i CD Oi ^ t/crt L I b RARY OF THE U N 1 VLRSITY or ILLl NO!S 581.973 G79 The person charging this material is re- sponsible for its return on or before the Latest Date stamped below. Theft, mutilation, and underlining of books are reasons for disciplinary action and may result in dismissal from the University. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN w>^a OCT 2 2 ijl m ■^ L161— O-1096 Digitized by tine Internet Archive in 2011 witii funding from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign http://www.archive.org/details/generafloraeamer02gray GENERA FLORAE AMERICA BOREALI-ORIENTALIS ILLUSTRATA. THE GENERA PLANTS OF THE UNITED STATES ILLUSTRATED BY FIGURES AND ANALYSES FROM NATURE, By ISAAC SPRAGUE, MEMBER OP 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 OP THE IMPERIAL ACADEMY NATOR.E CURIOSORHM ; OP THE BOTANICAL SOCIETY OF RATISBON, &C., &C. PLATES 101 — 186. ■-C (^ NEW YORK: GEORGE P. PUTNAM. LONDON: PUTNAM'S AMERICAN AGENCY. 1849. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1849, by Asa Gray, in the Clerk's OfiTice of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts. r C A IM B R I D G E : M K T C A L F AND COMPANY, PRINTERS TO THE UNIVERSITY. TO JOHN CAREY, Esq. THIS VOLUME IS GRATEFULLY DEDICATED IN MEMORIAL OF A LONG AND INTIMATE COMPANIONSHIP IN BOTANICAL PURSUITS, HIS ATTACHED FRIEND. ASA GRAY Cambridge, June 1, 1S49. 704347 ERRATA. Page 114, line 2 from bottom, for " Guaiacidum/' read " Guaiacidium. " 119, " 8, for " raphi," read " rhaphi." " 121, " 9, for " raphen," read " rhaphen." ERRATA FOR VOL. I. Page 21, line 4, for " minora, calycem referentia," read '' minus, calycem referens. 23, 41, 47, 59, 75, 83, 89, 91, 105, 133, 139, 1G7, 191, 193, 5, for "sessiii," read " sessile." 5, for " inter," read " intra." 5, for '• baccata," read •' baccato." 8, for " claudentes," read ■' claudentibus." 9, for " cordiformis," read " cordiformibus." 4, for " majuscula," read " majusculus." 3, for " Petala," read " Sepala." 4, for " imbricativo," read " imbricativa." 4, same correction. 4, for " disilientibus," read " dissilicntibus." 4, for " recta," read " rectus." 6, for " equalia," read " aequalia." 5, for " ffiqualia, nunc dupla v. tripla," read V. triplis." 4, for " bipartita," read " bipartiti." ' a:qualibus, nunc duplis Note. In order not to divide the illustrations of the important Natural Family (the LeguminosK) which succeeds, this volume is closed with Plate 186. The fourteen plates which complete the second hundred will be given in the third vol- ume. SYSTEMATIC IND EX Mollugo, Scleranthus, Siphonychia, Anychia, Paronychia, Loeflingia, Stipulicida, Spergularia, Malva, Callirrhoe, Napaea, Sidalcea, Malvastrum, Sida, Anoda, Abutilon, Melochia, Tilia, Stuartia, Linum, Oxalis, * Tribulus, Kallstromia, Larrea, Ord. CARYOPHYLLACEiE, Page 9. Page 13, Plate 101. Sagina, 29, Plate 109. 15, 102. Honkenya, 31, 110. 17, 103. Alsine, 33, 111. 19, 104. Mcehringia, ' 35, 112. 21, 105. Stellaria, 37, 113. 23, 106. Cerastium, 39, 114. 25, 107. Sileiie, 41, 115. 27, 108. Ord. Malv.a.ce^, 43. 49, 116. Sphaeralcea, 69, 127. 51, 117, 118. Modiola, 71, 128. 55, 119. Malachra, 73, \29tt 57, 120. Pavonia, 75, 130. 59, 121, 122. Malvavisciis, 77, 131. 61, 123. Kosteletzkya, 79, 132, 63, 124. Hibiscus, 81, 133. 65, 125, 126. Ord. Byttneriace^, 83. 85, 134. Hermannia, 87, 135. Ord. TiLiACE^, 89. 91, 136. Corchorus, 93, 137. Ord. Ternstromiace^, 95. 97, 138,139. Gordonia, 101, 140-142. Ord. Linages, 105. 107, 143. Ord. Oxalidace^, 109. HI, 144. Ord. Zygophyllace;e, 113. 115, 145. Guaiacnnii, 121, 118. 117, 146. Guaiacidium (Subgen.), 149. 119, 147. 8 SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Ord. Geraniace^e, Page 125. Geranium, Page 127, Plate 150. Erodium, 129, Plate 151. Ord. BALSAMINACEiE, ' . . 131. Impatiens, 133, 152, 153. Ord. LiMNANTHACEiE, 137. Floerkea, 139, 154. Ord. RuTACE^, 141. Rutosma, 143, 155. Ord. ZantkoxvlacejE, 145. Zanthoxylum, 147, 156. Ptelea, 149, 157. Ord. OcHNACE^, 151. Castela, 153, 158. Ord. Anacardiace^, 155. Rhus, 157, 159, 160. Ord. YiTACE^, 161. Vitis, 163, 161. Ampelopsis, 165, 162. Ord. Rhamnace^, 167. Zizyphus, 169, 163. Frangula, 177, 167. Condalia, 171, 164. Rhamnus, 179, 168. Berchemia, 173, 165. Ceanothus, 181, 169. Sageretia, 175, 166. Ord. Celastrace^, 183. Celastrus, 185, 170. Euonymus, 187, 171. Ord. Staphyleace^, 189. Staphylea, 191, 172. Ord. MALPIGHIACEiE, 193. Galphimia. 195, 173. Ord. AcERACE^ 197. Acer, 199, 174. Negundo, 201, 175. Ord. Sapindacea:, 203. ./Esculus, 205, 176, 177. Cardiospermum, ^15, 181. Ungnadia, 209, 178, 179. Dodonaea, 218, 182. Sapiudus, 213, 180. Ord. Polygalace^e, 219. Polygala, 221, 183, 184. Ord. Krameriaceje? 225. Krameria, 225, 185, 186. .^ Ord. CARYOPHYLLACE.E. Herbae blandse, foliis oppositis integerrimis : dicotyledoneae, plerumque dichlamydese, symmetricas, pentameras v. tetra- merae j calyce persistente aestivatione imbricato ; staminibus sepalis numero asqualibus (vel abortu paucioribus) et ante- positisj sen duplis ; ovario libero 1 - 5-lociilari ; ovulis am- phitropis vel campylotropis e placenta centrali ; embryone peripherico albumini farinaceo adplicito idemque saepius plus minusve cingente. Caryophylle^, Juss. Gen. p. 299 (excl. gen.), Fenzl in Endl. Gen. CARYOPHYLLEa: & Paronychie^e, DC. Prodr. 1. p. 351, & 3. p. 365. SiLENE^E, Alsine^s:, Paronychie^, «& Scleranthes:, Bartl. Beitr. 