endl. Gen. 4801 -2. Btighane. Calyx of 4 or 5 ovate or orbicular and concave petaloid sepals, imbricated in aestivation, regular, caducous. Petals 1 to 8, small, hypogynous, unguiculate, plane, or more or less concave and nectariferous near the base, usually two- lobed or two-homed at the apex, sometimes attenuated or imperfectly antheriferous, and evidently appearing as trans- formed stamens. Stamens very numerous, hypogynous, in many series on the oblong receptacle : filaments filiform, elongated: anthers short, innate or obscurely introrse. Pis- tils 1 to 2, sessile and with a depressed terminal stigma in 52 RANUNCULACE^. *§> Macrotys ; or subulate with the acute style, which is mi- nutely stigmatose unilaterally, commonly stipitate. Ovules numerous, horizontal, in two series on the whole length of the ventral suture, anatropous ; the raphes ventral. Follicles in ■§> Macrotys ovoid, turgid, sessile, and filled with numerous depressed- flattened (horizontal) smooth seeds, as in Actaea ; or else compressed and membranaceous, with fewer and laterally compressed (vertical) seeds ; their testa thickly clothed all over with slender squamulose projections. Embryo minute, next the hilum, at the base of firm albumen. Herbs, with tall stems from matted and knotty rootstocks, ample bi - triternate leaves much as in Acteea, and virgate ra- cemes, either simple or panicled. Flowers white, the odor unpleasant. Etymology and Properties. Name from cimex, a bug, and fugo, to drive away ; the Siberian species being employed as a bug-bane. The sen- sible properties are much as in Actasa, but with more bitterness. The Black Snake-root is a famous Indian antidote against the bite of venomous snakes. Geographical Distribution. A genus of few species, natives of the cooler parts of the northern temperate zone, chiefly in Asia and N. America. Note. Macrotys should probably rank as a genus ; but Actinospora ap- pears not to be distinguished by characters of equal importance. PLATE 20. Fig. 1-13. Cimicifuga (Macrotys) racemosa, Ell. ; — a lateral raceme, &c. (Botanic Garden, Cambridge.) 1. A flower-bud, somewhat enlarged. 2. An outer, and 3, an inner, sepal, enlarged ; inside view. 4. A petal or staminodium, enlarged. 5. A stamen, enlarged, inside view ; and 6, an outside view of the same. 7. Pistil and receptacle, magnified. 8. Vertical section of the same. 9. An ovule, magnified, the upper face presented to the eye. 10. A portion of the raceme in fruit ; natural size. 11. Transverse and vertical section of a pod, showing the seeds. 12. A seed, magnified. 13. Section of the same, showing the minute embryo. 14. Enlarged flower of Cimicifuga Americana, Michx. (from the Allegha- iiies) ; — most of the stamens and the petals except one removed. 15. The five long-stalked follicles of the same ; natural size. 16. A dehiscent follicle and seeds, enlarged. 17. A seed, more magnified. 18. Transverse section of the same. 19. Vertical section of the same, showing the minute embryo. Ord. MAGNOLIACEiE. Arbores vel arbusculae (acri-amaras et aromatica;) simplici- folias, dicotyledoneas, hypogynas, symmetricse, polyandry sen monadelphas ; perianthio concolori plerumque trimero tri - phiriserali, cestivatione imbricato, mox deciduo ; carpellis dis- cretis vel in syncarpium imbricato-coadunatis ; seminibus ex- arillatis ; embryone in basi albuminis homogenei minimo. Magnolia, Juss. Gen. p. 280. Magnoliace^: & Wintered, R. Br. ex DC. Syst. J. p. 548. Magnoliaceje &. Schizandrace^:, Blume, Fl. Jav. F.ndl. Lindl. The Magnolia Family, which comprises some of our most ornamental trees, belongs almost exclusively to the eastern side of both continents, and chiefly to the warmer portion of Eastern North America and to the corre- sponding part of Asia. It has no representatives in Europe or in Africa, and none in Western North America. There are some tropical species, on both sides of the equator ; and two genera are extratropical in the southern hemisphere, namely, in South America and in New Zealand and Southern Australia ; but one of them, the Drimys, or Winter's Bark, has a surpris- ingly extensive range ; the same species, according to Dr. J. D. Hooker, extending through 86 degrees of latitude, from near the southern limit of phaenogamous vegetation to New Grenada and even to Mexico ! The family, enlarged as here proposed, so as to include the Schizandreae as well as Wintereae, need be compared only with the order Dilleniaeeae of the southern hemisphere, on the one hand, and with the Anonaceas, on the other. From the former it is absolutely distinguished only by its exarillate seeds, but generally by the trimerous floral envelopes and caducous calyx also. From the latter it is separated by the solid and homogeneous (not ru- minated or lamellar) albumen, and by the imbricated aestivation of the corolla. An aromatic principle, due to a pungent ethereal oil and its resin, pervades the family. This is most abundant and pure in the Wintereas ; but is also manifest in Schizandra, at least in the fruit and seeds, and not less so in the Magnolieae, although covered by a bitter principle. It is likewise indicat- ed by the minute pellucid dots of the leaves, or at least of the petals, &c. ; and by the " glandular dots or disks " on the woody tissue, which, although comparatively few and minute in Magnolia and Liriodendron, are beautifully marked in Schizandra, — quite as much so, indeed, as in Illicium and Drimys. 54 MAGNOLIACEjE. \\ hile tlie Winterese, long since separated by Brown, are now generally reunited to Magnoliaceee, the Schizandreae of Blume have been admitted al- most without question as a distinct order, and have even been arranged by Lindley in a different alliance. Yet the latter are at least as nearly related to i lir Winterese as these are to the true Magnolia Family ; and the only absolute character which distinguishes them (namely, the capitate or spiked, instead of simply verticillate or single, carpels) is one in which they accord with Magnoliaceae proper. The stamens are not always monadelphous in Sehizandrea;, nor are the flowers always diclinous, if Hortonia belongs to the group ; while, on the other hand, one of the four Winteraceous genera is polygamous. It appears evident, therefore, either that the Wintereee of Brown should be extended so as to embrace the Scliizandreae, and be ordi- nally distinguished by the total absence of stipules, or else that the whole should be united in one family. Remembering that a few Dilleniacea? have stipules like those of Magnolia, while the rest are exstipulate, and convinced that the sensible properties as well as the floral characters of the plants in question invite the union, I propose to adopt the latter alternative, and to arrange under the order Magnoliaceae these three suborders, as follows. Subord. I. WINTERED. (Ord. Wintered, R. Br. 1818.) Flowers perfect, or sometimes polygamo-dicecious. Pistils simply verti- cillate, or reduced to one. Stamens distinct. — Stipules none. Leaves fre- quently verticillate-crowded or opposite, sempervirent, rarely serrate. Bark, seeds, &c., pungent-aromatic. (Ulicieae, DC. Prodr. 1825.) Illicium. (Plate 21.) Follicles numerous, stellate, 1-seeded. Subord. II. SCHIZANDRE^. (Ord. ScmzxNimvx, Blume.) Flowers monoecious or dioecious. Pistils imbricated-spicate or capitate. Stamens in a cluster, monadelphous or distinct (in Schizandra definite). — Stipules none. Leaves entire or toothed. Stems often sarmentose. Muci- laginous, the seeds aromatic. — Spharostemma, Kadsura, and Schizandra. (Plate 22.) Stamens 5, monadelphous in a 5-lobed disk. Subord. III. MAGNOLIE.E, DC, Endl. Flowers perfect, large. Pistils imbricated-spicate on an elongated gyno- phore. Stamens distinct. Seeds in the dehiscent species baccate, and at length hanging by an extensile cord of spiral vessels. Stipules conspicu- ous, forming the teguments of the bud, successively involving the condupli- cate leaves in vernation, deciduous after their expansion, leaving annular- scars on the terete branches. Bitter-aromatic. Magnolia. (Plates 22, 23.) Carpels coriaceous-baccate, adherent to the receptacle, dehiscent by the dorsal suture. Anthers introrse. Liriodendron. (Plate 24.) Carpels samaraeform, indehiscent, decidu- ous from the receptacle at maturity. Anthers extrorse. magnoliace.e, wintered. 55 Plate 21. ILLICIUM, L. Flores hermaphroditi. Sepala 3 vel 6. Pctala 9 - 30, tri - pluriseriata. Stamina indefinita : antherae introrsum adnata?. Folliculi plurimi, drupacei, circa columnam brevis- simam arete verticillati, stellato-patentes, denique bivalves, monospermi. — Arbuscnlas sempervirentes, Anisum spirantes. Illiciom, Linn. Gen. 611. Ellis, in Phil. Trans. 60. p. 524. Ga?rtn. Fr. t. 69. Lam. 111. t. 493. DC. Syst. 1. p. 440. Sieb. & Zucc. Fl. Jap. 1. p. 5. t. 1. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 42. Endl. Gen. 4743. Star-Anise. Flowers perfect. Calyx of 3 or 6 petaloid sepals, im- bricated in aestivation, caducous. Petals 9 to 30, imbri- cated in aestivation in 3 or several series, the inner succes- sively narrower, hypogynous, spreading, deciduous. Sta- mens indefinite (12 to 40) in several series, hypogynous, spreading : filaments short and fleshy : anthers adnate, in- trorse ; the two oblong cells contiguous or nearly so, opening longitudinally. Pistils 6 to 18, compressed, crowded in a circle, closely sessile, and broadly inserted around a central short and conical prolongation of the receptacle : ovary one- celled, one-ovuled : style subulate, recurved, stigmatose down the inner edge. Ovule ascending from some part of the ventral suture, anatropous, the raphe ventral. Fruit a whorl of distinct drupaceous follicles, stellately divaricate, compressed, woody-crustaceous at maturity, when the thin sarcocarp dries up, dehiscent by the whole length of the ventral suture, at length two-valved. Seed ascend- ing from the base of the cell, which it fills, obovate, com- pressed-lenticular, the hilum lunulate ; the crustaceous testa very smooth and shining, brittle (loosely adhering to the ob- scurely sculptured surface of the spongy-membranaceous in- 56 MAGNOLIACE.-E, WINTERED. ner integument). Embryo very minute, at the base of the fleshy and oily, homogeneous albumen. Shrubs or low trees, entirely glabrous, spicy-aromatic ; the evergreen leaves alternate or irregularly crowded and oppo- site, petioled, oblong, entire, coriaceous, minutely pellucid- dotted under a lens. Stipules entirely absent. Peduncles from axillary or terminal buds, one-flowered. Flower dark red-purple in I. Floridanum, hi the others yellowish. Etymology. From illicio, to entice; — perhaps from the properties of the Anisette de Bordeaux, which is flavored by the fruit of the Chinese I. ani- satura, the Star-Anise of the shops. Properties. Spicy-aromatic and carminative, especially the bark, leaves, and fruit. The latter yields a fragrant oil like that of Anise, for which it is substituted. The foliage of the Japanese I. religiosum is said to be poison- ous; and I. parviflorum has the same reputation in Alabama (where it is called " Poison Bay"), probably without good reason. Geographical Distribution. Of the four known species, two are na- tives of China and Japan, and two of the southeastern extremity of the Unit- ed States. Note. The buds of I. religiosum, according to the figure and description by Zuccarini, are perulate, and the ovule rises from the very base of the cell. The leaf-buds of I. Floridanum are perfectly naked, green, and acute ; and the ovule is attached to the inner angle of the cell above the base. PLATE 21. Illicium Floridanum, Ellis; — a flowering branch, natu- ral size ; from a plant cultivated in the Cambridge Botanic Garden. 1. A sepal, detached. 2-6. Petals of the several series, beginning with the exterior and broader. 7. A stamen, magnified, viewed from within or above. 8. A grain of pollen, highly magnified, showing a triple band. 9. Vertical section through the receptacle and whorl of the pistils, laying open one of the ovaries, and displaying the ovule ; enlarged. 10. The mature fruit ; natural size. 11. Seed, of the natural size. 12. The same, magnified, with the testa partly broken away, to show the uneven surface of the inner integument. 13. Vertical section of the same, through the albumen, showing the minute embryo. MAGNOLIACEjE, schizandre.e. Plate 22. SCHIZANDRA, Michx. Flores monoici, saepius pentameri ! nempe : Sepala 5. Petala 5. Stamina 5, brevissima, dilatata, in orbem 5-lobum monadelpha : antheros loculis connectivum latissimum cu- neiforme marginantibus valde sejunctis. Carpella plurima, 2-ovulata, imbricato-capitata : fructifera baccata, supra gyno- phorum denique elongatum pedunculiforme laxe spicata. — Frutex sarmentosus, foliis deciduis. Schizandba, Michx. FI.2 p. 18. t. 47. Bot. Mag. 1. 1413. DC. Syst. I. p. 544. Bart. Fl. N.Am. l.t. 13. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 46, 662. Endl. Gen. 4733. Flowers monoecious; the floral envelopes, &c, of the sterile and fertile flowers alike. Sepals usually 5, quincun- cially imbricated in aestivation, sometimes 6, rotund-ovate, concave, membranaceous with rather scarious margins, some- what colored (greenish-white, above sometimes tinged with red), deciduous ; the two exterior smaller. Petals 5, quin- cuncially imbricated in aestivation (rarely 6, when they are imbricated in two series), hypogynous, oblong-obovate, spread- ing, rather fleshy, abruptly thickened at the contracted base, crimson, copiously sprinkled with pellucid dots, deciduous. Ster. Fl. Stamens 5, opposite the petals, their short and broad filaments monadelphous, so as to form a circular and flat 5-cleft disk, occupying the whole centre of the flower : anthers with their two cells adnate to the margins of (he dilated-cuneiform connective, much smaller than it, thus widely disjoined, and those of adjacent anthers brought into contact, but not at all connate, neither extrorse nor introrse, opening longitudinally (toward the cleft). Fert. Fl. Pis- tils indefinite, closely imbricated-capitate on the oblong receptacle, distinct : ovary ovoid, sessile, one-celled, two- 58 MAGXOLIACE.E, SCHIZANDKE.E. ovuled, obliquely narrowed into a short beak, which is stig- matose for the whole length down the inner side. Ovules collateral, inserted on the ventral suture above the base, just opposite the lower termination of the decurrent stigma, glob- ular, nearly amphitropous. Fruit of several (6 to 12, the rest abortive) globular bac- cate carpels, loosely spicate on the much elongated gyno- phore, 1-2-seeded. Seeds superposed when both ripen, hori- zontal, reniform, with a very short raphe in the sinus; the testa crustaceous. Albumen fleshy and oily, homogeneous. Embryo minute, next the hilum : cotyledons very short. Shrub sarmentose ; with ash-colored bark ; the leaves alternate, ovate, pointed, long-petioled, entire or sparingly denticulate, the teeth glandular-tipped, veiny, thin and mem- branaceous, beautifully punctate with pellucid dots under a lens, deciduous. Stipules none. Buds small, scaly. Pe- duncles filiform, solitary in the axils of the lower leaves of the branch of the season, naked, one-flowered. Flowers small (half an inch in diameter), crimson. Berries red ; the fructiferous receptacle elongating to 2 or 3 inches in length. Etymology. From '«' ■ 386, 794 78 BERBERIDACEJE. The close alliance of the Berberidaces to the preceding orders is admitted by all botanists, perhaps, except Dr. Lindley, who has at length proposed a widely different arrangement, which is evidently based upon peculiar grounds, by no means compatible w-ith ordinary views of botanical affinity.