2. p. 153, & Ord. Nat. p. 305. Caryophyllace^s, Illecebrace.s:, & ScLERANXHACEiE, Lindl. Veg. Kingd. p. 496, 526. The Pink or Chickweed Family is well marked among the Polypetalag by the opposite and entire dotless leaves, more or less connate or connected by a transverse line across the usually tumid nodes ; the centrifugal inflores- cence ; the symmetrical pentamerous or occasionally tetramerous flowers, with an herbaceous and persistent calyx ; and the capsular fruit. Taken in the most extended view, it is absolutely distinguished from every other order with petaliferous flowers, excepting Portulacacese, by having the slender embryo applied to the outside of the farinaceous albumen, and more or less curved or completely coiled around it. There is, however, a series of grad- ually reduced forms, either with or without scarious stipules, many of them apetalous and with a one-seeded utricular fruit, which are scarcely sepa- rable from Amaranthaceae and Chenopodiaceas by any single absolute char- acter. According to Fenzl, who has investigated this order with great care and ability, the position of the stamens furnishes the essential distinction between Caryophyllaceae and Portulacaceee ; these organs, when only a single series is present, being inserted opposite the sepals in the former, and opposite the petals (alternate with the sepals) in the latter family. He accordingly refers 10 CARYOPHYLLACEiE. Mollugo and its allies to the Purslane Family, although in all other respects they agree with the Chickweeds. This character, however, is not applica- ble when both series of stamens are present ; nor is it borne out by our triandrous species of Mollugo, in which the stamens alternate regularly (not with the sepals, but) with the cells of the ovary, one of them being conse- quently situated directly opposite one of the inner sepals. (Plate 101, Fig. 1.) Some other diagnosis is therefore to be sought. Throughout the whole family, whenever there is a tricarpellary ovary in a pentamerous flower, the carpels, or cells of the ovary, are not really placed opposite the three exterior sepals, as is stated ; but one of them is situated directly before the sinus between the third and the fifth sepals (and therefore opposite a petal if there be any), while the two others, equally divergent from this and from each other, stand opposite the two exterior (the first and second) sepals; — these organs being numbered, of course, in the order in which they occur in the quincuncial aestivation, beginning with the outer or lowest one of the spiral. The plants of this family exhibit no marked sensible properties, and are applied to no important use ; except that several, especially of the Pink tribe, are cultivated for ornament, a few of these (such as the Clove Pink) being also prized for the fragrance of their flowers. The greater part are humble weeds. All are herbaceous, or barely suiTruticose. The Alsineae are entirely bland and insipid, with a watery or mucilaginous juice ; the Illecebreae have a slight aslringency ; while the Sileneae also exhibit traces of a subacrid and saponaceous principle, which in Saponaria, &c., has received the name of saponine, and is thought to possess alterative qualities, having been used as a substitute for sarsaparilla. The root of Silene Virginica is a reputed anthelmintic ; but its use for this purpose may probably have origi- nated from the coincidence between its popular name, " Wild Pink," and that of Spigelia Marilandica, which is called " Pmk-root." The seeds of Lychnis Githago (Corn Cockle) are thought to injure flour. They doubtless are a little acrid. Some representatives of the order occur in every flora. Far the greater part belong to the northern hemisphere ; the Alsineae chiefly abounding in the cooler or frigid, the others in the warmer temperate regions. Few are found within the tropics, except on mountains, where the elevation gives a cool climate. The perigynous insertion of the stamens, being also common in Alsineae, will by no means distinguish the Illecebreae as a separate family, nor can the stipules be deemed to furnish an ordinal character. Scleranthus differs from the Illecebreae only in the total absence of stipules, and, we may add, in the extxorse resupination of the ovule. Retaining the Mollugineae in this family, but arranging it next to the Portulacaceae , which precede (Vol. I. pi. 97- 100) ; the whole order, as represented in the United Stales, may be disposed as follows. CARYOPHYLLACE^. 11 SuBORD. I. MOLLUGINE^. Stamens alternate with the sepals when of the same number ; or when three, alternate with the cells of the ovary : — otherwise as in Illecebrea) and Alsineae. — Leaves often pseudo-verticillate, seldom stipulate. MoLLUGO. (Plate 101.) Capsule 3-celled, loculicidal, many-seeded. SuBORD. II. SCLERANTHE^. Leaves exstipulate. Calyx-tube urceolate in fruit. — Otherwise as in Ille- cebreae, Tr. Paronychieae. ScLERANTHus. (Plate 102.) Stamens 5 or 10 : anthers 2-celled. SiTBORD. III. ILLECEBRE^. {Paronycuii^m, St. Hil) Sepals distinct or united below. Petals often rudimentary or wanting. Ovary sessile. Leaves scarious-stipulate. Tribe I. PARONYCHIE^. — Fruit a one-seeded utricle. Siphon YCHiA. (Plate 103.) Sepals united to the middle ; the lobes petaloid, with plane and pointless tips. Petals subulate, inserted with the stamens into the throat of the calyx. Style elongated. Utricle inclosed in the calyx-tube. Seed resupinate. Anychia. (Plate 104.) Sepals nearly distinct, slightly cucullate and mucronulate at the apex. Petals none. Styles very short. Utricle larger than the calyx. Seed erect. Paronychia. (Plate 105.) Sepals united only at the base, cucullate at the apex or convolute, mostly cuspidate or awned, all alike connivent in fruit and inclosing the utricle. Seed suberect or resupinate. Tribe IL SPERGULE^. —Fruit a 3-5-valved several-seeded capsule. LcEFLiNGiA. (Plate 106.) Petals minute or none. Sepals cuspidate- pointed ; the three exterior bearing a subulate appendage (like the stipules) on each side. Stipulicida. (Plate 107.) Petals spatulate, larger than the emargi- nate scarious-margined sepals. Capsule about 20-seeded. Cauline leaves subulate, minute, connate by the adnate pectinate stipules. Embryo little curved. Spergularia. (Plate 108.) Petals oval. Sepals herbaceous. Valves of the many-seeded capsule alternate with the sepals when of the same number. Embryo incompletely annular. Leaves not verti- cillate : stipules free. SuBORD. TV. ALSINE^. Sepals distinct, or united only at the base. Petals usually present and imbricated in aestivation. Ovary sessile. — Stipules none.