* The family consists of about 12 genera, all of few or single species, ex- cepting Berberis itself, distributed over the northern temperate zone, chiefly in the cooler parts, and extending southward along mountain ranges only. In America the genus Berberis is also represented at the southern extremity of the continent. The berries are usually acid and edible or harmless ; the foliage is often acid ; the bark and roots of the woody species are astringent, and the roots of one or two are drastic. The compact wood of Berberis trifoliolata exhibits very broad medullary rays, much wider, towards the circumference of old stems, than the woody wedges themselves, which fork sparingly, after the manner of some Aristo- lochias. The annual layers are indistinct. Young stems of Nandina exhibit a similar structure. Conspectus of the United States Genera. * Anthers opening by uplifted valves. ■*- Shrubs. Embryo nearly as long as the albumen : cotyledons foliaceous. Berberis. (Plate 31.) Stamens and petals 6. Stigma umbilicate. Berry one- few-seeded. — Leaves or leaflets spinulose-toothed. h — i- Herbs. Embryo small or minute : cotyledons thick. Leontice $ Caulophvllum. (Plate 32.) Stamens and petals 6. Ovary 2-ovuled, bursting and evanescent after fertilization. Seeds drupa- ceous. — Leaves 3-ternate. Diphylleia. (Plate 33.) Stamens and petals 6. Berry few-seeded. — Flowers cymose. Cauline leaves 2, peltate, deeply 2-cleft, 7 - 9-lobed. Jeffersonia. (Plate 34.) Stamens and petals 8. Pod opening trans- versely half round, many-seeded. Seeds with a lateral arillus. — Scape naked, 1-flowered. Leaves 2-parted. * * Anthers not opening by uplifted valves. Podophyllum. (Plates 35, 36.) Petals 6-9: the stamens twice their number (in Amer. species). Berry large, many-seeded. Seeds on a very thick lateral placenta, inclosed in a pulpy arillus. — Flower sol- itary, in the fork of the two peltate palmately-lobed leaves. Croomia. (Plate 37.) Genus of doubtful affinity. " Veg. Kingd. p. 432-445. — In his Berberal alliance, Dr. Lindley com- bines, as the nearest allies of BerbcridiLcew, the DroseracetB, Fumariticete, Vita- cur, Cyrillacea, Ac. He excludes, however, frum the Barberry Family the ge- nus Podophyltums " which some botanists fency should stand here "; — a fancy which originated with Mr. Brown, ami which does not appear extraordinary when that genus (and especially its hexandrous species) is compared with Jef- fersonia and Diphylleia. berberidace.e. 79 Plate 81. BERBERIS, L. Calyx 6-sepalus, extus 3-2-bracteolatus. Petala 6, con- cava, intus pi. m. biglandulosa. Stamina 6. Stigma pelta- tum, umbilicatum. Bacca oligospermia, seminibus erectis. Embryo magnus, cotyledonibus subfoliaceis ellipticis. — Fru- tices, foliolis saepe spinulosis ; floribus racemosis. Berberis, Bauliin. Linn. Gen. 442. Ga-rtn. Fr. t.42. Hook. Fl. Bor.- Am. I . p. 28. Torr. & Gray, FI. 1. p. 49. Endl. Gen. 4814. Berberis & Mahosia, Nutt. Gen. 1. p. 210. DC. Syst. 2. p. 18. Odostewon, Raf in Amer. Month. Mag. 1819. p. 192. Barberry. Calyx calyculate with 3 or sometimes 2 close-pressed bractlets : proper sepals 6, in two series, alternatively im- bricated in aestivation, orbicular or obovate, concave-spread- ing, more or less petaloid, deciduous. Petals 6, opposite the 6 sepals, imbricated in aestivation in two series, hypogy- nous, obovate, concave-connivent, unguiculate or sessile, marked with two thickened glands, or more or less conspicu- ous glandular spots, at the base of the lamina inside, decidu- ous. Stamens 6, hypogynous, opposite the petals and short- er than they : filaments thick, articulated with the recep- tacle, spreading under the petals in the expanded flower, starting forward towards the pistil with a sudden jerk when touched with a point next the base on the inner side (thus projecting the pollen upon the stigma): anthers two-celled; the cells somewhat extrorsely adnate to the thick connec- tive, nearly the whole face separating as a valve which is lightly hinged at the apex. Ovary ovoid, one-celled, mark- ed with a projecting placental line inside (toward the axis) : style short and thick or none: stigma orbicular and peltate, umbilicate, entire. Ovules 2 to 9, erect from the base ol the placental line, towards which (he raphes are all turned 80 BERBERIDACE.-E. Berry oblong or globular. Seeds 1 to 9, erect, oblong, with a crustaceous testa and a narrow raphe. Embryo in the axis and occupying nearly the whole length of corneous- fleshy albumen, straight or nearly so : radicle slender, infe- rior : cotyledons elliptical, fiat and nearly foliaceous, parallel with the raphe, shorter than or equalling the radicle in length. Shrubs, with yellow wood and inner bark, deciduous or persistent 1 - many-lbliolate alternate leaves ; their petioles dilated at the base. Stipules adnale, commonly minute, caducous. Leaflets articulated, veiny, usually spinulose- toothed or ciliate-serrate. Flowers yellow, racemose. Etymology. From the Arabic name of the berries of the Barberry. Properties. These well-known berries are pleasantly acid and astrin- gent. The yellow bark and wood furnishes a dye, and is astringent, and seems also, with the root, to contain a principle (berberine) which is cathartic. Division. To the two recognized subgenera, I may here add a third. § 1. Bereeris proper. — Filaments usually inappendiculate. Primary leaves mostly converted into triple, quintuple, or simple prickly spines ; the secondary fascicled in the axils of these, unifoliolate (articulated above the scale-like base which represents the real petiole), subsessile. §2. Trilicina. — Filaments inappendiculate. Unarmed: leaves all evo- lute, digitately 3-foliolate : leaflets sessile on the apex of the common petiole. (B. trifoliolata, Moric.) §3. Mahonia, Nutl. — Filaments appendiculate with two salient teeth at the apex. Unarmed : leaves all evolute, pinnately 5 - 17-foliolate. PLATE 31. Bereeris Canadensis, Pursh; — part of flowering stem, natural size, from the Cambridge Botanic Garden. 1. Diagram of the flower (the upper side belongs next the axis). 2. A flower, enlarged. 3. An outer sepal; 4, an inner sepal, enlarged. 5. A petal, enlarged ; inside view. 6, 7. Stamens, enlarged ; the latter with the anther dehiscent. 8. Ovary transversely, and 9, vertically divided, magnified. 10. Berries, from a wild specimen. (Mountains of North Carolina.) 11. Vertical section of a berry, enlarged. 12. Magnified section of the seed and embryo. 13. Magnified embryo, turned flatwise, to show the broad cotyledons. berberidace.f. 81 Plate 32. LEONTICE, L. Calyx 6-sepalus, petaloideus, interdum bracteolis calycula- tus. Petala 6, nectariformia, dilatato-cucullata, sepalis multo minora. Stamina 6. Ovarium e basi 2 — 4-ovulatum. Pe- ricarpium tenui-membranaceum inflatum, indebiscens, vel, — Subgen. Caulophyllum, grossificatione seminum longe ante matnritatem ruptum, evanescens. Semina itaque nuda, drupacea. — Folium triternatum. Leontices Sp., Linn. R. Br. in Linn. Trans. 12. p. 143. t. 7. DC. Syst. 2. p. 23. Decaisne in Nouv. Ann. Sci. Nat. 2. t. 12. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 52. Endl. Gen. 4810. Caulophyllum, Michx. Fl. 1. p. 204. t. 21. Nutt. Gen. 1. p. 210. Blue Cohosh. Pappoosc-root. Calyx calyculate with 3 close-pressed bractlets : sepals 6, consimilar, imbricated in aestivation in two separate series, petaloid, ovate-oblong, flat, widely spreading or revolute, early deciduous. Petals 6, hypogynous, one at the base of each sepal and very much shorter than it, fleshy and gland-like, viscid, unguiculate, cuneiform-dilated, the very broad and rounded summit involute, deciduous. Stamens 6, hypogynous, opposite the petals and rather shorter than they: anthers rather shorter than the filaments: the two oblong cells somewhat extrorsely adnate to the thickish con- nective ; the greater part of the face separating in dehiscence as an uplifted valve. Ovary ovoid-oblong, one-celled, taper- ing into a subulate oblique style, which is minutely stigma- tose from the apex down the inner side. Ovules 2. collat- eral, erect from the base of the cell, raised and as if articu- lated on short fleshy funiculi, anatropous. Pericarp very thin, raptured soon after the floral envel- opes fall by the pressure of the growing seeds, and then 82 BERBERIDACE.E. shrivelling away. Seeds (one or both maturing) therefore naked, stipitate on their thickened funiculi, spherical, large, with a fleshy at length baccate testa, appearing like drupes ! Albumen corneous, deeply umbilicate at the hilum, its verti- cal section deeply reniform. Embryo minute, partly received into a sort of cup formed by the folding of the tegmen in the axis of the umbilicate basal depression, cylindrical : radicle short, inferior, about the length of the thick cotyledons. Herbaceous ; the fleshy rootstock sending up in early spring a simple and naked stem, bearing near the summit a triternately compound leaf destitute of a common petiole, and often a smaller and similar leaf at the very base of the ter- minal raceme or panicle. Leaflets 2-5-cleft at the apex, glaucous, as also the blue drupaceous seeds. (Characters from the North American species only.) Etymology, &c. Leontice is a name abbreviated by Linnaeus from the Leontopetalum of Tournefort. Caulophylluin, which may very probably re- sume its generic rank, is formed of Kavhos, stem, and tfiCWov, leaf; the stem seeming to form a stalk for the single, large and compound leaf. Properties- The root is an " Indian medicine," but its real qualities are unsettled. The albumen of the seed has been proposed as a substitute for coffee. PLATE 32. Leontice (Caulophyllum) thalictroides, Linn.; — sum- mit of stem, natural size when coming into flower. (Botanic Gar- den, Cambridge ; May : from Western Xew York.) 1. Back view of a flower-bud, showing the 3 bractlets (sepals of authors). 2. Diagram of the aestivation, &c. 3. Enlarged flower, seen from above. 4. A bractlet ; 5 and 6, sepals, enlarged. 7. Enlarged petal, from the outside ; 8, inside view of the same. ■J, 10. Magnified stamens, seen from the outside. 11, 12. Same, s sen from the inner side. 13. Pistil, enlai gi \ 1-1, 15. Same, transversely and vertically divided. Hi. Pistil, a week after the floral envelopes have fallen, enlarged. IT, 18. Same, still later ; the pericarp ruptured by the growing seeds. 19. The two full-grown seeds on their funiculi ; natural size. 20. Vertical section of one of them. 21. Embryo, detached, and highly magnified. berberidace^e. s3 Plate 33. DIPHYLLEIA, Michx. Sepala 6, caducissima. Petala 6, ovalia, plana. Stamina 6. Bacca gibbosa, basin versus 2-4-sperma. Embryo majuscu- la. — Caulis alternating diphyllus ; foliis maximis, peltatis, bifidis, ambitu lobatis. Cyma terminalis. Difhylleia, Michx. Fl. 1. p. 203. t. 19, 20. Bot. Mag. t. 1666. DC. Syst. 2. p. 39. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 52. Enrll. Gen. 4808. Gray, in Sill. Jour. 42. p. 23. Calyx of 6 thin and membranaceous roundish-oval sepals, imbricated in two series in aestivation, caducous when the corolla opens. Petals 6, alternatively imbricated in aestiva- tion, hypogynous, consimilar, larger than the sepals, round- ish-obovate, sessile, not glandular, plane, spreading, early deciduous. Stamens 6, hypogynous, opposite the sepals, shorter than they: anthers oblong, longer than the terete filament ; the cells somewhat extrorsely adnate to the con- nective, their face (except an inner margin) separating in dehiscence as an uplifted valve. Ovary oblong-ovoid, one- celled, nearly straight : style very short : stigma terminal, circular, depressed, slightly grooved across the middle. Ovules 5 or 6, borne in two series near the base of the pla- cental line which marks the inner side of the cell, ascend- ing, globular, anatropous. Berry globular, somewhat gibbous, apiculate with the nearly sessile stigma, unilaterally 2 - 4-seeded ; the flesh thin. Seeds 2 to 4, ascending from near the base of the cell on the ventral side, oblong, gibbous, slightly curved ; the testa fleshy-coriaceous. Albumen fleshy, or corneous when dried. Emrryo in the axis of the albumen, extending from the base nearly to the middle, slightly curved to correspond with the curvature of the seed: radicle inferior, slender ; the coty- ledons nearly of its length, oblong, pretty thin, parallel with the raphe. 84 BERBERIDACE^E. Herb of striking appearance, with much the habit of Po- dophyllum : the thickened and creeping rhizoma formed of distinct annual increments, sending up a stout alternately two-leaved flowering stem (terminated by a cyme of white blossoms), which separates at the base in autumn by a marked articulation, leaving a broad excavated scar, in the manner of the rootstocks of a Solomon's Seal. Leaves very large (1 to 2 feet broad when full grown), thin, palmately veined, reticulated, of dilated reniform or orbicular circum- scription, deeply two-cleft, and the margins cut-lobed and toothed ; the cauline excentrically, the radical centrally, pel- tate on long and stout petioles. Berries blue, glaucous. Etymology. From Sir, twice, or double, and divXkov, leaf. Properties. Unknown: probably much like those of Podophyllum. Geographical Distribution. Restricted to shaded springy places, or the margin of mountain brooks, in rich and deep alluvial soil, along the Al- leghanies from Virginia to Georgia. It (lowers in May, while the leaves are yet but half grown. PLATE 33. Diphylleia cvmosa, Michx. ; — flowering stem and rhizo- ma, from plants cultivated in the Botanic Garden, Cambridge, and dried specimens, from the mountains of North Carolina : lower leaf cut away, the upper thrown back and reduced in size. 1. A magnified stamen, with the anther dehiscent ; outside view. •2. A similar stamen, seen from the inner side. 3. A magnified pistil. 4. A vertical section of the same, .showing the ovules. 5. An ovule, more magnified. 6. Transverse section of the ovary made towards the base. 7. A berry ; and 8, a vertical section of the same, showing the seeds, it. A seed, magnified ; lateral view. 10. Vertical section of the same, displaying the embryo, &c. RKKRERIDACE/K. Plate 34. JEFFERSONIA, Bart. Sepala 4, caduca. Petala 8, plana. Stamina S. Capsula coriacea, obovata, polysperma, snb apice rima horizontali operculatim dehiscens. Semina pluriseriata, arillo laterali laciniato. — Scapus uniflorus niidns. Folia radicalia, bipar- tita, segmentis semicordatis. Jeffersonia, Barton, in Trans. Amor. Pliil. Soc. 3. p. 334. Michx. Fl. 1. p. 23C. DC. Syst. 2. p. 34. End!. Gen. 4807. Torr. & Gray, FI.N. Am. 1. p. 53. Twin-leaf. Calyx of 4 (sometimes 3 or 5) linear-oblong petaloid sepals, imbricated in aestivation in a single series, caducous. Petals 8, imbricated in estivation in two series, hypo- gynous, oblong, sessile, plane, spreading, early deciduous. Stamens 8, hypogynous, one before each petal : anthers oblong, shorter than the filiform filaments, scarcely if at all extrorse ; nearly the whole face of each cell separating as an uplifted valve. Ovary ovoid, slightly stipitate, one-celled, marked by a horizontal line around the back above the mid- dle, tapering at the summit into a short style : the stigma terminal, somewhat dilated and two-lobed. Ovules indefi- nite, borne in several rows on nearly the whole length of the broad ventral suture, somewhat ascending, anatropous. Fruit a coriaceous obovate pod, transversely dehiscent half-way round on the back, near the summit, by a revolute persistent lid, forming a broad lunate chink. Seeds numer- ous in several series on the broad placenta, somewhat as- cending, arillate; the arillus unilateral at the base of the raphe, fleshy, laciniate : testa coriaceous. Embryo minute at the base of the fleshy albumen : cotyledons short: radi- cle next the hilum. Herb low, with matted fibrous roots, sending up, in early 86 BERBERI DACEjE. spring, a tuft of two-parted peltately-veined radical leaves, on long petioles, and naked scapes terminated by a single white flower. Etymology. Dedicated by Professor Barton to Thomas Jefferson. Properties. The plant has a popular reputation in Ohio, under the name of Rheumatism-root, as a stimulant, diaphoretic, &e. (Riddell, Synop- sis.) The seeds have an acrid taste, which is very persistent. Geographical Distribution. The single species inhabits rich and cool woods, from Northern New York southward through the Alleghany Moun- tains, and in the Western States. PLATE 34. Jeffersonia diphylla, Pers. ; — natural size in flower. (Botanic Garden, Cambridge.) 1. Diagram of the flower. 2. A stamen, magnified. 3. A stamen, more enlarged ; the valves of the anther opening. 4. Same ; the anther divided transversely before dehiscence ; then 4-celled. 5. Pistil, magnified ; dorsal view. 6. Same, seen from the inner or placental side. 7. Same, transversely divided, showing the 4-ranked ovules. 8. An ovule, more magnified. 9. A growing seed, with the arillus just appearing ; enlarged. 10. The mature, dehiscent pod ; natural size. 11. Same, with the seeds removed, and the back cut away to show the placenta. 12. A seed, with its arillus, magnified. ID. Vertical section of the same, showing the minute embryo at the base of the albumen. berberidace.e. 87 Plate 35, 36. PODOPHYLLUM, L. Sepala 6, caducissima. PetalaG-9. Stamina petalis nu- mero aequalia vel dupla ; antheris longitudinaliter dehiscen- tibus. Bacca polysperma ; seminibus in arillo pulposo nidu- lantibus. — Caulis apice uniflorus, diphyllus ; foliis peltatis 5-9-fidis. Podophyllum, Linn. Gen. 643. DC. Syst. 2. t. 233. Bigel. Veg. Mat. Med. t. 35. Jacquem. Voy. t. 9. Endl. Gen. 4806. May-Apple. Mandrake. Calyx (calyculate by 3 green bractlets which are cadu- cous before anthesis) formed of 6 very thin and membrana- ceous obovate sepals, imbricated in two series in asstivation, caducous from the bud without expanding. Petals 6 or 9, in two or three series, alternatively imbricated and slightly crumpled in aestivation, hypogynous, dilated-obovate, large, spreading, deciduous. Stamens as many as the petals and opposite them in the Himalayan species, twice as many in the North American, hypogynous : filaments very short : anthers oblong-linear, adnate ; the cells opening longitudi- nally by a single extrorse line, as it were by a laterally hinged valve. Ovary ovoid, sessile, one-celled, crowned by a large and thick peltate and undulate-crested stigma. Ovules very numerous, covering the broad ventral placenta which occupies the whole length of the cell, crowded in about 5 rows, horizontal, nearly amphitropous. Fruit a large ovate fleshy berry ; the cell filled by the lateral placenta and the mass of pulpy arilli developed from its whole surface, inclosing the indefinite obovate seeds. Embryo small, at the base of fleshy albumen. Herbs, with thick fibrous roots from creeping rootstocks, which send up in spring sterile stalks terminated by a single orbicular centrally peltate leaf, or two-leaved stems termi- 88 BERBERIDACF.vE. runted by a single large (white) flower, nodding on a short peduncle. Cauline leaves excentrically peltate, palmately 5 — 9-ribbed and deeply cleft : the lobes incised and toothed. Etymology. Name formed of 7ro0s , a foot, and ■ Sp., Tourn. Linn. Gajrtn. Schkubr, I c. Nymph ea, Boerh. 1. c. p. 363. Salisb. in Kon. & Sims, Ann. Bot. 2. p. 71. N i mpbosahthi :-, Rich. Anal. 1'r. p. 68 & Ann. Mue. IT. p. 230. t. '.). Yellow Pond-Lily. Spatterdock. Calyx of 5 or 6 roundish and concave coriaceous sepals, imbricated in aestivation, green at the base, yellow above and inside, five, persistent. Petals 10 to 20, small, usually thick and glandular or stamen-like, imbricated, inserted into a thickened (hypogynous or barely perigynous) torus or disk at the base of the ovary. Stamens indefinite, short, insert- ed on the torus within the petals in many series, closely im- bricated and appressed to the pistil, at length elastically re- curved, persistent: filaments very short, stout, continued into a similar linear glandular-truncate connective: anther adnate to its inner face (introrse); the linear cells parallel, contiguous, opening longitudinally. Ovary columnar, na- ked, many-striatc, 10 - 25-celled, crowned with a circular and convex 10-25-crenulate and 10-25-rayed peltate sessile stigma, umbilicate in the centre. Ovules as in Nymphaea, but rather fewer. Fruit baccate with a firm rind, naked, ovoid or oblong, terminated by the concave-truncate persistent radiated stig- ma, pulpy inside, many-celled,*many-seeded ; the pulpy en- docarps capable of being detached entire from the firmer axis 104 NYMPHLEACE.epa, to bear; the conspicuous style being one of the characteristics of the genus. Properties. The juice is acrid, much like that of the Celandine. Geographical Distribution. A genus of two species, one of which belongs to the Northwestern United States ; the other to the Himalayan Mountains. — Our species bears very showy yellow flowers, and continues to blossom through the summer. PLATE 48. Stylophorum diphyllum, Nutl. ; — a vernal specimen; natural size. (Botanic Garden, Cambridge ; from Ohio, Dr. Short.) 1 . Diagram of the aestivation and parts of the flower, in a cross section. 2. A sepal, of the natural size ; inside view. 3. A petal, natural size. 4. A magnified stamen ; outside view. 5. Pistil, magnified. 6. A transverse section of the same. 7. A magnified ovule, after fertilization, showing the incipient crest, which grows from the raphe. 8. A capsule, of the natural size (rather small). 9. A capsule, dehiscent to the base by 4 valves, and.seeds. 10. The persistent intervalvular placentae and style of the same. 11. A magnified seed; the crested raphe towards the eye. 12. Longitudinal section of the same through the raphe, and the embryo. 13. Embryo, detached and more magnified. PAPAVERACE.E. 115 Plate 49. SANGUINARIA, Dill. Sepala 2. Petala 8 - 12, oblonga vel spathulata, aestiva- tione haud corrugata. Stamina 24. Stylus brevis, stigmate bisulco. Capsula oblonga, 2-valvis ; placentis 2 intervalvu- laribus polyspermis. Semina cristata. — Scapus uniflorus et folium unicum palmatilobum, vernatione florem involvens, e gemma bivalvi rhizomate crasso enata, primo vere orientes. Sadguinaria, Dillen. Hort. Elth. p. 334. t. 252. Linn. Gen. 645. Lam. 111. t. 449. DC. Syst. 2. p. 88. Bigel. Med. Bot. 1. p. 75. t. 7. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 62. Endl. Gen. 4818. Blood-root. Calyx of 2 ovate sepals, slightly imbricated in aestivation, caducous. Petals 8 to 12, obovate-oblong or spatulate, im- bricated in two or three series, hypogynous, spreading, the innermost often narrower, early deciduous. Stamens about 24, hypogynous, much shorter than the petals : filaments filiform, short : anthers oblong-linear, innate, the cells opening longitudinally by a marginal and obscurely extrorse line. Ovary oblong, one-celled, with two parietal placentas : style short, columnar : stigma broad, sulcate - two-lobed, the lobes alternate with the placentae. Ovules very numerous, horizontal in several rows on the two placentae, anatropous. Capsule oblong, somewhat compressed, herbaceo-coria- ceous, many-seeded, pointed by the short persistent style, two-valved ; the valves separating from the replum formed of the two intervalvular filiform placentas. Seeds horizon- tal, obovoid, with a smooth crustaceous testa, the raphe strongly crested. Embryo minute at the base of the fleshy albumen, cordate. Herb with a large branching tuberous rhizoma, surcharg- ed with orange-red juice, sending up in earliest spring, from 1 10 I'AI'AVERACEjE. terminal 2-3-valved buds, a long-petioled leaf and a naked one-flowered scape. Leaf roundish, palmately 5 - 9-ribbed and obtusely 5 — 9-lobed, reticulated-veiny, wrapped around the flower-bud when it rises from the ground, much en- larged after expansion and becoming reniform. Flower large for the size of the plant, handsome : petals white. Etymology. Name from sayiguis, blood, in allusion to the color of the juice, which flows copiously from the rootstock or petioles when wounded. Properties. An acrid narcotic, the former quality prevailing ; of con- siderable importance and promise in the materia medica. The active prop- erties appear to be principally due to a peculiar, extremely acrid alkaloid principle, called sanguinarina. The juice was used by the aborigines as a paint or dye ; and hence, like several other tinctorial plants, it was called Puccoon. Geographical Distribution. Common, in rich woods, throughout the United States and Canada. • PLATE 49. Sanguinaria Canadensis, Linn.; — vernal plant, of the natural size. 1. A sepal, enlarged, seen from the inside. 2. A petal, equally enlarged. 3. An enlarged stamen, seen from the inner side. 4. Same, seen obliquely from the outer side. 5. Pistil, enlarged ; and 6, same, divided transversely. 7. An ovule, magnified. 8. A pod, of the natural size. 9. Same, the valves cut away ; the seeds removed from the placenta; above. 10. A seed, enlarged, with its large, crested raphe. 11. Section of the same, showing the embryo at the base of the albumen. 10. Emhrvo, detached and more magnified. Ord. fumariacej:. Herbae tenerse (succo aqueo innocuo), dissectifoliae, exsti- pulatae : dicotyledoneas, hypogynae, hermaphrodita?, dimerae ; petalis 4 cruciatis irregularibus ; staminibus 6 diadelphis dimorphis ; ovario uniloculari, placentis 2 parietalibus ; ovu- lis amphitropis ; embryone in basi albuminis subcurvati minimo. Fcmariaceje, DC. Syst. 2. p. 105, & Prodr. 1. p. 125. Meisn. Gen. p. 8. Lindl. Veg. Kingd. p. 435. Papaverace^e, Subord. Fumariace.e, Bernh. in Linnaea, 8. p. 401, 473. Endl. Gen. p. 858. The Fumitory Family accords so nearly with Papaveracea? in the struc- ture of the fruit and seeds, that these plants were included in that order by Jussieu, and are still regarded by eminent botanists as forming merely a di- vision of it with irregular flowers. Indeed, of the botanists who receive the family as distinct, some admit Hypecoum and its allies to form a component part of it (as does Lindley, notwithstanding his removing the family to another alliance than that which contains the Poppy Family), while others exclude them. According to the latter view, which is manifestly to be adopt- ed when (from considerations of convenience chiefly) the family is kept dis- tinct, Fumariaceaj are to be characterized by the irregular 1 - 2-spurred or saccate corolla, the four connivent petals of which, or at least the two inner, are more or less coherent ; and by the diadelphous stamens, placed three in each set before the exterior petals, with dimorphous anthers ; the central one of each set being two-celled, while the lateral are only one-celled and but half the size. The anthers with the stigma remain inclosed in the little, cavity formed by the cohesion of the spoon-shaped tips of the two inner petals, which never open. The bitterish or slightly acid and watery (instead of colored or milky) juice is not diagnostic : for it is quite the same in Esch- scholtzia and other undoubted Papaveraceae, which apparently are equally destitute of any narcotic quality. To account for the nature and position of the four stamens with one-celled anthers, De Candolle suggested that these result from the fission of the two stamens of the inner series which (in the regular symmetry of the binary flower) should stand before the inner petals; — a view which was reproduced 118 FUMARIACE^. by Lindley (Inlrod. to Nat. System, ed. 1, etc.). On the other hand, M. Gay has recently maintained,* that these are the four normal stamens of a complete inner verticel, while two of those of the outer vertic'el (with 2-cell- ed anthers) are wanting, and that the flower is therefore really hexandrous and with the same arrangement as in Cruciferas. The objection to this view is, that it presupposes a truly quaternary, instead of a binary, plan of the flower. Taking a still different view, I presume that the lateral stamens in this case will be found to arise by the process called " didoubhment " by the French botanists (happily translated deduplication by Mr. Henfrey) ; — a mode of increase in the number of ■parts, particularly of the stamens, which must be allowed to occur in analogous cases, if the observations of Duchatre were accurately made, and which is not at all incompatible with received morphological views ; for a single phyton may as readily give rise to a clus- ter of stamens as to the several leaflets of a digitate leaf. The two sepals are anterior and posterior and the carpels lateral (right and left as respects the axis), just as in Cruciferse ; hut, by the torsion of the pedicel in flower, the carpels, with the outer petals to which they corre- spond, appear to be anterior and posterior. As to sensible qualities, Fumariaceas are slightly bitter and astringent, or with the tubers, &c, a little acrid ; but of no especial importance. This small order, with the exception of two species indigenous to the Cape of Good Hope, belongs entirely to the temperate zone, and chiefly to the Old World. One species of the genus Fumaria (which gives its name to the order, although it is a greatly simplified form, as to the fruit, which is reduced to a one-seeded nutlet) is sparingly naturalized around old gar- dens and dwellings in the Northern States. The indigenous representatives of the family in North America, scarcely a dozen in number, are restricted to three genera ; namely, Dicentra and Adlumia, with both of the exterior petals gibbous or saccate at the base, and Corydatis, in which only one of them is saccate or spurred. * In Jinn. Sci. JVat. ser. 2. (Oct. 1842.) 2. p. 216. FUMARIACE.E. 119 Plate 50. DICENTRA, Borkh. Corolla aequaliter 2-calcarata vel 2-saccata, saepius decidua ; petalis distinctis. Capsula siliquosa ; seminibus cristatis. Dicentra, Borkh. in Rom. Arch. 2. p. 40 (err. typogr. Dichjtra). Bernh. in Linnsea, 8. p. 468. Meisn. Gen. p. 10. Endl. Gen. 4836. Diclytba, DC. Syst. 2. p. 107, & Prodr. 1. p. 125. Dielytra, Hook. Fl. Bor.-Am. 1. p. 35. Torr. &. Gray, Fl. 1. p. 66. Fumarls Sp., Linn. Andr. Bot. Rep. t. 395. Michx. Fl. 2. p. 51. Corydalis Sp., Neck. Pers. Nutt. Gen. 2. p. 85. Cdcullaria, Raf. in Med. Rep. 2. p. 350, & Desv. Jour. Bot. 2. p. 159. Perizomanthus, Pursh. Fl. 2. p. 462 (sub Corydali), excl. spec. Brceclies-Flower. Squirrel-corn. Calyx of 2 very small petaloid or scarious sepals, resem- bling bractlets, never inclosing the flower-bud. Corolla cordate, or two-spurred at the base, compressed, hypogynous, of 4 connivent but distinct petals in two series ; the two exterior larger, alternate with the sepals, similar, saccate or calcarate at the base, appressed, inclosing the inner pair ex- cept their midribs and apex, contracted above, and with short and spreading hooded tips : the two interior opposite the sepals, unguiculate, spoon-shaped or excavate-hooded at the apex, where the two lightly but permanently cohere over the anthers and stigma, their prominent midrib dilated at the sum- mit to form a salient crest : all deciduous, or else scarious-per- sistent around the base of the pod. Stamens 6, in two sets of three each, one set opposite each outer petal and lightly cohering with its insertion and with a linear (or sometimes nearly obsolete) gland that descends into the spur or sac : filaments subulate-filiform, distinct, or the three slightly united, especially about the middle : anthers more or less extrorse, fixed by the base, that of the middle stamen two- celled, those of the lateral one-celled ; the cells opening lon- gitudinally. Ovary one-celled, with two parietal placentas 120 FUMARIACE.E. placed opposite the inner sepals : style subulate or filiform : stigma crest-like, flattened contrary to the placentae, 2 - 4- lobed or horned. Ovules numerous, horizontal in two rows on each placenta, between amphitropous and anatropous. Capsule siliquaeform, lanceolate or oblong, membrana- ceous ; the two valves separable from the filiform interval- vular placentas, which remain with the persistent style. Seeds several, globular-reniform, with a shining crustaceous testa, conspicuously crested at the hilum. Embryo minute, at the narrowed base of I he fleshy albumen next the hilum. Herbs low and acaulescent ; the slender rootstocks tuber- iferous or granuliferous, sending up slender petioles support- ing a ternately-compound leaf with pinnately multifid divis- ions, and scapes, bearing a simple raceme or else cymulose clusters of handsome (white, purple, or cream-colored) flow- ers. Pedicels bracteate and bibracteolate, nodding. Etymology. From Sty, double, and Kivrpov, spur. A slip or typograph- ical error by Borkhausen (who however gave the derivation correctly) gave rise to much confusion respecting the name, as the synonymy shows. Geographical Distribution and Division. A genus of a few North American and two Siberian species. (D. chrysantha, Hook. 6f Am., from California, will probably be found not to belong to the genus.) — Our species form two sections, to be characterized differently from Bernhardi, as follows. § 1. Cucullaria, Raf. — Flowers simply racemose, vernal (either 2-gib- bous or 2-spurred). Gland at the base of the stamens spur-like. Calyx and corolla early deciduous. (D. Cucullaria and D. Canadensis.) § 2. Capnorchis, Borkh. ex Endl. (Eucapnos, Bernh.) — Raceme com- pound ; the flowers c.ymulose-fascicled, produced through the summer. Glands obsolete. Floral envelopes marcescent ! (D. formosa & D. eximia.) PLATE 50. Fig. 1-5. Dicentra Canadensis, DC. (under Diclylra). 1. Dissected flower, enlarged; with 2, the inner petals, removed. 3. Upper part of one set of stamens, more magnified. 4. Enlarged pistil, the ovary cut across to show the ovulation. 5. A fertilized ovule, magnified ; the crest appearing from the raphe above. 6. Ripe pod, with the persistent floral envelopes, of D. eximia. 7. Same, with the valves detached from the replum, and seeds fallen. 8. A seed, from the same, and 9, a section through the crest ; magnified. 