* * The tribes of this suborder proposed by Fcnzl are not here adopted, because we find the ovary more or less completely three-celled in Honkenya, MoBhrin- gia, &c. ; and at an early period the dissepiments may be seen in oilier Alsineae. 12 CARYOPHYLLACEiE. * Styles alternate with tlie sepals. Sagina. (Plate 109.) Valves of the capsule as many as the sepals (4 or 5) and opposite them. Petals entire or none. # * Styles fewer than the sepals, or if as many, opposite them, -t- Valves of the capsules as many as the styles (usually 3) and entire. HoNKENYA. (Plate 110.) Stamens inserted on a conspicuous glandular- 10-lobed disk. Seeds few, inserted on the base of the capsule, ros- tellate. Leaves and stems very succulent. Alsine. (Plate 111.) Seeds numerous on a central columnar placenta, not strophiolate. Leaves subulate, filiform or linear. -4- H- Capsule dehiscent by twice as many valves or teeth as there are styles. McEHRiNGiA. (Plate 112.) Petals entire. Capsule 4- 6-valved. Seeds few, strophiolate. Stellaria. (Plate 113.) Petals 2-cleft, rarely minute and entire, or none. Capsule 6 - 8-valved. Seeds numerous, not strophiolate. Cerastium. (Plate 114.) Petals obcordate or 2-cleft. Capsule dehis- cent at the apex by twice as many teeth (usually 10) as there are styles. SuBORD. V. SILENE^. Sepals united into a tube. Petals unguiculate, usually convolute in aesti- vation, inserted with the stamens upon the summit of a short or elongated stipe (carpophore) which supports the ovary. — Stipules none. SiLENE, (Plate 115.) Calyx ebracteolate, 5-toothed. Styles 3. Cap- sule dehiscent at the summit by 6 teeth. CARYOPHYLLACEiE. 13 Plate 101. MOLLUGO, L. Corolla nulla. Stamina 5, laciniis calycis alterna, seu 3 loculis ovarii alterna, hypogyna. Stigmata 3. Capsula 3- locularis, loculicide 3-valvis, polysperma. — Folia plana pseudo-verticillata, stipulis obsoletissimis. Flores saepius pseudo-axillares. MoLLCGO, Linn. Gen. 139. Gsrtn. Fr. 2. p. 235. t. 130. f. 8. Wight &c Arn. Prodr, Ind. Or. 1. p. 43. Fenzl in Ann. Wien. Mus. 1. p. 375 (excl. subgen.) & 2. p. 246. Endl. Gen. 5186. Indian Cliickweed. Carpct-'weed. Calyx spreading, of five oval sepals, which are colored (white) inside and on the margins, quincuncially imbricated in aestivation, persistent. Corolla none. Hypogynous disk minute or none. Stamens hypogynous, as many as the se- pals and alternate with them (or very rarely from 6 to 10, the exterior series alternate with the sepals), or reduced to three when they alternate with the cells of the ovary (one sta- men being opposite the fourth sepal !) : filaments subulate : anthers globular or oblong, two-celled, innate, the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary ovoid, somewhat three-lobed, three-celled, two of the cells placed nearly opposite the two exterior sepals, the third opposite the sinus between the third and fifth sepals : styles 3, short, the summit and whole in- ner surface stigmatose. Ovules several or numerous, in two series in each cell, horizontal, amphitropous. Fruit a membranaceous capsule, three-celled, three- valved, loculicidal, the partitions separating from the central seminiferous axis, and borne on the middle of the valves. Seeds indefinite, campylotropous ; the testa crustaceous. Embryo coiled into a nearly complete ring, surrounding the central farinaceous albumen. 14 CARYOPHYLLACE^. Herbs chiefly annual and depressed, dichotomously much branched and prohferous; the leaves flat, opposite, but by fasciculation usually falsely verticillate or rosulate : the stip- ules early fugacious or obsolete. Flowers small, in cymes or sessile umbels, rarely solitary, terminal, but commonly appearing as if axillary on account of the repeated proliferous evolution of one or more branches from each node. Etymology. The name is a kind of diminutive of mollis, coined by Linnfeus, in allusion to the softness of these plants. Geographical Distribution. These humble weeds belong to the tropi- cal region of both worlds, one species extending to the Northern United States, where it abounds in waste or cultivated places, especially near dwell- ings ; but it has probably been introduced from a more southern latitude. It is through some mistake, doubtless, that M. arenaria, H. B. K., is cited by Fenzl as having been found in Connecticut by Drummond. PLATE 101. MoLLUGO verticillata, Linn. ; — a small specimen, of the natural size. 1. Diagram of the flower, with a magnified section of the ovary. 2. A flower, enlarged. 3. A stamen, more magnified. 4. Pistil, enlarged ; the calyx removed. 5. Vertical section of an enlarged pistil and of the base of the calyx (showing also a minute hypogynous disk). 6. An ovule, magnified. 7. Dehiscent capsule and persistent calyx, enlarged. (The valves are represented too thick.) 