10. The embryo taken from the last, and highly magnified. FUMARIACE.E. 121 Plate 51. ADLUMIA, Raf. Corolla e petalis 4 coalitis, basi 2-saccata, marcescenti- persistens, capsulam siliquosam iiicludens. Semina ecrista- ta. — Herba scandens, petiolis cirrhiformibus. Adlumia, Raf. in N. Y. Med. Repos. (hex. 2.) 5. p. 350, &in Desv. Jour. Bot. 2. p. 169. DC. Syst. 2. p. 111. Bernh. in Linnaja, 1. c. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 68. Endl. Gen. 4837. Corydalis Sp., Vent. Choix. t. 19. Calyx of 2 small and scarious sepals, deciduous. Co- rolla as in Dicentra, but the petals all firmly coalescent into an ovate-cordate body, which is marcescent-persistent and perfectly incloses the mature pod. Stamens as in Di- centra, except that the filaments of each set are united nearly to the top into a lanceolate scarious synema. Ovary linear-lanceolate, one-celled, with two parietal placentae : style subulate : stigma flattened and dilated contrary to the placentae, two-lobed. Ovules 4 to 6 on each placenta, alter- nately inserted in a single series, horizontal, nearly anatro- pous ; the raphe superior. Capsule siliquaeform, lanceolate, tipped with the persist- ent style and stigma, always covered by the marcescent corolla, inclosed within the inner petals and the stamineal sheath, two-valved, the intervalvular filiform placenta; form- ing a replum. Seeds 8 to 12, alternately inserted on each placenta in a single series, horizontal, obovoid-reniform, na- ked (not crested at the raphe or hilum); the black crusta- ceous testa smooth and shining. Albumen fleshy, reniform- incurved. Embryo small, cylindrical, in the hilar curvature of the albumen. Herb biennial, with elongated branching stems, climbing gracefully by its tendril-like young petioles ; the leaves al- ternate, 3 - 4-ternately or pinnately decompound, with a 9 122 FUMARIACE^E. very short general petiole, but with elongated secondary di- visions : leaflets delicate, 3 — 5-lobed. Flowers in axillary cymulose panicles, drooping on slender pedicels, white, ting- ed with rose-color. Etymology. Dedicated to the late Major Adlum, an amateur botanist and cultivator. Geographical Distribution. A genus of a single species, native of damp tcopses, &c, in the Northern United States, and often cultivated to form light and delicate bowers in shady places. PLATE 51. Adlumia cirrhosa, Rqf. ; — branch with a single leaf and panicle, natural size. (Cambridge Botanic Garden.) 1. An enlarged persistent flower divided vertically, showing the stamens, with the anthers withdrawn from the cavity at the tip of the inner petals, and the included capsule, one of the placentas towards the eye. 2. A flower, at an earlier stage, with the sepals still present, cut across towards the summit, enlarged. 3. Diagram of the flower ; the two exterior lines representing the sepals ; the next the outer, the others the inner pair of petals, as they would appear in a cross section at their free summits : the inclosed rounded figures represent the anthers, three in each set, and the central figure is a section of the ovary. 4. Anthers of one set, magnified; seen from the outside. 5. Vertical section of the ovary, magnified, showing the ovules. C. Transverse section of the same, in the same position. 7. The replum, enlarged, with two seeds attached. 8. A seed, magnified. 9. Vertical section of the same, showing the albumen and the embryo. 10. Embryo, detached, and more magnified. fumariace/e 123 Plate 52. CORYDALIS, Vent., Bernh. Corolla unicalcarata, ringens, decidua. Capsula silkmosa, polysperma, stylo persistente. Semina crista concava saspe conchiformi strophiolata. — Caulis ramosus e radice subsim- plici. Corydalis, Vent, ex DC. Bernh. in Linnaja, 7. p. 604. (non Neck.) Corydalis, Sect. Capnoides, DC. Syst. 2. p. 122. excl. C. Capnoides. Corydalis, Sect. Capnites, Endl. Gen. 4839. non DC. Fumarij: Sp., Linn. Juss. Lam. Calyx of 2 very small sepals resembling bractlets, decid- uous. Corolla of 4 hypogynous petals, deciduous, irregu- lar, ringent at the summit, where the two exterior are alike, the larger (and in the full-grown flower becoming the upper) one alone calcarate or saccate at the base : the two interior opposite the sepals, similar, much smaller than the exte- rior which inclose them, unguiculate, spoon-shaped, then- concave tips cohering over the stigma and anthers, their keel enlarging into a salient dorsal crest at the summit. Stamens 6, diadelphous, hypogynous, one set inserted opposite each outer petal ; the filaments united nearly to the tip into a di- lated membranaceous synema : the middle anther of each set two-celled, the lateral one-celled (as in Dicentra, &c). A hypogynous gland or spur just under the insertion of the corresponding synema projects into the spur or sac of the upper petal. Ovary one-celled, with two parietal placentae opposite the inner petals : style subulate : stigma flattened and two-lobed contrary to the placentae. Ovules indefinite, horizontal, alternately inserted in a single row upon each placenta, nearly amphitropous ; the raphe superior. Capsule siliqueeform, one-celled, tipped with the persist- ent style and stigma, several — many-seeded, two-valved ■ the valves separating from the replum formed of the persist- 124 FUMARIACEiE. ent filiform intervalvular placental;. Seeds globular-reni- form, with a smooth and shining crustaceous testa, partly covered by a concave or shell-shaped hilar crest. Embryo minute, at the smaller curved extremity of the fleshy albu- men, next the hilum : cotyledons as long as the radicle, foliaceous and lanceolate in germination. Herbs with slender or simple roots (no tuberous caudex), often biennial or annual ; the stem more or less branching, and with ternately or pinnately compound or dissected leaves. Racemes terminal, or becoming opposite the leaves, bracte- ate, often yellow or purple. Etymology. An ancient name for the "crested lark," and for some plant of the Fumitory family, which probably took the name from the spur of the flower, somewhat like that of the Larkspur. Geographical Distribution, &o. Natives of the northern temperate zone, much the greater part Siberian. The two species in the United States, with one on the Pacific coast, belong to the genus as restricted by Bernhardi, whose view it is therefore most convenient to adopt. PLATE 52. Corydalis aurea, Willd. ; — summit of a stem in flower and fruit; natural size. (Botanic Garden, Cambridge ; from Ver- mont, Oakcs.) 1. A flower (with a bractlet), enlarged. 2. Diagram of the disposition of its parts. 3. A dissected flower, more enlarged ; with 4, its pair of inner petals. 5. Pistil, more enlarged, its base cut away, showing a section of the ovary. 6. Vertical section of the lower part, showing the ovules. 7. An ovule, more magnified (the incipient crest forming from the raphe). 8. Enlarged replum of a pod, and seeds; the valves fallen away. 9. A seed, with its crest, more magnified. 10. Vertical section of the same ; showing the minute embryo in place. 11. Embryo, detached and more magnified- Ord. CRUCIFERJ1. Herbas exstipulatas, alternifoliae (succo aqueo pungente) : dicotyledoneae, hypogynae, hermaphroditae, tetramerae ; sepa- lis et fetalis 4 cruciformibus ; staminibus tetradynamis ; siliqua septo membranaceo inter placentas 2 parietales saspis- sime biloculari ; ovulis campylotropis vel amphitropis ; semi- nibus exalbuminosis, cotyledonibus radicular accumbentibus vel incumbentibus. Cruciformes, Tourn. Inst. p. 210. Tetradynam*:, Linn. Gen. p. 329. Sii.i9.uosa:, Linn. Prelect, ed. Giesek. p. 481. , Cruciferx, Adans. Fani. 2. p. 409. Juss. Gen. p. 237. DC. Syst. 2. p. 139, & Prodr. 1. p. 131. Endl. Gen. p. 861. Brassic ace*, Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. ed. 2. p. 58, & Veg. Kingd. p. 351 . The Mustard or Cress Family, one of the most strictly natural and homogeneous which the vegetable kingdom affords, is at once distinguished by its regular cruciform flower, tetradynamous stamens, and by that sort of pod termed a siHque, or, when very short, a silicle. The flowers are formed on the quaternary plan. There are always four sepals, of which the two exterior in the bud are situated one anterior and the other posterior, while the two interior, which are often the larger, are lateral, or right and left, as respects the axis of inflorescence. Although the edges of the outer pair cover those of the inner in the bud (except in the few instances where the aestivation is valvate), yet the plan of the flower is not binary, like that of Fumariaceae (p. 117), but the four sepals constitute a single verticel ; for the four petals are alternate with them, instead of being opposed to them, as would necessarily be the case on the former supposi- tion. The laminae of the four petals, spreading opposite each other in pairs, produce the cruciform shape which gives the name to the order. In aestiva- tion, the petals are imbricated with usually one exterior, two half exterior and half interior, and the fourth wholly interior, or else they are regularly convolute ; the latter mode being only a slight deviation from the former. Both the calyx and the corolla are deciduous in all the family, or at least in all ordinary cases. 126 CRUCIFER.t:. The peculiarity of the stamens gave the name and character to the class, Telradynamia, which in his Artificial System Linnaeus framed for the recep- tion of these plants. Of the six stamens, two are shorter and inserted one opposite each lateral sepal ; while the four longer, which are commonly in- serted a little higher on the receptacle or hypogynous disk, are placed one pair before the posterior, and the other before the anterior sepal. This brings them partly before the four petals respectively ; which has not unnat- urally been taken to be their normal position by several botanists, as by Kunth,* and Gay,f who thus view them as forming the complete inner stamineal verticel, and consequently suppose that half of the exterior verticel (namely, the two stamens which should stand before the anterior and poste- rior sepals respectively) has been suppressed. But it is plain, as our dia- grams (Plates 53, 54, 63, &c.) show, that these four stamens are not oppo- site the petals. As already remarked, they stand in pairs before the anterior and posterior sepals, or alternate, with the two upper and two lower petals, that is to say, just in the places which should be occupied by single stamens to complete the symmetry of the tetramerous flower. In other words, the anterior and posterior stamens of the simple verticel are doubled, just as the two stamens of Fumariaceae are trebled, by deduplication. This explanation, as applied to Fumariaceae, was in type, as it now stands (on page 118), when, just in the nick of time, I received the London Jour- nal of Botany, for January, 1848, containing a beautiful elucidation of the Structure of Cruciferous Floicers, by Prof. Moquin-Tandon and my friend P. Barker Webb, in which this view is brought forward and enforced in a much more thorough and convincing manner than. I could have hoped to do- it. % To the instances cited by them in which one or both of these stamens * L'bcr die Blilthen- vnd Fruchllildung dcr Cruciferen, in Abhandl. Konigl. Mad. lilssensch. Bcrl. 1832. t In Ann. Sci. JVat. Oct. 1842. p. 218. t "De Candolle, himself, has shown in his Memoir on Crucifera, that each pair of geminate stamens has really only the value of a single organ, and con- sequently that the andrceceum in Cruciferae may, like the corolla and calyx, be reduced to the quaternary type." " This theory of the didoubhment of the two longer stamens in this group is confirmed by numerous facts, both normal and anomalous. 1. In many Cru- ciferee, and more particularly in the Clypeola cyclodontea, Del., the filaments of the solitary stamen are furnished with two teeth, one on each side, whilst those of the double stamens have but one on their outer side ; if we join these two stamens together, so that they form but one, a bidentate filament will result en- tirely similar to those of the solitary stamens. " 2. In other Cruciferffi a longer or shorter portion of the filament remains simple. Thus, in the Sterigma tomentosum, DC, the division takes place as tar as the middle; in the Anchonium Billardieri, DC, in a third part only of the upper portion of the filament. Here the position of the longer stamens, double only in their upper portion, is exactly the same as that of the solitary stamens. " 3. In the Vella psendocytisus, Linn., we find, in the place of the double sta- mens, a single one: its filament being frequently rather broader, sometimes di- vided only at its summit, sometimes entirely undivided, but bearing in that case an anther, wholly or partially geminate. "4. Many Crucifcrae become tetrandrous by pclorization, others are normally so. In either case, the four stamens are then equal. CRUCIFERAE. 127 habitually or frequently remain undivided below, we may add the genus Streptanthus (Plate 61, fig. 4). Although these able botanists do not allude to the analogous case of Fumariaceae, yet it is perfectly evident that they would apply the same principle to the explanation of the anomaly in that family. The six anthers are all alike and two-celled. The gynsecium consists of two united carpels, which stand right and left as respects the axis of inflorescence, or one before each of the lateral sepals. The peculiarity of the silique consists in its being two-celled, while the pla- centae are strictly parietal. The explanation of this long since indicated by Brown, and by Lestiboudois, is doubtless the true one ; namely, that the false dissepiment is an extension of the parieties of the carpels, or, so to say, of the epicarp of each, stretching inwards beyond their ovuliferous edges, so as to form, sometimes a narrow border, as in Selenia (Plate 67), &c , but commonly a perfect partition by their union in the centre. The line of junction is frequently indicated by a median nerve (Plates 53, 55, 57, 64). This partition, however thin, is separable into its two component la- mella;, composed apparently of a single stratum of compressed cells, which are of different forms in different plants. Besides this areolation, the par- tition is sometimes veiny, or traversed, more or less copiously, by " tubes having the appearance and ramification of the veins of a leaf." These dif- ferences were pointed out by Mr. Brown, and turned to account in distin- guishing genera.* We have endeavoured to figure the principal forms of areolation which are presented by the species we have illustrated ; but are not prepared to offer any opinion respecting the value of this character. In several Cruciferae, this partition is altogether wanting, especially in the Isatideae, where the pod is indehiscent and only 1-2-seeded, and in Cakile (Plate 74) and its allies, in which the pod is transversely divided and joint- ed. In the dehiscent genera, the two valves always separate from the fili- form placentae, which form the frame (rcphtm) for the partition, and bear the persistent style or stigma. The styles, if any, are always consolidated into one. The two stigmas are either combined, or more or less distinct (2-lobed) ; and the lobes are anterior and posterior, or are placed over the parietal placentas, and not over the cells; just as happens in most Papaveraceae, and in many other cases of parietal placentation. This, along with the abnormal partition and dehis- cence, gave rise to some ingenious hypotheses respecting the structure of the Cruciferous fruit, which need not be here recounted, since their foundations "5. Finally, certain Cruciferae, instead of returning to the quaternary type, recede from it. Their single stamens undergo a change analogous or very sim- ilar to that of the double pair. One of us lias observed flowers of Matthiola in- cana, in which the single stamens were cleft throughout their entire length each portion being provided with half an anther and half a filament. M. Lesti- boudois speaks of a Cheiranthus Cheiri in which these stamens were completely geminated, not laterally as the longer pair, but from without inwards. M. Se- ringa met with a flower of the same species (var. grandiflora) which had the lower stamens ' didoubldes ejartcment comma les sup&rieures.' " — Moq.-Tand. tfc Webb, in 1. c. p. 5, and p. 6, 7. * Ohserr. PI. Oudney, Denham,ty Clappcrlon, p. 12. cl Bcq, 1826 128 CRUCIFER^E. have been entirely swept away by Mr. Brown's masterly exposition of the real nature and composition of the stigma, as well as of the placenta.* In this family the two half-stigmas of different carpels are combined over the placentae, just as those placentae are themselves formed by the junction of the contiguous edges of two different carpellary leaves, that is, of the two half-placentae of different carpels. As applied to Cruciferse, this view has just been very satisfactorily reproduced by Moquin-Tandon and Webb, in the article before cited, and entirely de novo on their part, as they were un- acquainted with Mr. Brown's exposition of this subject until after their arti- cle was prepared for the press. The structure of the flower and fruit in this strictly natural family is so uniform, that it is unnecessary to repeat continually, in our detailed descrip- tions, the characters which are common to the whole, or to which there are few if any exceptions ; such, for instance, as the alternate leaves (to which Dentaria offers the only exception) ; the indefinite racemose inflorescence ; the absence of bracts and bractlets (of which the exceptions are noted where they occur) ; the introrse 2-celled anthers ; the aestivation of the calyx and corolla, which as to the former is imbricated with the anterior and posterior sepals outside, as already mentioned, in all our genera ; and, as to the lat- ter, the same genus or even the same individual exhibits both the imbri- cated-convolute and the truly convolute modes. As at present known, this family comprises at least 1600 species, under about 180 genera. Cruciferous plants are found in every part of the world, but are most abundant by far in the northern temperate zone. There is a larger proportion in the Old World than in the New. The sensible properties of the order are exemplified by its familiar escu- lent and officinal representatives, such as the Mustard, Horseradish, Radish, Cabbage, Turnip, Scurvy-Grass, &c. All have more or less of the volatile acrid principle upon which their stimulant, rubefacient, and antiscorbutic qualities, as well as the pungent flavor, depend. Diffused among abundance of saccharine and farinaceous or mucilaginous matter, this acridity serves as a wholesome natural condiment. Some Cruciferae, like the Rape, are culti- vated for the fixed oil that abounds in the embryo of the exalbuminous seeds. Many are prized for the beauty or fragrance of their flowers ; as the Wall- flower, Stock, &c In a local Flora, it is most convenient to characterize the primary divisions from the fruit, whether dehiscent, indehiscent and nucamentaceous, or lo- mentaceous. In a general system, some characters taken from the seed and embryo should doubtless have precedence ; but it is still uncertain which should take the lead. For the present purpose it will suffice to dispose our comparatively few genera according to the following conspectus. * In Plantce Javanica Rariores, part 2. 1840. p. 106-112, note. For an exposi- tion of this view, see Gray's Botanical Text-Booh, ed. 1. p. 144 (1842), and ed.2. p. 238 (1845). CRUCIFER.E. 129 Conspectus of the Genera of the United States. Ser. I. SiLiquosiE. — Silique 2-valved, jointless. (Cotyle- dons plane, in N. Amer. species.) Tribe I. ARABIDE^E. — Cotyledons plane, parallel with the parti- tion, accumbent (o=), one edge lying against the ascending radicle, which occupies the side remote from the placenta. (Embryo straight in Leaven- worthia.) Silique elongated or sometimes short, many-seeded. * Silique terete or slightly compressed ; the valves nerveless or nearly so. Nasturtium. (Plate 53.) Silique short, often a silicle. Seeds numer- ous, two-ranked in each cell, very small, punctate, on capillary fu- niculi. Calyx spreading : petals sometimes wanting. Iodanthus. (Plate 54.) Silique linear. Seeds one-ranked in each cell, marginless, as broad as the septum. Calyx erect. * * Silique compressed ; the valves flat and nerveless. (Seeds 1-ranked.) Cardamine. (Plate 55.) Silique linear or linear-lanceolate. Seeds wingless, on filiform funiculi. Dentaria. (Plate 56.) Silique lanceolate. Seeds wingless, on dilated and flattened funiculi. Leavenworthia. (Plate 57.) Silique oblong. Seeds winged. Em- bryo straight ! * * * Silique compressed, or somewhat quadrangular; the valves 1-nerved. Arabis. (Plate 58.) Silique linear, elongated ; the valves nearly flat, 1-nerved. Seeds 1-ranked in each cell. Petals somewhat unguicu- late or sessile, the claw plane. Turritis. (Plate 59.) Silique, &c, as in Arabis. Seeds 2-ranked in each cell. Streptanthus. (Plates 60, 61.) Silique linear, elongated ; the valves flat or flattish, 1-nerved. Seeds 1-ranked in each cell. Claw of the petals canaliculate or involute, commonly twisted. Barbarea. (Plate 62.) Silique linear, nearly quadrangular from the carinate- 1-nerved valves. Seeds 1-ranked. Flowers yellow. Tribe IT. SISYMBRIE^E. — Cotyledons plane, placed with their edges to the partition, incumbent (o||), the back of one of them lying against the ascending radicle, which occupies the side remote from the placenta, sometimes oblique, so as to become partly accumbent. Silique mostly linear and elongated, many-seeded. # Silique not stipitate. Erysimum. (Plate 63.) Silique linear, quadrangular, the valves acute- ly carinate- 1-nerved. Calyx erect. Sisymbrium. (Plate 64.) Silique linear or oblong, terete or 4 - 6-an- gular ; the valves convex, 1-3-nerved. Calyx equal, usually open. » # Silique long-stipitate, linear. Petals with long claws. 130 CRUCIFER.E. Stanleva. (Plate 05.) Claws of the petals connivent into a tube ; the linear sepals spreading. Silique nearly terete or quadrangular. Flowers yellow or greenish. Warea. (Plate 66.) Claws of the (white or rose-purple) petals spread- ing. Silique compressed, the valves nearly flat, 1-nerved. Ser. II. SiLicuLosa:. — Silicle (rounded, or not much long- er than broad) opening by valves. Cotyledons plane, not longitudinally plicate nor spirally convolute. Tribe III. ALYSSINEiE. — Silicle with a broad partition (or rarely none) which is parallel with the flat or convex valves. Cotyledons broad, accumbent against the ascending radicle (o=), parallel with the partition. # Silicle compressed. Seeds on free funiculi. Selenia. (Plate 67.) Silicle oval, flat, subulate with the long style, many-seeded. Seeds orbicular, surrounded by a wing. Draea. (Plates 68, 69.) Silicle elliptical, oval, or linear-oblong, com- pressed, many-seeded. Seeds wingless. • # Silicle globose-inflated. Funiculi partly adnate. Vesicaria. (Plate 70.) Valves of the several-seeded silicle hemispherical. Tribe IV. SUBULARIE^E. — Silicle oval, turgid, with a rather broad partition, the cells several-seeded. Cotyledons bent transversely be- low the middle and incumbent on the ascending radicle. Subularia. (Plate 71.) Silicle somewhat flattened contrary to the par- tition, the convex valves rather boat-shaped. Leaves all radical, subulate. Tribe V. SENEBIEREiE. — Silicle compressed contrary to the very narrow partition, didymous ; the globular-ventricose valves closed or nearly so, 1-seeded. Cotyledons as in Tribe IV. Senebiera. (Plate 72.) Cells of the silicle rugose-reticulated, separat- ing entire. Flowers minute. Tribe VI. LEPIDINE2E. — Silicle compressed contrary to the very narrow partition ; the valves strongly boat-shaped or carinate. Cotyledons plane, incumbent (rarely accumbent) on the ascending radicle. Lepidium. (Plate 73.) Seeds solitary in each cell : funiculi free. Ser. III. Lomentaceje. — Silique or silicle transversely 2- several-celled, and articulated. Tribe VII. CAKILINE/E. Cotyledons plane, accumbent. Cakile. (Plate 74.) Silicle 2-jointed ; the joints 1-celled, 1-seeded. Seed suspended tn the lower, erect in the upper cell. CRUCIFEll^E. 131 Plate 53. NASTURTIUM, R. Br. Siliqua abbreviata vel silicula teretiuscula, valvis turgidis enerviis. Semina in loculis biseriata, numerosissima, parva, immarginata ; funiculis capillaribus. Cotyledones planse ac- cumbentes. — Calyx patens. Petala flava vel alba, iiiterdum abortiva. Nasturtium, R. Br. in Ait. Kew. ed. 2. 4. p. 109. DC. Syst. 2. p. 187. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 72. Endl. Gen. 4850. Sisymbrii Sp., Linn. Schkuhr, Handb. t. 187. excl. spec. ? Armoracia, Rupp. Fl. Jen. Koch, Fl. Germ. p. 66. Water-Cress. Calyx spreading, somewhat colored ; the sepals imbricat- ed in aestivation, equal at the base. Petals spreading, obo- vate or cuneiform, sometimes obsolete. Filaments subulate or filiform, toothless: anthers oval or sagittate. Hypogy- nous glands 4 or 6. Ovary ovoid, oblong, or linear, some- times one-celled from the incompletion of the partition : style short or none, rarely slender : stigma capitate or de- pressed, obscurely two-lobed. Ovules numerous, irregu- larly crowded in several rows on each placenta (in two or more ranks in each cell), nearly horizontal. Silique or silicle varying from linear or oblong to ellip- tical or even globose-ovoid, terete or slightly compressed parallel with the partition, two-valved ; the turgid or strong- ly convex valves destitute of keel or midnerve ; the partition nerveless or one-nerved in the middle. Seeds indefinite and usually very numerous, occupying two rows in each cell, on irregularly crowded capillary free funiculi, more or less pendulous, flattish, rounded, impressed-punctate. Radicle ascending on the side towards the axis (remote from the pla- centa) ; the cotyledons accumbent, plane, parallel with the partition. 132 CRUCIFER^E. Herbs growing in water or wet places, smooth or simply hirsute ; with annual, biennial, or perennial roots, and branch- ing stems which are frequently rooting below. Leaves usu- ally lyrately toothed or pinnatifid, or pinnately parted ; the petioles often auriculate-dilated at the base. Flowers small or minute, yellow or white ; the racemes prolonged in fruit. Etymology. An old name for several pungent Cruciferous plants, said to be compounded of nasus and tortus, from their effect upon the nostrils. Geographical Distribution, &c. A cosmopolite genus, the species of which are of difficult extrication, especially those of the section Brachylo- bos, DC, which have for the most part yellow or yellowish flowers. The Water-Cress is the type of a peculiar section of the genus (Cardaminum, DC). While many species bear linear siliques, others by gradual transi- tion have oblong, elliptical, ovoid, or even globular silicles, some of which C. A. Meyer therefore refers to Cochlearia § Armoracia. Indeed, the white- flowered N. lacustre, Gray, ined.,* is so exactly an Armoracia as to con- vince me that that group, if it can be detached from Cochlearia, will have to be appended to the present genus ; — which, taken as a whole, would be more naturally placed among Alyssineae than in Arabideae. — The Ameri- can N. palustre (which usually has shorter pods than the European plant) sometimes exhibits 3 - 4-carpellary and completely 3-4-celled ovaries. PLATE 53. Nasturtium sessiliflorum, Nutt. ; — a small specimen (from St. Louis, Engelmann) ; natural size. (Excl. fig. 1 -5.) 1. Diagram of the flower of N. palustre, the common North American plant so called. 2. An enlarged flower of the same. 3. Stamens and pistil ; and 4, inside view of a stamen, more enlarged. 5. Pistil and receptacle, more magnified. 6. Silique of N. sessiliflorum, enlarged ; one valve and most of the seeds detached. 7. Tissue from the partition, highly magnified. 8. A seed ; and 9, section across the accumbent cotyledons and radicle ; magnified. * The Nasturtium natans, Hook. FL. Bor.-Jlm., Torr. fy Gr. Fl., &c. (N. na- tans 8. Americanum, Gray, in Jinn. Lye. N. Y.) Its flowers are much larger than in N. natans, DC. (which is the Cochlearia amphibia, ft. Mryer) ; the white petals are twice the length of the calyx, and there is no partition to the pod, except a narrow border. CRUCIFERiE. 133 Plate 54. IODANTHUS, Torr. fy Gr. Siliqua linearis, teres, valvis convexis fere enerviis. Se- mina in loculis uniserialia, immarginata. Cotyledones plana? accnmbentes. — Calyx erectus, unguibus petalorum brevior. Iodanthus, Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 72 (sub Cheirantho). Gray, Man. Bot. N. U. S. p. 33. Hespebidis Sp., Michx. Fl. 2. p. 31. Nntt. Gen. 2. p. 69. DC. 1. c. False Rocket. Calyx erect, imbricated in aestivation : the lateral sepals slightly gibbons at the base, in the bud furnished with a cornute process next the apex. Petals spreading, spatu- late-obovate, tapering into a narrow claw which is longer than the sepals, entire, imbricated-convolute in aestivation. Stamens strongly tetradynamous : filaments subulate-fili- form, toothless : anthers sagittate. Glands 4. Ovary linear-oblong : style short and thick : stigma hemispheri- cal. Ovules numerous, alternately inserted and forming only one row in each cell. Silique linear, terete, rather fleshy, somewhat torulose when dry, tipped with the short style, two-valved ; the con- vex valves not carinate or nerved on the back (or with an obscure midnerve when dry) : the partition nerveless, com- posed of linear-oblong longitudinal areolae, bounded by nearly straight lines. Seeds several in each cell, forming a single series, occupying the whole breadth of the partition, oval, pendulous on short and free ascending funiculi which are geniculate-inflexed at the apex, not margined. Radicle ascending on the side farthest from its placenta ; the coty- ledons parallel with the partition, plane, accumbent. Herb with a branching stem from a perennial fibrous root, and oblong-ovate and acuminate leaves, which are sharply and irregularly toothed ; the lower lyrate, with small lateral 134 CRUCIFER.f:. divisions, the margined petiole auriculate-sagittate at the base. Racemes loose, elongated, somewhat panicled, ebrac- teate : the rather large and showy flowers violet-purple. Etymology. From itiSijr, viokl-colored , and Svdos, flower, in allusion to the color of the petals. Geographical Distribution, &c. A genus of a single species, indi- genous to the Western United States, removed, on account of its accumbent cotyledons, from Hesperis, with which genus in all other respects it seems substantially to accord. PLATE 54. Iodanthus hesperidoides, Tott. ' on partial dissepiments which project into the cell ; and the dehiscence of the 14 Z\i CISTACEiE. capsule being loculicidal, these are borne on tlie middle of the valves, as in the two preceding families. The elongated embryo is more or less excen- tric, and either slightly curved (as in Lechea), or circulate, conduplicate or variously convolute in the midst of the farinaceous (rarely corneous) albu- men ; the slender radicle pointing to the extremity of the seed remote from the hilum. Cistaceae possess no marked sensible qualities and furnish no useful prod- ucts except a balsamic gum-resin, such as the officinal Ladanum, yielded by Cistus Creticus and its allies, which exudes from the leaves and branches of many species so as to render them glutinous. They are all slightly as- tringent. The principal home of this family is in the western part of the Old World, and especially around the Mediterranean. There are five or six species of Helianthemum in the New World, chiefly in the warmer portion of the United States (one of them in California), be- sides Lechea and Hudsonia, which are peculiar to this country. CISTACEiE. 203 Plate 87. HELIANTHEMUM, Town. Petala 5, ephemera, asstivatione pi. m. corrugata. Stamina indefinita. Capsula imilocularis, 3-valvis, pleio-oligosperma. Semina orthotropa. Embryo circinatus, circumflexus, vel uncinatus. — Herbas vel siiffruticuli. Helianthesium, Toum. Inst. p. 248. 1. 128. Grertn. Fr. 1. 1. 76. Michx. Fl. 1. p. 308. Dunal, in DC. Prodr. 1. p. 266. (excl. plur.) Spach, in Ann. Sci. Nat. ser. 2. 6. p. 360 (cum Croeanthenio). Endl. Gen. 502!). (excl. spec.) Cisti Sp., Linn. etc. Subgen. Heteromeris. — Flores majusculi 5-petali et po- lyandri, cum parvulis apetalis saspiusve cryptopetalis 3 — 10- andris plerumque in eadem stirpe mixti. — Herbas perennes, foliis alternis vel suboppositis exstipulatis. Heteromeris, Spach, in Ann. Sci. Nat. I. c.