8. A magnified seed. 9. Section of the same and of the annular embryo. CARYOPHYLLACEiE. 15 Plate 102. SCLERANTHUS, L. Calyx 5-fidus ; tubo urceolato seu infundibular!, fructifero indurate fauce constricto utriculum membranaceum inclu- dente. Corolla nulla. Stamina 10 fauci calycis inserta ; 5 alterna, ejusdem sinubus opposita, saepissime sterilia. Styli 2. Ovulum extrorsum resupinato-pendulum. Radicula su- pera: cotyledones funiculum spectantes. — Folia lineari-su- bulata, basi connata, exstipulata. ScLERANTHus, Linn. Gen. 562. Gaertn. Fr. t. 126. Schk. Handb. 1. 120. R. Br. Prodr. p. 412. DC. Prodr. 3. p. 378. Nees, Gen. Fl. Germ. 3. t. 77 (mal.). Endl. Gen. 5222. Torr. Fl. N. Y. 1. p. 108. Knawel. Calyx five-cleft (rarely four-cleft), herbaceous, persistent; the lobes ovate, imbricated in aestivation, spreading during anthesis, afterwards connivent, and the throat constricted, becoming indurated in fruit as well as the urceolate tube which incloses the utricle. Corolla none. Stamens inserted on the throat of the calyx, twice as many as its lobes ; those opposite the lobes (or rarely fewer) antheriferous ; the alter- nate ones reduced to mere sterile filaments, or sometimes perfect : anthers introrse, two-celled, didymous, the cells somewhat diverging at the base, opening longitudinally. Ovary one-celled : styles 2, distinct, stigmatose for the whole length of the inner side. Ovule solitary, campylo- tropous, resupinate on the recurved apex of a long and filiform funiculus which rises from the base of the cell ; the micropyle superior. Fruit a hyaline utricle inclosed in the indurated tube of the calyx. Seed resupinate, lenticular, rostellate, smooth. Embryo coiled into a complete ring, surrounding the central 16 CARYOPHYLLACEiE. farinaceous albumen : radicle and the linear slender cotyle- dons superior ; the latter occupying the side next to the funiculus ! Herbs of small size and insignificant appearance, dichoto- mous and cymose ; with the linear or subulate opposite leaves connate at the base, entirely destitute of stipules ; the small flowers subsessile in the forks of the branches, forming leafy or bracteate paniculate or corymbose cymes. Etymology. From a-KXrjpos, hard, and avdos, flower; in allusion to the induration of the fructiferous calyx. Geographical Distribution. Natives of the temperate regions of both hemispheres ; but probably not truly indigenous to the United States. Note. This genus of insignificant weeds has been assumed as the type of a separate order ; but it differs from the Ulecebreae only in wanting the stipules. Many Ulecebreae have the fructiferous calyx equally indurated ; and the ensuing genus shows a similar union of the sepals into a tube. Mr. Sprague, however, notices that the ovule is retrorsely resupinate in Scleran- thus, the radicle therefore occupying the side of the seed remote from the funiculus ; but introrsely resupinate in those Paronychieas which have the seed inverted, the radicle accordingly lying next the funiculus. PLATE 103. ScLERANTHUS ANNUUS, Linn.; — of the natural size. 1. A branchlet, with a flower, a bud, and leaves, magnified. 2. A magnified flower, with the calyx cut away and spread open. 3. Vertical section of the pistil, magnified, showing the ovule in place. 4. Magnified stamen, seen from the outside. 5. Same, seen from the inside, showing the dehiscence of the anther. 6. Fructiferous calyx, enlarged. 7. Seed with its funiculus, magnified. 8. Vertical section through the fructiferous calyx and the seed, in place, (the delicate utricle not represented,) showing the embryo coiled around the albumen. CARYOPHYLLACEiE. 17 Plate 103. SIPHONYCHIA, Torr. ^ Gr. Calyx fere ad medium 5-fidus ; tubo obovato, fructifero utriculum membranaceum includente ; lobis petaloideis planis, vel apice incurvis, muticis. Stamina 5 et petala subulata (potius filamenta sterilia) fauci calycis inserta. Stylus gracilis apice bilobus. Semen e funiculo basilari introrsum resupinato-pendulum ; radicula supera ; cotyledoni- bus funiculo aversis. — Herba longe humifusa ; foliis planis bistipulatis, internodiis multo brevioribus. SiPHONYCHiA, Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 173. Paronychia Sect., Endl. Gen. 5202. HERNiARiiE Sp., Nutt. in Sill. Jour. 5. p. 291. Calyx five-cleft to near the middle ; the ovoid tube her- baceous, somewhat indurated in fruit ; the lobes petaloid (white), oblong, very obtuse, plane and entirely inappen- diculate, imbricated in asstivation, the apex more or less inflexed. Petals (or rather sterile stamens) inserted on the throat of the calyx opposite the sinuses, subulate, exactly resembling the filaments. Stamens inserted on the throat of the calyx, as many as its lobes, and opposite them : fila- ments subulate : anthers didymous, introrse, two-celled ; the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary ovoid-oblong, one- celled : style slender, exserted, two-lobed at the apex ; the lobes introrsely stigmatose. Ovule solitary, campylotropous, pendulous on the incurved apex of a long filiform funiculus which rises from the base of the cell ; the micropyle supe- rior. Fruit a hyaline utricle, inclosed in the calyx-tube. Seed lenticular, smooth, resupinate on the incurved apex of the funiculus. Embryo coiled into a nearly complete ring, sur- 18 CARYOPHYLLACEyE. rounding the central farinaceous albumen : radicle superior ; the slender cotyledons occupying the side remote from the funiculus. Herb annual, with widely spreading procumbent stems, and oblanceolate leaves, much shorter than the slender inter- nodes. Stipules scarious, distinct, subulate. Flowers in terminal glomerate cymules, white. Etymolocjy, &c. Composed of cri(f)a>v, a tube, and the name of the re- lated genus Anychia ; from which it differs by the gamophyllous calyx, no less than by its resupinate seed, &c. Geographical Distribution. The single species is a native of the Southern Atlantic States, in sandy soil. Note. What are termed the petals are surely the same organs as the " sterile stamens ' ' of Scleranthus. PLATE 103. SiPHONYCHiA Americana, Torr. 4" Gray; — a branch, of the natural size (from Augusta, Georgia). 