& inComp.Bot. Mag. 2. p. 200. Helianthemi Sect. Lecheoipes, Dunal, in DC. I. c. p. 269. Rock-rose. Frost-weed. Calyx herbaceous, persistent : sepals 5, of which the two exterior are much smaller or minute and rather to be regard- ed as bractlets ; the three proper sepals equal, convolute in aestivation. Petals 5, hypogynous, unsymmetrically placed as respects the sepals, more or less crumpled and convolute in the contrary direction from the sepals in aestivation, spreading, rounded or dilated-cuneiform, equal, expanding in sunshine for a single day, then caducous. Stamens indefi- nite, hypogynous, all fertile, caducous: filaments filiform, distinct : anthers introrse or innate ; the cells opening lon- gitudinally. Ovary ovoid, one-celled with three parietal placentae, or incompletely three-celled by their projection : style articulated with the summit of the ovary, or very short or wanting : stigma capitate, three-lobed or three- crested. Ovules orthotropous, nodding or recurved on as- 14* 204 CISTACE2E. cending filiform funiculi, numerous or few. — In the section Heteromeris, there are produced, in the course of the season, clusters of smaller flowers, with petals which do not exceed the calyx and seldom or never expand, or else are apeta- lous or tripetalous, 3— 10-androus, and few-ovuled. Capsule chartaceous or cartilaginous, one-celled or half three-celled, three-valved, loculicidal, the valves bearing the narrow placentae upon their middle, few - many-seeded. Seeds usually on slender funiculi, orthotropous, with a crus- taceous testa. Embryo excentric, circumflexed or curved nearly into a ring in the midst of the farinaceous albumen : the slender radicle pointing to the apical micropyle : coty- ledons flattish, oval, oblong, or linear. Herbs or suffruticose plants, usually low and branching ; with alternate or partly opposite entire leaves, and yellow, or sometimes white or rose-colored flowers. Stipules none in American species. Etymology. Name formed of ifKios, the sun, and avBcpav, flower ; the blossoms opening only in direct sunshine. Geographical Distribution. A genus of numerous species in the warmer parts of Europe and especially in the Mediterranean region, and with a few in similar parts of North America, nearly all of which belong to Heteromeris, fipach. One species only extends northward to Canada. PLATE 87. Helianthemum (Heteromeris) Canadense, Michx, ; — a flowering stem, early in the season, of the natural size. 1. Diagram of the aestivation and plan of the flower. 2. A magnified stamen, seen from the outside ; and 3, from the inside. 4. Pistil and receptacle, magnified. 5. Same, vertically divided, showing the numerous ovules on long funiculi, fi. Transverse section, showing the slightly introflexed placenta;. 7. A magnified pistil of one of the smaller and later flowers. 8. Vertical section of the same, showing a solitary ovule on each placenta1. 9. A capsule (and calyx) from a secondary flower, enlarged. 10. A many-seeded capsule (and calyx) of a primary, petaliferous flower, enlarged to the same degree as the last. 11. A seed, magnified. 12. Vertical section of the same, showing the circumflexed-uncinate em- bryo in the albumen. cistace.l. 205 Plate 88, 89. LECHEA, L. Petala 3, parva, in alabastro plana, marcescentia. Stami- na 3 — 12. Ovarium incomplete 3-loculare : placentae 3 late lamelliformes semiseptis adnatas, extus 2-ovuliferae. Stig- mata plumoso-fimbriata. Capsula 3-valvis : valvas a semi- septis placentisve solutae. Embryo rectiusculus, fere axilis. — Herbae exstipulatae, parviflorae, floribus sordide purpureis. Lechea, Linn. Gen. 142. GaJitn. Fr. t. 129. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 285. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 152. Endl. Gen. 5030. Lechea & Lechidium, Spach, in Comp. Bot. Mag. 2. p. 282, & Ann. Sci. Nat. I. c. Pinweed. Calyx herbaceous, persistent, of 5 sepals ; the two exte- rior in the bud minute and rather to be regarded as bractlets ; the three proper sepals convolute in aestivation, ovate, con- cave. Petals 3, hypogynous, alternate with the three prop- er sepals, and not longer than they, obovate or oblong, con- volute but not crumpled in aestivation, marcescent-persistent. Stamens hypogynous, 3 - 12, when only three placed oppo- site the petals, shorter than they : filaments filiform : an- thers oval, introrse, the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary globular, raised on a very short stipe, incompletely three- celled, the 3 imperfect partitions each bearing a large oval and valve-shaped placenta : style very short or obsolete : stigmas 3, fimbriate-plumose. Ovules 2 on each placenta, borne on. the base of the posterior face one on each side of the partition, erect, orthotropous, on very short funiculi. Capsule cartilaginous, triangular -ovoid or globular, inclos- ed in the connivent calyx or nearly so, 3 - 6-seeded, loculi- cidally three-valved ; the valves separating from the broad and crustaceous placentae, which appear like an inner set of valves curved in the opposite direction, and inclosing the 206 CISTACE.E. two or by abortion the single erect seeds between them and the proper valves. Embryo straight or 'accumbently arcuate in the axis or nearly so of the corneous albumen : radicle cylindrical, superior : cotyledons elliptical or obovate, flat. Herbs, branching and often suftrutescent at the base, with entire and mostly sessile puncticulate leaves ; the lower usu- ally opposite or verticillate, the upper alternate, gradually reduced to bracts. Flowers very small and numerous, cy- mulose-clustered, or racemiform on the branches (but not axillary), pedicellate. Petals and stigmas dull purple. Etymology. Dedicated to Leche, a Swedish botanist, Professor at Abo. Geographical Distribution. An Eastern North American genus of three or four species, growing chiefly in sandy or sterile soil, from Canada to Texas, principally along and near the coast. Division. There are two pretty well-marked sections, which are viewed as genera by Spach, namely : — ^ 1. Lechea, Spach. — Placentae membranaceo-crustaceous, fragile, sepa- rating from the evanescent partitions and revolute around the seeds. § 2. Lechidium, Spach. — Placentae cartilaginous, scarcely recurved, firm- ly adherent to the persistent partitions which separate from the valves at dehiscence. Pedicels slender, deflexed. (L. Drummondii.) PLATE 88. Lechea thymifolia, Pursh; — flowering stem, with some of the sterile shoots at the base ; from the coast of Massachusetts. 1. Diagram of the flower and aestivation. 2. Open flower, magnified. 3. A stamen ; and 4, pistil and receptacle, more magnified. 5. Double section of the ovary, displaying the ovules and placentae. 6. Capsule, with the calyx opened, enlarged. 7. Magnified cross-section of the valves, placentae, and seeds. 8. Magnified seed ; and 9, vertical section of the same. 10. The embryo from the last, showing the cotyledons. PLATE 89. Lechea (Lechidium) Drummondii, Torr. <% Grl (Texas.) 1. Flower-bud, enlarged ; and 2, diagram in a transverse section. 3. Expanded flower, magnified. 4. An inner sepal ; 5, a petal ; and 6, a stamen, more magnified. 7. Pistil and receptacle, equally magnified. 8. Transverse section of a ripe capsule and seeds, showing the septifragal valves, and the persistent partitions fixed to the placenta?. < 9. A magnified seed. CISTACE^i:. 207 Plate 90. HUDSONIA, L. Petala 5, calyce majora, ephemera. Stamina 9-30. Ova- rium uniloculare, placentis 3 nerviformibus 2-ovulatis ; stylo filiformi stigmate minuto desinente. Capsula calyce tubu- loso-connivente inclusa, 3-valvis, 2 - 6-sperma. Embryo uncinato-circinatus, gracilis. — Fruticuli ericoidei, canescen- tes, dense csespitosi, foliis parvis imbricatis persistentibus, floribus luteis. Hudsonia, Linn. Mant. p. 11. VVilld. Hort. Ber. t. 15. Giertn. f. Fr. 3. p. 152. t. 310. Nutt. Gen. 2. p. 4. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 284. Spach, in Ann. Sci. Nat. ser. 2. 6. p. 372. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 154. Endl. Gen. 5031. Torr. FI. New York, 1. p. 80. t. 9. Calyx of 5 sepals ; the two exterior minute and resem- bling bractlets; the three others ovate, equal, convolute in aestivation, colored (yellowish) inside, united at the base, persistent, at length connivent in a tube and inclosing the capsule. Petals 5, hypogynous, convolute in aestivation, obovate or cuneiform, much larger than the sepals, thin and delicate, caducous. Stamens 9 to 30, hypogynous, decidu- ous : filaments filiform : anthers roundish, innate or slight- ly introrse, the cells opening laterally by a longitudinal line. OvABT'sessile on the convex torus, ovoid, strictly one-celled, with three nerviform parietal placentas : style long and fili- form, straight, persistent : stigma truncate, minutely three- lobed. Ovules two from the lower part of each placenta, orthotropous, ascending, on slender funiculi. Capsule oblong, somewhat triangular, inclosed in the connivent calyx, one-celled, three-valved ; the chartaceous valves bearing the narrow placentae upon their middle. Seeds one or two on each placenta, ascending from near the base, ovate ; the testa nearly smooth, crustaceous. Em- 208 CISTACE-iE. bryo linear, slender, homotropous ; the radicle about the length of the thin farinaceous albumen, superior, excentric ; the linear cotyledons incumbently uncinate-circinate. Shrubs dwarf and casspitose, Heath-like, much branched, hoary-tomentose ; the very small leaves closely imbricated on the stems and branches, alternate, subulate or linear- oblong, sessile, appressed or somewhat spreading, persistent. Flowers sessile or peduncled, terminating the crowded short branchlets, expanding in sunshine for a single day only, yellow. Etymology. Dedicated to Hudson, the author of the Flora Anglica, an English botanist contemporary with Linnaeus. Geographical Distribution, &c. A genus of three Eastern North American species, growing in sandy soil chiefly along the coast ; one of them (H. tomentosa) nearly confined to the sea-shore, and to the shores of the Great Lakes, extending northward to Slave Lake. PLATE 90. Hudsonia tomentosa, Nutt. ; — branch in flower, of the natural size, from the coast of Massachusetts. (Ipswich, Oakes.) 1. A leaf, magnified. 2. Diagram of the flower and aestivation. (The placenta alternate with the sepals; but are wrongly placed opposite them.) 3. Branchlet and flower, enlarged. 4. A stamen, magnified. 5. Same, with the anther transversely divided. 6. Pistil, with the receptacle, magnified. 7. Same, with the ovary divided vertically, showing the ovules. 8. An ovule, more magnified. 9. Dehiscent capsule and persistent calyx, enlarged. 10. A seed, more magnified. 11. Vertical section of the same, showing the embryo in the albumen. Ord. HYPERICACEiE. Frutices vel herbas (succo acrido resinoso), exstipulatse, foliis oppositis integerrimis punctatis : dicotyledoneac, hypo- gynaa, 5 - 4-petalas, regulares, poly-oligandrae ; staminibus saepissime 3 - 5-adelphis ; petalis aestivatione convolutis rari- usve imbricatis; ovario 2 - 5-carpellavi uniloculari placentis pi. m. parietalibus, aut placentis inter se ad axim coalitis 2— 5-loculari, stylis totidem pi. m. discretis ; ovulis anatro- pis ; capsula plerumque septicida et polysperma; seminibus exalbuminosis ; cotyledonibus brevibus. Hvperica, Juss. Gen. p. 254. Hvpericineje, DC. Fl. Fr. Chois. Prodr. Mon. Hyper. & in DC. Trodr. 1. p. 541. Endl. Gen. p. 1031. Hvpericace.e, Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. ed. 2. p. 77. Spach, Suit. Burl'. 5. p. 335, & in Ann. Sci. Nat. ser. 2. 5. p. 157, 349. The St. John's-wort Family is doubtless most nearly related to the tropical order called Guttiferae or Clusiaceae ; but in an extra-tropical Flora it is most conveniently introduced between the Cistaceae and the small family of Elatinaceae. Among our hypogynous polypetalous orders it is readily distinguished by the opposite and entire leaves, which are punctate (as also the sepals, petals, &c.) with pellucid dots and usually with dark-colored ones intermixed, and destitute of stipules ; by the regular pentamerous (or in Ascyium alone tetramerous) calyx and corolla ; the prevailingly polyandrous and 3 - 5-adel- phous stamens ; the separate or separable styles ; the septicidal capsule ; and the indefinite and exalbuminous (oblong or cylindrical and straight or somewhat curved) anatropous seeds. The embryo is conformed to the cavity of the rather thick and fleshy inner integument of the seed, which some- times has been mistaken for a thin albumen ; it is oblong or cylindrical, with the obtuse radicle usually much longer than the thick or flattish cotyledons. The foliaceous or herbaceous calyx is persistent, and imbricated in sestiva- tion. The petals are either deciduous or marcescent, and usually oblique and convolute in aestivation, but in Elodea they arc equal-sided and quinruu- cially imbricated. The inflorescence is always cymose. 210 • HYPERICACE.E. The pellucid dots of the leaves are glandular vesicles, filled with an ethe- real oil, of which the coloring matter of the dark glands is probably a sort of resin or balsam. To this secretion, and to the free resinous juice, which especially abounds in tropical plants of the family, the acrid and balsamic qualities which pervade the order are owing. The yellow juice of some Equatorial American trees or shrubs of the order is strongly cathartic, and furnishes a product ( Gummi Gutla) analogous to gaml/oge, which is a prod- uct of some Ceylonese trees of the allied family of Guttiferee. Hypericacese are widely diffused over the world, but are most abundant in the warmer temperate climes. Far the greater part belong to Hypericum, as received by Linnaeus, Endlicher, and most, botanists. Besides the typical genus, we have in the United States Ascyrum, characterized by its quater- nary calyx and corolla ; and Elodea, with equal-sided petals, and conspicu- ous hypogynous glands interposed between the three stamen-clusters. HYPERICACE^E. 211 Plate 91. ASCYRUM, L. Sepala 4, decussata ; exteriora multo majora. Petala 4, aestivatione convoluta. Glandulae inter stamina indefinita nullae. Capsula unilocularis. — Flores flavi. Ascvrhm, Linn. Gen. 903. Nutt. Gen. 2. p. 15. Chois. in DC. I. c. p. 55. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 156, 671. Endl. Gen. 5463. Ascyrdm (& Isophvllum ?), Spach, in Ann. Sci. Nat. I.e. p. 367. St. Peter's-wort. Calyx foliaceous ; the 4 sepals imbricated two exterior and two interior in aestivation ; the exterior usually rounded or cordate and much larger than the inner pair, spreading in flower, enlarging in fruit and valvate-connivent over the capsule, persistent. Petals 4, hypogynous on the short receptacle, cruciate, widely spreading, obovate or linear- oblong, convolute in aestivation, somewhat oblique, decidu- ous. Stamens indefinite, 9 to 100, hypogynous : filaments distinct or obscurely united at the very base, scarcely clus- tered, capillary, marcescent : anthers round-oval, didymous, introrse, fixed by the middle, somewhat apiculate by the glandular point of the interposed connective ; the cells open- ing longitudinally. Ovary ovoid, one-celled, 2 - 4-lobed, with two to four somewhat introflexed parietal placentas : styles 2 to 4, united below or distinct, short or slender, per- sistent, stigmatose at the apex down the inner side. Ovules very numerous, horizontal, in several rows on the inner face of each placenta, anatropous. Capsule ovoid, often somewhat compressed parallel to the larger sepals, one-celled, septicidally 2 - 4-valved, the sutures dividing the lamelliform parietal placentae. Seeds very numerous and small, horizontal on the inner face of each placenta, oval or oblong, straight ; the crustaceous testa minutely reticulated; the inner integument thickish. Al- 212 HYPERICACE.E. bumen none. Embryo cylindrical : cotyledons very short, at the extremity opposite the hilum. Suffruticose, with the branches or young stems ancipi- tal, very leafy, and terminated with single large flowers or three together. Leaves all opposite, sessile, often partly clasping, oval, oblong, or obovate, entire, usually opaque and coriaceous, punctate with translucent and beneath with blackish dots. Pedicels bibracteolate. Petals yellow. Etymology. An old name of the St. JohnVwort, composed of a priva- tive, and a-Kipos, asperity, from the smoothness of these plants. Geographical Distribution, &c. A genus of several species, natives of the Atlantic and chiefly Southern United States, and of the West Indies. Two species extend northward in the warm Pine barrens near the coast, as far as New Jersey and Long Island. — Besides the genuine species, which have the outer pair of sepals ovate or cordate, many times larger than the narrow or minute and somewhat colored inner pair, and entirely inclos- ing them as well as the pod in fruit, there is a single species in Florida (A. microsepalum, Torr. cj- Gr.; the genus Isophyllum, Spactt) with the small and narrow sepals not more unequal than in Hypericum, from which it dif- fers only in the quaternary number of parts, and to which, rather than to Ascyrum, it should most probably be appended. Thus restricted, the pres- ent genus is well marked in habit and character. PLATE 91. Ascyrum stans, Miehx. ; — a flowering branch (from New Jersey, Knitskirn), of the natural size. 1. Diagram of the flower, aestivation, &c. 2. Flower, the petals removed or fallen. 3. Outsidej and 4, inside view of an anther, &c, magnified. 5. A tricarpellary pistil and the receptacle, magnified. 6. Transverse section of the same, showing the placenta; and ovules. 7. An ovule, more magnified. 8. Capsule in the fructiferous calyx, the anterior sepal turned down. 9. Capsule removed from the calyx, of the natural size. 10. A magnified seed. 11. Vertical section of the same and of the contained embryo. hypericace^e. 213 Plate 92, 93. HYPERICUM, Tourn., L. Sepala 5. Petala 5, inaequilatera, aestivatione convoluta. Glandulae inter stamina indefinita rariusve pauca nullae. Capsula 1 — 5-locularis. — Flores flavi. Hypericum, Lam. Ill t. 643. Giertn. Fr. t. 62. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. I. p. 157. Endl. Gen. 5464. Hypericum, Ascyrum, & Androsjemum, Tourn. Inst. &c. Hypericum & Sarothra, Linn. Gen. 383, 902. excl. spec. St. Jolin's-wort. Calyx herbaceous or foliaceous, persistent ; the sepals 5, equal or somewhat unequal, imbricated in aestivation, two of them exterior (and often rather larger), and two interior, distinct, or united at the base. Petals 5, hypogynous, alternate with the sepals, convolute in aestivation, usually oblique or unequal -sided, naked, deciduous or marcescent. Stamens indefinite, very numerous, or sometimes few, hypogynous, commonly 3 — 5-adelphous at the base or more or less distinctly collected in as many clusters : filaments capillary, marcescent : anthers globular, didy- mous, introrse ; the cells opening longitudinally. Hypogy- nous glands none. Ovary of 3 or 5 united carpels (which are opposite the sepals when of equal number), one-celled, with three or five strictly parietal or introflexed placentae, or 3 - 5-celled by the junction and cohesion of the placentae in the axis : styles 3 or 5, filiform, distinct, or united below, sometimes united to the apex, but separable in fruit, persist- ent : stigmas usually capitate. Ovules indefinite, in two or several series on each placenta, horizontal, anatropous. Capsule like the ovary one-celled with projecting or strictly parietal placentae, or 3 - 5-celled by the junction of the placentae in the axis, septicidally 3 - 5-valved ; the pla- centae adhering to the inflexed edges of the valves, or often 214 HYPERICACE.E. separating from them. Seeds very numerous, anatropous, oblong or cylindrical, straight or sometimes incurved ; the testa usually conformed to the nucleus and crustaceous, or bearing a wing-like raphe ; the inner integument thickish and fleshy. Albumen none. Embryo oblong or cylindrical ; the cotyledons short, at the extremity opposite the hilum. Herbs or shrubs ; with opposite and entire leaves, punc- tate with pellucid and usually also with dark-colored dots ; and commonly showy yellow flowers, which are terminal and solitary or in cymes. Etymology. 'YirepiKov, an ancient name, of uncertain derivation. Geographical Distribution, &c. This large and polymorphous genus is widely distributed over the world, but far most copiously in the eastern part of the warmer temperate regions of the northern hemisphere, bolh in the New and in the Old World. It is doubtless to be divided hereafter, but not to be dismembered to the extent proposed by Spach. Properties. The herbage is acrid, especially in the herbaceous species, as irt the Common St. John's-wort, which has been variously used in popu- lar medicine. Many species are also balsamic. PLATE 92. Hypericum graveolens, Buckley; — summit of a flowering plant, cultivated in the Cambridge Botanic Garden, from the moun- tains of North Carolina ; of the natural size. 1. Diagram of the flower, aestivation, &c. 2. One of the three sets of stamens (united at the base), enlarged. 3. Inside, and 4, outside view of a more magnified stamen. 5. Pistil, magnified ; and 6, transverse section of the ovary. 7. An ovule, more magnified. 8. Enlarged capsule, divided transversely, with the calyx. 9. Magnified seed ; and 10, vertical section of the same and of the embryo. PLATE 93. Hypericum (Brathys) Sarothra, Michx. ; — natural size. 1. Diagram of the flower. (Stamens 8, in three sets.) 2. Enlarged flower; and 3, the two stamens of the third set, magnified. 4. Pistil, magnified. 5. Enlarged capsule, transversely divided, showing the truly parietal seeds. 6. A magnified seed ; and 7, section of the same and of the embryo. 8. Capsule (5-celled) of Hypericum (Roscyna, Spach) pyramidatum, Ait. ; — in dehiscence, divided transversely and enlarged. 9. A magnified seed ; and 10, the same and the embryo vertically divided. HYPERJCACEjE. 215 Plate 94. ELODEA, Adans. Sepala 5. Petala 5, asquilatera, inappendiculata, aestiva- tione imbricata, decidua. Glandulae squamiformes 3, pha- langibus staminum ssspissime 3-andris alternse. Capsula 3- locularis. — Flores rubelli. Elodea, Adans. Fam. 2. p. 443. Pursh, Fl. 2. p. 479. Nutl. Gen. 2. p. 17. Spach, in Ann. Sci. Nat. 1. c. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 167. Endl. Gen. 5465. (excl. § b. c.) Hyperici Sp., Linn., Michx. Hyperici Sect. Elodea, Chois. Prodr. Mon. Hyp. p 43, & in DC. 1. c. Triadenium, Raf. in Med. Repos. hex. 6. 2. p. 350. Martia, Spreng. Syst. 3. p. 333. Marsh St. Jolin's-wort. Calyx persistent, of 5 nearly equal nervose-striate sepals, erect, chartaceo-herbaceous, quincuncially imbricated in aes- tivation, persistent. Petals 5, hypogynous, ovate or spatu- late, equal-sided, not appendiculate, imbricated in aestivation (two exterior and two interior), spreading in anthesis, other- wise erect, deciduous. Stamens 9 (rarely 12 or 15), triadel- phous, not longer than the calyx, hypogynous ; the phalan- ges placed opposite the dissepiments, one before each exte- rior petal, and the third between the third and fifth petals : filaments united for one third or half then length, then linear-filiform, persistent : anthers globular, didymous, in- trorse, apiculate with the glandular apex of the connective, the cells opening longitudinally. Hypogynous glands 3, conspicuous, interposed between the phalanges of the sta- mens, ovate, fleshy and nectariferous (orange-colored). Ovary ovoid-oblong, three-celled by the junction of the thick pla- centas in the axis : styles 3, subulate, stigmatose down the inner side. Ovules numerous, in three or more series on each placenta, horizontal, anatropous. Capsule oblong, chartaceous. three-celled, many-seeded. 216 HYPERICACE^E. septicidally three-valved. Seeds very numerous, horizontal, oblong ; the crustaceous testa minutely striate and scrobicu- late ; the inner integument fleshy. Albumen none. Em- bryo conformed to the seed, cylindrical : cotyledons at the apex remote from the hilum, much shorter than the radicle. Herbs very smooth and pale green, with perennial roots, terete and branching stems, and decussately opposite oval or oblong entire leaves, which are sessile by a broad and some- what clasping base, or else narrowed into a short petiole, punctate with translucent and larger dark -colored dots. Flowers small, cymulose ; the contracted cymes axillary and terminal, much shorter than the leaves : petals flesh-col- ored, or somewhat orange-colored in fading. Capsules much larger than the calyx, the pericarp filled with resiniferous lines. Etymology. Name from i\m&r]s, growing in marshes, from the station these plants inhabit. I Geographical Distribution, &c. A well-marked genus of two spe- cies, natives of Eastern North America from Canada to Florida and Texas. PLATE 94. Elodea Virginica, Nutt. ; — summit of a flowering plant, of the natural size. (Cambridge, Massachusetts.) 1. Diagram of the flower, Estivation, &c. 2. Open flower, enlarged. , 3. One of the three phalanges of the stamens, magnified ; inside view. 4. Anther, &c, more magnified, outside view ; and 5, inside view. 6. Pistil and receptacle, magnified. 7. An ovule, highly magnified. 8. A capsule, with the persistent calyx and filaments at the base, enlarged. 9. A magnified seed. 10. Vertical section of the same and of the contained embryo. Ord. ELATINACEtE. Herbae paludosae annuae, foliis oppositis seu verticillatis, stipulis interpetiolaribus, floribus axillaribus : dicotyledoneae, hypogyneas, regulares, symmetrica?, 2 - 5-meras ; nempe, se- palis, petalis, staminibus, stylis loculisque ovarii 2, 3, 4, v. 5, aut staminibus numero duplis ; aestivatione imbricativa ; ovulis anatropis ; placentis in columnam centralem conna- tis; capsula septifrage vel septicide 2— 5-valvi polysperma ; seminibus exalbuminosis ; cotyledonibus brevibus. ELATiNEi, Camb. in Mem. Mus. 18. p. 225, & in St. Hil. Fl. Bras. 2. p. 160. Arn. in Edinb. Jour. Nat. Sci. 1. p. 430. Fisch. & Meyer, in Linnjea, 10. p. 6'J. Endl. Gen. p. 1036. Fenzl, in Regensb. Denkschr. 3. p. 179. Elatinaces, Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. ed. 2. p. 88, & Veg. Kingd. p. 480. The Water-wort Family consists of about twenty known species of annual herbs, usually of small size, growing in water or wet and muddy places. Much the greater number are natives of the Old World, in the northern hemisphere ; the Elatines chiefly in the temperate, and the Bergias in the tropical regions. Of the three known American representatives, two fall within the limits of the present work ; while the third is Brazilian. They are bland plants, destitute of any marked sensible qualities, as far as is known ; although the popular name of Water Pepper in Europe, and the Tamul name meaning Water-fire, which, according to Dr. Wight, is applied to an Indian species, would seem to indicate no small degree of acridity. Until their separation as a distinct family by Cambessedes, these plants had been appended to Caryophyllacete, on account of a general resemblance to duckweeds ; from which their exalbuminous and anatropous seeds (much more than their capitate stigmas) abundantly distinguish them. Bartling joined them to Lythraces, which some of them resemble in aspect, but from which they differ widely in their stipulate leaves, discrete styles or stigmas, and especially in the hypogynous insertion of the petals and stamens. Lind- ley refers the family to his Rutal alliance, chiefly on considerations deriv- ed from one or two plants which are doubtless with justice excluded from the order. But the nearest affinity of Elatinacea? is evidently on one hand with Hypericacese ; from which they are principally distinguished by their 15 218 ELATINACE.E. stipules, the absence of pellucid dots in the leaves, and by the perfect sym- metry of the distinct stamens ; and on the other with Crassulaceee, through I)i;imorpha, as has already been suggested by the acute Fenzl. The two Linnaean genera rested on the number of stamens and styles; Elatine being octandrous and tetragynous, and Bergia, decandrous and pen- tagynous. But it afterwards appeared that the parts of the flower were occasionally ternary, and the stamens sometimes of the same number as the petals only, namely 3, 4, or 5 : and in 1817, Nultall introduced a third ge- nus, Crypta, with a dimerous and diandrous, or rarely trimerous and trian- drous flower, and few seeds. This genus, as well as Bergia, Fischer and Meyer soon afterwards referred to Elatine. In 1829, Cambessedes found- ed on a Brazilian plant a fourth genus, Merimea; which he distinguished from Bergia by its smooth (instead of ribbed) seeds, and strictly septicidal dehiscence, the dissepiments coming aw-ay attached to the valves ; while in Bergia he supposed them to remain adherent to the axis as in Elatine; — leaving the pentamerous instead of 3 - 4-merous flowers to distinguish Bergia from Elatine. The next year, Mr. Arnott, or at least in 1834, in conjunction with Dr. Wight, also referred all the plants of the family (except apparently Lancretia of Delile) to Elatine ; at the same time errone- ously characterizing the dehiscence as loculicidal. Endlicher retained the genera Elatine, Bergia, and Merimea as left by Cambessedes, distinguishing Bergia by the valves of the capsule being introflexed but separating from the persistent dissepiments ; and appending Lancretia to Hypericineae. In 1810, Hooker (in Irones Planlarum) figured a Texan pentamerous species, with just the habit of the Indian Bergias, under the name of Merimea (or Bergia?) Texana ; which, not having ascertained its dehiscence, he referred to Merimea chiefly because of its being a native of the New World. The dehiscence of this species having been ascertained to be septifragal, as in Elatine proper, it was referred to that genus in the Supplement to the Flora of North America, Vol. I. More recently, Fenzl has successfully reduced the whole to the two Linnaean genera ; Elatine comprising all those with septifragal dehiscence, and Bergia (including Lancretia and Merimea) those with septicidal dehiscence ; giving to the former, however, the origi- nal Linnajan species of Bergia. But Seubert has since observed that this species is septicidal, and has restored it to Bergia ; wrongly taking with it, however, our E. Texana, the dehiscence of which, he says, is not clearly de- scribed, although, in the work referred to, it is explicitly said to be septifragal. As this last plant is now the only pentamerous Elatine, and presents just the aspect of Bergia, I have allowed it to form a distinct section. It should be remarked that the specimens gathered by Lindheimer are decandrous ! Finally, as it appears that our Crypta differs from its allies by the eva- nescent partitions of the delicate pod (if we mistake not), and the basilar placenta, as well as by the few seeds and prevailingly dimerous flowers, I have separated it from the gerontogeous species, as a subgenus merely ; proposing, however, its entire reestablishmcnt, in ease of its corroboration through the New Zealand E. gratioloitks of Cunningham, — a trimerous species of similar habit, which is described as having a unilocular capsule. ELATINACEjE. 219 Plate 95, 96. ELATINE, L. Capsula septifraga ; dissepimentis columnac adnatis persis- tentibus, aut raro evanidis. Elatine, Linn. Gen. 502. GEertn. Fr. t. 102. Juss. Gen. p. 300. Schkuhr, H:in4b. 1. 100. Camb. in Mem. Mus. 1. c. Fenzl, 1. c. Seubert, in Nov. Act. Acad. Nat. Cur. 21. p. 38. t. 2-5. Alsinastrum, Vaill. Bot. Par. p. 5. t. 1. f. 6. Subgen. Crypta. — Flores dimeri, rarius trimeri. Dis- sepimentum evanescens. Placentae basilares, oligospermae. — Folia opposita, integerrima. Crvpta, Nutt. in Jour. Acad. Pnilad. 1. p. 117. t. 6. Subgen. Bergella. — Flores pentameri (5 - 10-andri). Dissepimenta persistentia. Placentas centrales. — Folia op- posita, serrulata. Water-wort. Calyx herbaceous, of 2 to 5 sepals, which are distinct or united barely at the base, imbricated in aestivation, persist- ent. Petals as many as the sepals and alternate with them, hypogynous, imbricated in aestivation, persistent or marcescent. Stamens hypogynous, as many as the petals and alternate with them, or more commonly of twice their number and both alternate with and opposite them : fila- ments subulate, persistent : anthers globular or cordate, introrse ; the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary globular', sessile, usually 3-4-celled, rarely (in Bergella) five-celled, the cells alternate with the petals ; or in. Crypta mostly two- celled, the cells opposite the petals (anterior and posterior): the placentas in the axis, central, or in Crypta basilar : styles as many as the cells, short or almost wanting, persistent : stigmas dilated. Ovules anatropous, indefinite, covering the thick placentae, in Crypta rather few and all ascending. 15 * 220 ELATlNACEiE. Capsule globular, membranaceous or chartaceous, 3-4- celled, or in Bergella five-celled, septifragally dehiscent by as many valves opposed to the sepals, their margins separat- ing from the persistent dissepiments, which remain attached to the central axis, interposed between the projecting many- seeded placentas ; or in Crypta the membranous capsule bursts irregularly ? and the delicate dissepiments disappear after or before the capsule opens, leaving a basilar placenta bearing 6 to 12 erect seeds. Seeds anatropous, oblong or cylindrical, straight or incurved ; the crustaceous testa longi- tudinally ribbed and transversely rugose or reticulated : inner integument thin. Albumen none. Embryo conformed to the seed : cotyledons semiterete, obtuse, shorter than the cylindraceous radicle which points to the hilum. Herbs, usually small aquatic annuals, with opposite, or in >$- Potamopithys verticillate, sessile or short-petioled and en- tire or toothed leaves, with interposed stipules, and small (solitary or rarely cymulose-fascicled) axillary flowers. Stip- ules distinct or more or less united in pairs, entire or toothed. Ktvmology. 