1. A magnified flower. 2. Same, with the calyx cut away and spread open. 3. A detached stamen, more magnified ; inside view. 4. Magnified pistil, with a part of the walls of the ovary vertically cut away, showing the ovule in place. 5. A seed with a part of the funiculus, magnified. 6. Vertical section of the same, showing the annular embryo surrounding the albumen. CARYOPHYLLACEiE. 19 Plate 104. ANYCHIA, Michx. Calyx 5-partitus, herbaceus, utriciilo minor ; sepalis ad api- cem subcucullatis, dorso minime corniculatis. Corolla nulla. Stamina 2-5 imo calyci inserta. Stigmata 2 sessilia. Se- men erectam ; radicula infera. — Herbas diffusEe, ramosis- simee ; foliis planis breviter bistipulatis ; floribus minimis in dichotomiis subsessilibus. Anychia, Michx. Fl. 1. p. 112 (excl. spec). Juss. Mem. Mus. 2. p. 389. DC. Prodr. 3. p. 369. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Amer. 1. p. 172. QuERi^ Sp., Linn. Sp. 1. p. 90. Gartn. Fr. t. 128. QcERiA, Nutt. Gen. 1. p. 158. ParonychivE Sect., Endl. Gen. 5202. Forked CliicSi^veed. Calyx herbaceous, not indurated with age, of five almost distinct plane sepals, imbricated in aestivation, their tips a little cucullate and minutely corniculate or mucronulate pos- teriorly. Corolla entirely wanting. Stamens from 2 to 5, inserted on the very base of the sepals and opposite them (when only two opposed to the two exterior sepals): fila- ments filiform : anthers two-celled, didymous, introrse ; the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary globose-ovoid, minutely pubescent, one-celled : styles 2, short, united below, stigma- tose on the inner face. Ovule solitary, amphi-campylotro- pous, borne on the summit of a short and straight basilar funiculus. Fruit a membranaceous utricle, larger than the calyx. Seed obovate-lenticular, smooth, erect. Embryo coiled into a nearly complete ring, surrounding the albumen : the radi- cle inferior. Herbs annual, erect or procumbent, diffuse, re])eated]y forked ; the internodes almost capillary. Leaves obovate or 20 CARYOPHYLLACE^. lanceolate, plane, herbaceous. Stipules very small, distinct, subulate, scarious. Flowers minute, subsessile, solitary in the forks of the leafy branches, or somewhat cymulose on the ultimate ramifications. Etymology. Name abbreviated from that of the related genus Parony- chia, q. V. Geographical Distribution. A genus of two, or perhaps three, species of humble weeds, belonging exclusively to Eastern North America, extending from Canada to Texas. PLATE 104. Anyciiia dichotoma, Michx., /3. capillacea, Torr. ; — a branch of the natural size. 1. Diagram of the flower. (The dark ring represents the space between the walls of the ovary and the solitary ovule.) 2. A calyx, enlarged. 3. A node with an open flower, &c. (the left-hand leaf shows the stip- ules), magnified. 4. Magnified stamen, seen externally. 5. Same, seen from the inside. 6. Pistil, magnified. 7. Vertical section of the same, showing the erect, somewhat transverse ovule. 8. Utricle with the persistent calyx, magnified. 9. Seed, in its natural position, magnified. 10. Vertical section of the same, through the embryo and albumen. 11. The embryo detached, with the cotyledons separated. CARYOPHYLLACEiE. 21 Plate 105. PARONYCHIA, Tourn,, Juss. Calyx 5-partitus, exinvolucratus ; sepalis conformibus, ad apicem cucullatis vel convolutis, aequaliter aristatis seu mu- cronatis, fructiferis clausis utriculum includentibus. Petala minimaj setiformia, vel nulla, cum staminibus saepius 5 imo calyci inserta. Stylus apice bifidus. Semen e funiculo basilar! introrsum pi. m. resupinato-pendulum ; radicula su- pera seu adscendente. — Herba3 diffusae vel caBspitosee ; sti- pulis interfoliaceis scariosis argenteis. Paronychia, Tourn. Inst. Juss. in Mem. Mus. 1. p. 338. DC. Prodr. 3. p. 370 (excl. § 3). Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 169 (excl. § 3). Endl. Gen. 5202 (excl. § Siphonychia & Anychia). Illecebri Sp., Linn. Anychia Sp., Michx. Fl. 1. p. 112, ex parte. Plottzia, Am. in Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. ed. 2. p. 441. Whitlo\i'-vvort. Calyx of five similar herbaceous or partly scarious sepals, usually coriaceous when old, united at the base, slightly im- bricated in asstivation. Petals (or rather sterile stamens) 5, setiform, rarely triangular, inserted on the base of the calyx alternate with its divisions, sometimes abortive or wanting. Stamens 5 (rarely fewer) inserted on the base of the calyx opposite its divisions : filaments subulate, persist- ent : anthers introrse, two-celled, the cells opening longi- tudinally. Ovary globular or oblong, one-celled : style slender or short, two-cleft at the apex or two-parted, the lobes stigmatose down the inner face. Ovule solitary, amphi-campylotropous, borne on the summit of a basilar funiculus which rises from the base of the cell, with the micropyle at first inferior, or at length usually introrsely resupinate. 