'EXanVj/, an ancient name, from 'E\aTrj,n fir-tm, in allu- sion to the appearance of the verticillate-leaved species. PLATE 95. Elatine (Crypta) Americana, Am. New Haven, Connecticut. 1. Flowering branch, magnified. 2. Diagram of a dimerous flower. (Carpels, &c, anterior and posterior.) 3. A flower, more magnified. 4. A magnified stamen, outside, and 5, an inside view. 6. Pistil, magnified ; and 7, vertical section, showing the basilar placentae. 8. An ovule, more magnified. 9. A seed, magnified ; and 10, a vertical section of it through the embryo. PLATE 96. E. (Bergella) Texana, Torr. <5f Gr. / — Texas, Lindheimer. 1. Diagram of the flower, aestivation, &c. 2. Two flowers, with the axis, base of the leaves, and stipules, magnified. 3. A sepal ; 4, a petal ; and 5, a stamen, more magnified. 6. Ovary, magnified ; and 7, vertical section through the placentae. 8. Dehiscent capsule, with the persistent sepals and petals, enlarged. 9. Transverse section, showing the septifragal dehiscence, &c. 10. A magnified seed. 1 1 . Vertical section of the same, through the contained embryo. Ord. PORTULACACEiE. Herbas (v. frutescentes) succulents, insipidaa, exstipulatte, foliis integerrimis : dicotyledoneas, anisomerae, regulares, hy- pogynas vel perigynaa ; calyce saepius dipetalo, corolla 3-6- petala seu nulla ; asstivatione imbricativo ; staminibus petalis numero asqualibus et antepositis aut indefinitis ; ovulis am- phitropis e placenta centrali ; embryone peripherico annulari vel*hippocrepiformi albumen farinaceum cingente. Portulace.e, Juss. Gen. p. 313. (excl. gen.) DC. Prodr. 3. p. 351. Fenzl, in Ann. Wien. Mus. & in Endl. Gen. p. 946 (ex parte). Lindl. Veg. Kingd. p. 500. Portulacacej:, Lindl. Imrod. Nat. Syst. ed. 2. p. 123. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 195. The Purslane Family consists of succulent plants, with a watery or mucilaginous juice, entirely destitute of any active or harmful properties, usually bearing ephemeral, and often showy flowers. The order is most allied to the Mesembryanthemacea? on one hand, and to Caryophyllaceae on the other. Its limits are by no means well settled ; but the genuine Portulacaceous plants are recognized by a calyx of two sepals, while the corolla is composed of three to six, usually 5 petals, which have the stamens opposite them or attached to their base, except when the latter are more numerous or indefinite ; and by the commonly one-celled capsule with a free central placenta from the base, with reniform or lenticular seeds having the slender embryo coiled around the outside of farinaceous albumen, as in Ca- rvophyllaceas, &c. Sesuvium anil its allies, however, have a regular 5- parted calyx and are apetalous. Portulacaeea; are chiefly indigenous to the tropical and warmer temperate regions, and grow in sunny and parched situations, as do other succulents. This is not the case, however, with Claytonia and Montia, which are scarce- ly fleshy, and inhabit rich and damp woods or wet places, and extend north even to the arctic zone. Several plants of the order besides the well-known Purslane are employed as potherbs. The tuberous root of a Claytonia is eaten in Siberia ; and the farinaceous roots of Lewisia furnish the Indians of Oregon with an important article of food . 222 PORTULACACEiE. Conspectus of the United States Genera. * Sepals 2. Petals usually 5. (True Portulacaceae.) Claytonia. (Plate 97.) Calyx persistent. Stamens 5, adherent to the base of the hypogynous petals (which are not ephemeral) . Cap- sule 3-valved, 3 - 6-seeded. Talinum. (Plate 98.) Calyx deciduous. Petals 5, hypogynous, ephe- meral. Stamens 10 - 30. Capsule 3-valved, many-seeded. Portulaca. (Plate 99.) Calyx 2-cleft, the tube coherent with the ova- ry. Petals 4-6, perigynous, ephemeral. Stamens 8 -20. Capsule circumscissile at the middle, the upper portion deciduous with the limb of the calyx, one-celled, many-seeded. * # Sepals 5. Corolla wanting. Sesuvium. (Plate 100.) Calyx 5-parted, free. Stamens 5 - 20 , insert- ed in the throat of the calyx. Capsule circumscissile, 3-5-eelled, many-seeded. Styles distinct. portulacack.k 223 Plate 97. CLAYTONIA, L. Calyx 2-sepalus, liber, persistens. Petala 5, hypogyna, hand ephemera. Stamina 5, unguibus petalorum inserta. Stylus apice trifidus. Capsula unilocularis, 3-valvis, basi 3 - 6-sperma. — Herba? saepius diphyllas, inflorescentia race- miformij floribus albis vel roseis. Claytonia, Linn. Gen. 287. Lam. III. t. 144. Gaertn. Fr. t. 12!). Pursh, Fl. 1. p. 175. t. 3. DC. PI. Gras. t. 131, & Prodr. 3. p. 360. Hook. Fl. Bor.-Am. 1. p. 224. t. 71-74. Torr. &. Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 19S. Endl. Gen. 5180. Limnia, Linn, in Act. Ups. 1746. p. 130. t. 5. Spring Beauty. Calyx herbaceous, of two ovate sepals, imbricated in aes- tivation (both margins of one exterior), persistent. Petals 5, hypogynous, equal, quincuncially imbricated in aestiva- tion, distinct, or somewhat united by the short claws or con- tracted base, spreading, expanding for more than one day, at length gelatinous-colliquescent. Stamens 5, equal, one be- fore each petal ; the filiform or subulate filament inserted on its base : anthers oval or oblong, fixed by the middle, introrse ; the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary ovoid, one-celled: style slender, three-cleft ; the slender divisions stigmatose down the inner side. Ovules 3 to 6, on short free funiculi which rise from the base of the cell, campy- lotropous. Capsule ovoid, membranaceous, one-celled, three-valved (loculicidally) 3-6-seeded from the base. Seeds erect, len- ticular, with a shining crustaceous testa, not strophiolate at the hilum. Embryo incompletely annular or curved into the form of a horseshoe around the outside of the farina- ceous albumen : radicle inferior, much longer than the semiterete cotyledons. 224 PORTUI.ACACE.ffi. Herbs, usually of humble size, very smooth, slightly suc- culent, either annual with fibrous roots, or perennial from a caudex or globular tuber ; the leaves plane and entire ; the radical ones long-petioled ; the cauline rarely alternate, or in several pairs, usually a single pah, either distinct or connate. Inflorescence racemiform and usually secund (but the bracts, if any, not subtending the pedicels), or rarely manifestly cymulose : the petals rose-color or white. Etymology. Dedicated to John Clayton, of Virginia, one of the earliest botanists of this country, and who furnished to Gronovius the materials of the Flora Virginica. Geographical Distribution, &c. A North American and Siberian genus of about twenty known species, of which two, belonging to Clay- tonia proper, are natives of the United States and Canada, and are among the prettiest of our vernal flowers. The greater number, and especially the annual species, are indigenous to Oregon and North California. PLATE 97. Claytonia Virginica, Linn. ; — plant of the natural size. (Botanic Garden, Cambridge ; from New York.) 1. Diagram of the flower, ajstivation, &c. 2. A petal with the stamen attached, enlarged. 3. Outside, and 4, inside view of a stamen, more magnified. 5. Pistil, enlarged. 6. The ovary, vertically divided, showing the insertion of the ovules. 7. An ovule, more magnified. 8. Dehiscent capsule, with the seeds, and the persistent calyx, enlarged. 9. A seed, more magnified. 10. Vertical section of the same, showing the embryo curved almost round the albumen. PORTULACACEyE. 225 Plate 98. TALINUM, Adans. Calyx 2-sepalus, liber, deciduus. Petala 5, hypogyna, ephemera. Stamina 10-30, hypogyna. Stylus apice trilo- bus. Capsula unilocularis, 3-valvis, polysperma. — Flores saspius cymosi. Talinum, Adans. Fara. 2. p. 145. excl. spec. Gaertn. Fr. t. 219. Sims. Bot. Mag. t. 1357. Haworth, Syn. Succ. p. 123. DC. Prodr. 3. p. 356. Fenzl, in Ann. Wein. Mus. 2. p. 296. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 196. Endl. Gen. 5178. Phemeranthds, Raf. Speech. 1. p. 86. Calyx herbaceous, of two ovate sepals, imbricated in aes- tivation, deciduous. Petals 5, hypogynous, quincuncially imbricated in aestivation, expanding in sunshine for a single day, deciduous soon after. Stamens 10 to 30, hypogynous, or slightly adnate to the base of the petals : filaments fili- form : anthers introrse, fixed by the middle ; the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary globular, slightly three- grooved, one-celled, or three-celled below, the thin dissepi- ments soon disappearing : style columnar or filiform, three- lobed, the whole inner surface of the lobes stigmatose. Ovules indefinite, on slender funiculi, inserted all over the central and usually stipitate placenta, amphitropous or cam- pylotropous. Capsule chartaceous, smooth, globular, one-celled, loculi- cidally three-valved (the valves in T. teretifolium usually separating or separable from a capillary replum), many- seeded. Seeds covering the free central placenta, lenticular or reniform, strophiolate at the hilum ; the crustaceous testa smooth and shining. Embryo incompletely annular around the outside of the farinaceous albumen. Herbs or suffruticose fleshy plants, very smooth, with alternate or somewhat opposite entire leaves, and cymose fugacious flowers, expanding in the morning sunshine. 22G PORTULACACE.&. Etymology obscure : probably an unmeaning name. Geographical Distribution. A tropical and subtropical genus ; with the exception of T. teretifolium, which extends northward to Pennsylvania, and a nearly allied species in Arkansas. PLATE 98. Talinum (Phemeranthus, Raf.) teretifolium, Pursh; — plant of the natural size, cultivated in the Cambridge Botanic Gar- den, from Westchester, Pennsylvania, Darlington. 1. Diagram of the aestivation, &c, with a transverse section of the ovary near the base, showing the incomplete dissepiments. 2. Vertical section of the ovary and receptacle, &c, magnified. 3. Pistil and receptacle entire, equally magnified. 4. A stamen, magnified, inside view. 5. Same, seen from the outside. 6. An ovule, more magnified. 7. A capsule, enlarged ; the valves just separating. 8. The same, more dehiscent, showing the seeds packed on the placenta. 9. A magnified seed. 10. The same, vertically divided, showing the coiled embryo. PORTULACACE.E. 227 Plate 99. PORTULACA, Tourn. Calyx tubo cum ovario inferne connato, limbo 2-partito circumscisse deciduo. Petala 4-6, cum staminibus S-20 summo calycis tubo iuserta, fugacissima. Stylus 3 — S-parti- tus. Capsula unilocularis, polysperma, circumscisse dehis- cens. Portulaca, Tourn. Inst. p. 236. t. 118. Adans. Fam. 2. p. 242. Juss. Gen. p. 312. Gasrtn. Fr. t. 128. DC. PI. Gras. 1. 123, & Prodr. 3. p. 353. Endl. Gen. 5174. Purslane. Calyx two-cleft or two-parted ; the tube coherent with the lower part of the ovary ; the divisions herbaceous, im- bricated in aestivation, circumscissile round their base and deciduous. Petals 4 to 6, distinct, or a little united at the base, inserted on the summit of the tube of the calyx just where it becomes free from the ovary, equal or unequal, imbricated in aestivation, expanding only once, then colli- quescent. Stamens 8 or numerous, inserted at the base of the petals : filaments subulate or filiform : anthers introrse, didymous, the oval cells opening longitudinally. Ovary ovoid, one-celled, wiflk a free basilar placenta : styles 3 to 8, united at the base, stigmatose down the inner side. Ovules indefinite, erect on capillary and free or branching funiculi from the basilar placenta, amphitropous. Capsule (pyxis) membranaceous, one-celled, ovoid or globular, circumscissile near the middle at the point where the calyx ceases to be adherent, the upper part falling off as a lid. Seeds numerous, campylotropous, reniform-annular ; the crustaceous and shining testa often granulated. Embryo completely or incompletely annular around the outside of the farinaceous albumen : radicle inferior : cotyledons semiterete, incumbent. 228 PORTULACACE.E. Herbs low and succulent ; with alternate or irregularly opposite entire leaves, which are either terete or plane, and often furnished with tufts of bristles in their axils ; the up- permost usually involucrate around the solitary or clustered (sessile or pedicellate) flowers. Petals yellow, purple, or rose-color, delicate, expanding in direct sunshine during the forenoon, soon closing, and before evening colliquescent. Etymology, Geographical Distribution, &c. The old Latin name, of uncertain meaning, for the Common Purslane, which has been used from all antiquity as a potherb, and in salads. All are natives of the tropics and of the southern border of the northern temperate zone ; but the common Purslane has from early times been naturalized around gardens almost every- where. Several showy species have recently become common in cultiva- tion. P. pilosa is indigenous on our Southern frontiers ; and P. oleracea itself is said to be truly wild in Arkansas and Texas. PLATE 99. Portulaca oleracea, Linn. ; — a branch in flower, of the. natural size. 1. Diagram of the flower, aestivation, &c. •2. Magnified stamen, outside view. 3. Inside view of the same. 4. Vertical section through the ovary and adherent calyx, &c, magnified. 5. An ovule, more magnified. 6. A capsule (pyxis), enlarged. 7. Same, with the lid detached, showing the seeds. 8. A seed, more magnified. 9. Vertical section of the same through the e^bi'V". POKTULACACEvE. 229 Plate 100. SESUVIUM, L. Calyx 5-partitus, liber, persistens. Petala nulla. Stami- na perigyna, 10 — 15 vel indefinita, rarius 5 sinubus calycis inserta. Styli 3-5. Capsula 3 — 5-locularis, polysperma, circumscisse dehiscens. — Herbae prostratee littorales, foliis oppositis succulentis. Sescvium, Linn. Gen. 624. Jacq. Stirp. Amer. t. 05. Lam. III. t. 434. DC. PI. Gras. t. 9, & Prodr. 3. p. 453. Wight & Am. Prodr. Fl. Ind. Or. 1. p. 3G1. Endl. Gen. 5170. Calyx deeply five-cleft or five-parted, free, persistent ; the sepals quincuncially imbricated in asstivation, herbaceous, colored (purplish) inside, sometimes mucronate or comute below the tip. Petals wanting. Stamens inserted on the short tube of the calyx, rarely 5 and alternate with the se- pals, oftener 10 to 15, or indefinite : filaments filiform : anthers globular, didymous, introrse, the cells opening lon- gitudinally. Ovary free from the calyx, 3 - 5-celled, with the placenta? in the axis: styles 3 to 5, distinct, stigmatose for the whole length of the inner side. Ovules numerous in each cell, ascending on filiform funiculi arising from the axile placenta. Capsule (pyxis) ellipsoid or oblong, membranaceous, 3- 5-celled, many-seeded, circumscissile as in Portulaca at or below the middle, the upper part falling off as a lid. Seeds reniform or globular, campylotropous, smooth. Embryo curved around the outside of the farinaceous albumen, an- nular or nearly so. Herbs prostrate, succulent and maritime ; with opposite and entire fleshy leaves, and terminal or axillary and sessile or short-peduncled flowers. 230 PORTULACACK.E. Etymology. An unexplained name. Geographical Distribution, &c. A genus evidently allied to Portu- laca, notwithstanding the 5-sepalous calyx, &c, composed of a few spe- cies of strictly maritime plants, which arc principally tropical ; but two or more species inhabit the coast of the Southern States, and even extend northward, it is said, as far as New Jersey. The species figured is re- markable for having the minimum number of stamens. PLATE 100. Sesuvium pentandrum, Ell. ; — New Orleans, Drummond. 1. Diagram of the flower. 2. Calyx, with the stamens, detached and laid open ; magnified. 3. A magnified stamen, inside view. 4. Pistil, magnified. 5. Vertical section through the ovary and calyx, &c. 6. Capsule (pyxis) magnified, the persistent calyx spread open, the lid raised up, showing the seeds. 7. A seed, more magnified. 8. Section of the same, showing the embryo curved around the albumen. CLEMATIS . . ILLA t ^J ^ HE PA' . ' i : :alt % TRi LLIU.3 . a q ' NITUM 'r- •) IIGIED ' f .;. / .' tflhi NE L / ( Si) 1 , ' i ./*!>. n r > 0£ ' •:'";' i ' " . n . -D , % o < K^