22 CARYOPHYLLACE^. Fkuit a membranaceous utricle inclosed in the persistent connivent calyx. Seed globular, oblong or lenticular, as- cending, or more commonly more or less resupinate-pendulous. Embryo coiled into a complete or incomplete ring around the farinaceous albumen : the radicle ascending, or when the resupination is complete, superior, occupying the side next the free funiculus. Herbs low and diffuse, usually caespitose ; the flowering stems dichotomous or cymose. Leaves opposite, various in form ; the interfoliaceous stipules separate or united, silvery- scarious, usually large and conspicuous, the uppermost sur- rounding the flowers like bracts. Flowers small, crowded in glomerate or rarely somewhat open cymes. Etymology. Ilapawxia, an ancient name for a whitlow, and for an herb thought to cure it. Geographical Distribution. Natives of the warmer parts of the tem- perate zone of the northern hemisphere ; the greater part belonging to the Mediterranean region. Seven species are known in the Southern United States and the dry region towards the Rocky Mountains. One of them ex- lends northward to the Saskatchawan, lat. 53°. Another (here figured), which belongs to the Southern Alleghany Mountains, has recently been de- tected on the White Mountains of New Hampshire. PLATE 105. Paronychia argyrocoma, Nutt.; — a branch in flower, drawn from a plant brought from the White Mountains of New Hampshire, by the late Mr. Oakes. 1. An expanded flower, magnified. 2. Calyx laid open, showing the stamens, very short petals, &c. 3. A stamen, more magnified, outside view. 4. The same, seen from within. 5. Pistil from which the calyx (2.) is cut away, more magnified. 6. Vertical section of its ovary, &c., showing the nearly erect ovule. 7. Ovule detached and more magnified. 8. Magnified utricle with the fructiferous calyx ; the latter laid open. 9. Detached seed (in the same position as in the utricle) , more enlarged. 10. Vertical section of the same, through the embryo and albumen. 11. Embryo of the same, detached, and somewhat straightened. CARYOPHYLLACEiE. 23 Plate 106. LCEFLINGIA, L. Sepala sensim subulata, exteriora iitrinque unisetosa. Pe- tala minima vel nulla. Stamina 3-5. Capsula unilocularis, polysperma. Embryo rectiusciilus. — Folia subulata ; stipu- lis adnatis in setas liberas demum productis. Flores sessiles. LffirLiNGiA, Linn, in Act. Holm. 1758. p. 15. t. 1. LceA. Iter. t. 1. f. 1. Cav. Ic. 1. t. 94&148. DC. Prodr. 3. p. 380. Endl. Gen. 5210. Hook. Ic. PI. t. 285. Calyx of five distinct and rigid herbaceous sepals, imbri- cated in asstivation, narrowed above into long subulate tips, the three exterior furnished usually on both sides about the middle with a setiform lobe ; the two interior rather smaller and entire, with more scarious margins. Petals 3 to 5, minute, or wanting. Stamens as many as the sepals, and opposite them, inserted on their very base : filaments short : anthers didymous, two-celled, introrse, the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary ovoid-trigonous, one-celled, with a columnar basilar placenta: styles 3, short, more or less united, or none. Ovules indefinite, amphitropous, ascending on the free central placenta. Capsule conical, membranaceous, three-valved ; the valves nearly opposite the three interior sepals. Seeds numerous, lenticular, smooth, amphitropous. Embryo barely arcuate, dorsal, applied to the outside of the farinaceous albumen: COTYLEDONS rather short : radicle inferior. Herbs annual, depressed, of small size and insignificant appearance, glandular-puberulent and viscid ; the short subu- late or setaceous leaves commonly fascicled in the axils. Stipules connate with the base of the leaf, their tips only free in the form of a setaceous tooth on each side, like the appendages of the outer sepals, which are of the same na- 24 CARYOPHYLLACEiE. ture. Flowers small and inconspicuous, sessile in the forks of the stem and in the axils, solitary or ternate. ExYMOLOGy. Dedicated to the discoverer of the original species, Peter Lajling, a pupil of Linnaeus, and sent hy him to Spain. Geographical Distribution. There are three recognized species of the genus ; two of them natives of the southwestern borders of Europe, while the third belongs to the analogous region of the New World, namely, to Texas and California. PLATE 106. LcEFLiNGiA SQUARROSA, Nutt. ; — a Texan specimen. 1. Diagram of the flower. 2. A node with a pair of leaves and flower, magnified. 3. An expanded flower, magnified (pentandrous, apetalous). 4. A stamen, more magnified ; inside view. 5. Vertical section of the pistil, magnified, showing the ovules, &c. 6. Dehiscent capsule, in the calyx, magnified. 7. A magnified seed. (Micropyle not rostellate.) 8. Longitudinal section of the same, displaying the embryo applied to the outside of the albumen, but little curved. CARYOPHYLLACE^.. 25 Plate 107. STIPULICIDA, Michx. Sepala late scarioso-marginata, retusa, petalis spathulatis inferne utrinque bidenticulatis snbbreviora. Stamina 5. Stylus 3-lobus. Capsula iinilocularis, circiter 20-sperma. Embryo hemicyclicus. — Caulis pliiries dichotomus, fastigi- atus, setaceus ; floribns in apice ramuloriim capitellato-glome- ratis ; foliis radicalibus spathulatis, caulinis minimis subulatis ; stipulis adnatis pectinato-laciniatis. Stipulicida, Michx. Fl. 1. p. 20. t. 6. Nutt. Gen. 1. p. 29. DC. Prodr. 3. p. 375. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 173. Endl. Gen. 5215. Calyx of five almost distinct sepals, which are cuneate- oblong, with a rigid axis and scarious-petaloid (white) mar- gins (the inner more broadly scarious), imbricated in asstiva- tion, persistent. Petals .5, rather longer than the calyx, imbricated in sestivation, hypogynous, spatulate, the dilated claw minutely two-toothed on each side above the base, marcescent. Stamens 5, alternate with the petals, hypogy- nous : riLAMENTs filiform, short : anthers introrse, two- celled; the cells oblong, opening longitudinally. Ovary globose-ovoid, one-celled, with a basilar columnar placenta : style short, three-lobed ; the lobes stigmatose along the whole inner face. Ovules numerous, amphitropous, ascending. Capsule somewhat exceeding the calyx, globular, charta- ceous, three-valved, about twenty-seeded. Seeds borne on the columnar free placenta, smooth, compressed, inequilate- ral, almost anatropous. Embryo dorsal, curved into nearly a semicircle around the convex side of the farinaceous albu- men : RADICLE inferior. Herb low and very slender, from an a])parenlly annual root, the stems repeatedly dichotomous, the capillary corym- 3 26 CARYOPHYLLACl-^. bose branchlets terminated by a close cluster of several small sessile (white) flowers, apparently leafless ; the cauline leaves being all reduced to minute subulate bracts, which are transversely connected by means of a scarious incisely mul- tifid somewhat deciduous stipular membrane. Etymology. Name composed of stipula, the stipule, and cado, to cut; in allusion to the incised stipules. Geographical Distribution. The single species is restricted to the Atlantic border of the United States, from North Carolina to Florida ; grow- ing in dry, sandy soil. PLATE 107. Stipulicida setacea, Mkhx. ; — of the natural size. 1. Diagram of the flower. 2. An expanded flower, magnified. 3. A sepal from the same (one of the inner). 4. A petal from the same, showing the lateral teeth. 5. A stamen, more magnified, inside view. 6. Outside view of the same. 7. Vertical section through the ovary, placenta, receptacle, &c. 8. A detached ovule, mere magnified. 9. Magnified dehiscent capsule, with the calyx and marcescent petals. 10. A seed, more highly magnified. 11. Vertical section of the same, showing the embryo curved half round the albumen. CARYOPHYLLACE^.. 27 Plate 108. SPERGULARIA, Pers. Sepala herbacea. Petala 5, ovalia, raro abortiva. Styli 3-5. Capsula unilocularis, 3 - S-valvis, polysperma ; valvis dum sepalis numero seqiialibus iisdem alternis. Embryo incomplete annularis. — Folia ssepiiis fasciculata, nee rite verticillata, carnosula ; stipulis scariosis conspicuis. Spergularia, Pers. Ench. 1. p. 504 (Sect. Arenariae). Cainbess. in St. Hil. Fl. Bras. 2. p. 171. t. 110. Endl. Gen. 5218. Balardia, Cambess. in op. cit. 2. p. 180. t. 111. Lepigonum, Fries. Walilb. Fl. Gothob. p. 45. Stipularia, Haworth, Synops. p. 104. Spergula, Sect. Spergularia, Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 175. ArenarijE Sp. stipulatae, Linn., etc. Spwrrcy-SandMort. Calyx of five herbaceous sepals, united barely at the base, imbricated in aestivation, persistent. Petals 5, oval or obovate, usually conspicuous (rarely wanting), slightly peri- gynous, imbricated in asstivation. Stamens 10, inserted into a slightly perigynous annular disk, or frequently by abortion 5, alternate with the petals, sometimes reduced to three, two, or one : filaments subulate : anthers introrse, two-celled, the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary one-celled : styles 3 to 5, distinct or nearly so, the inner face stigmatose. Ovules indefinite, borne on a columnar central basilar placenta, am- phitropous. Capsule chartaceous, ovoid, one-celled, three - five-valved ; the valves, when five, alternate with the sepals. Seeds nu- merous, lenticular-compressed, often surrounded by a scarious or winged margin. Embryo uncinate or incompletely annu- lar, partly surrounding the farinaceous albumen. Herbs depressed, with the leaves more or less fleshy, fili- form or setaceous, commonly fascicled in the axils, but not 28 CARYOPHYLLACEyE. verticillate ; the scarious stipules conspicuous, the adjacent ones often united into one. Flowers pedicellate, termi- nal, by the evolution of the branches becoming lateral : pedicels refracted after anthesis, at length again upright. Corolla purple, rose-color, or white. Etymology, &c. The name is taken from Spergula ; to which the genus is more nearly related than to Arenaria. Their stipules at once distinguish them from the Arenariea; ; their emhryo, the position of the valves of the capsule, and the want of verticillate leaves, from Spergula. Geographical Distribution. Natives of the sea-shore in most parts of the world, either strictly littoral, or sometimes found in sandy soil at some distance inland, but scarcely extending beyond the influence of a saline soil. PLATE 108. Spergularia rubra, Pers. (Waste fields, Cambridge.) 1. Diagram of the flower. 2. Flower, with a leafy branch, magnified. 3. A stamen, magnified, inside view. 4. The same, outside view. 5. The pistil, magnified. 6. The same, the ovary and placenta longitudinally divided. 7. Dehiscent capsule with the persistent calyx, magnified. 8. A seed, more magnified. 9. Vertical section of the same, and of the contained embryo and albumen. CARYOPHYLLACEiE. 29 Plate 109. SAGINA, L. Petala Integra, saepe obsoleta sen nulla. Ovarium uni- loculare. Styli tot quot sepala, iisdem alterni ! Capsula polysperma 4 - 5-valvis, valvis integerrimis sepalis oppositis ! — Herbae pusillee, exstipulatse, foliis filiformibus vel subulatis. Sagina, Linn. Gen. 176. Bartl. Ord. Nat. p. 305. Torr. &. Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 177. Fenzl in Ann. Wien. Mus. 1. p. 43. Endl. Gen. 5224. Fenzl in Ledeb. Fl. Ross. 1. p. 338. Alsinella, Dillen. Gen. 6. Spergul^; Sp. exstipulatae, Linn, et Auct. Spergella, Reichenb. Fl. Germ. p. 110. Pearlwort. Calyx of four or five nearly distinct sepals, imbricated in aestivation, herbaceous, a little fleshy, persistent. Petals as many as the sepals and alternate with them, hypogynous, entire, deciduous, often small and inconspicuous, sometimes altogether wanting. Stamens as many as the sepals, and opposite them, or twice as many, inserted on the lobes of a hypogynous disk : filaments filiform : anthers introrse, two- celled, the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary ovoid, one- celled : styles 4 or 5, alternate with the sepals, short, the whole inner face stigmatose. Ovules numerous, ascending on slender funiculi which rise from a central columnar pla- centa, amphitropous. Capsule one-celled, four - five-valved to the base ; the membranaceous valves opposite the sepals, entire. Seeds numerous, pyriform-lenticular, or somewhat reniform, smooth, naked at the hilum. Embryo curved more than half round the outside of the farinaceous albumen. Herbs of small size, diffuse or depressed, destitute of stipules ; the opposite leaves subulate or filiform. Flowers small, terminal or lateral, often nodding on the apex of the strict and slender peduncle. 30 CARYOPHYLLACE^. Etymology. Sagina, fattening, food ; — these little plants being sup- posed to be nourishing to cattle. Geographical Distribution, &c. Natives of the colder and temperate parts of the northern hemisphere, sparingly, if at all truly, indigenous in the southern hemisphere. The species here figured (as well as S. apetala) has probably been introduced from the Old World, although it has the ap- pearance of being indigenous in Rhode Island, Connecticut, &c. But S. nodosa and S. Linnaei (Spergula saginoides, L.) are certainly indigenous north and west of the limits of the United States proper, as also, probably, is S. Elliottii, Fenzl (Spergula decumbens, Ell.), in the Southern States. S. fontinalis. Short df Peter, is thought by Fenzl to be an apetalous form of Stellaria crassifolia. S. erecta, Linn. (Mcenchia, Ehrh.), is now referred to Cerastium. — The Linneean Sagina was founded on the tetramerous species alone ; the pentamerous ones having been referred to, and until re- cently retained in, Spergula, from which they differ in the position of the valves of the capsule, as well as in the want of stipules. PLATE 109. Sagina procumbens, Linn. ; — from Rhode Island, Olney. 1. Diagram of the flower. (The central cross represents the stigmas, which alternate with the valves of the capsule, and with the sepals.) 2. An expanded flower, magnified. (Tetramerous.) 3. Hypogynous disk (with the base of the filaments) detached and more magnified, 4. Stamen (with the lobe of the disk) still more enlarged ; outside view. 5. The same, seen from within, and showing the dehiscence of the anthers. 6. Pistil, magnified. 7. The same, with the ovary and central placenta vertically divided. 8. An ovule detached, more magnified. 9. Dehiscent capsule and calyx of a pentamerous flower, magnified. 10. Magnified seed. 11. Vertical section of the same, and of the arcuate embryo, albumen, &c. CARYOPHYLLACEiE. 31 Plate 110. HONKENYA, Ehrh. Flores subpolygami. Petala integerrima. Stamina 10, disco conspicuo glanduloso 10-lobo inserta. Ovarium subtri- (v. 4-5-) loculare. Styli 3-5. Capsula unilocularis, 3-5- valvis; valvis integerrimis, dum sepalis numero sequalibus iisdem alternis. Semina pauca, fimdo loculi inserta, rostel- lata. — Herba arenarimi littoris, succulenta ; foliis ovalibiis ; floribus solitariis. HoNKENVA, Ehrh. Beitr. 2. p. 281 (1788). Reichenb. Fl. Germ. p. 568. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 176. Etidl. Gen. 52-i9. Fenzl in Ledeb. Fl. Ross. 1. p. 357. Amriodenia, Gmel. Fl. Sibir. 4. p. 160 (nomine tantura indicatum). Ammadenia, Ruprecht, Fl. Samoj. Cisural. p. 25. Adenarium, Raf. in Desv. Jour. Phys. 89. p. 259 (1818). Ammonalia, Desvaux, ex Endl. Gen. Halianthus, Fries, Fl. Hall. p. 75. Arenaria peploides, Linn, et Auct. Sea-Sandwort. Flowers described as polygamo-dioecious, but with us perfect. Calyx of five thick and fleshy ovate sepals, imbri- cated in sestivation, united at the base, persistent. Petals 5, perigynous, spatulate-obovate, unguiculate, as long as the calyx, imbricated in asstivation. Stamens 10, alternately opposite the sepals and the petals, inserted into the sinuses of a conspicuous 10-lobed and glandular slightly perigynous disk, those opposite the sepals rather longer than the others : FILAMENTS filiform-subulatc : anthers two-celled, introrse, the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary ovoid, more or less com- pletely three -five-celled, the dissepiments soon breaking away from the walls and adhering to the more persistent columella : styles as many as the cells, usually 3 or 4, short, stigmatose on the inner face. Ovules few, arising from the 32 CARYOPHYLLACE.E. very base of etich cell around the naked columella, amphi- campylotropous. Capsule ovoid, fleshy, one-celled, few-seeded, three-valved, sometimes five-valved, the entire valves then alternate with the sepals. Seeds large, erect, lenticular-pyriform, with a sinus at the naked basilar hilum ; the micropyle rostellate- produced. Embryo hippocrepiform with the extremities approximated, almost inclosing the farinaceous albumen : RADICLE and the slender cotyledons inferior. Herb perennial, succulent, growing in the sands of the sea-shore, with numerous quadrangular stems from a common creeping rootstock ; the leaves decussate, ovate or oblong, very thick and fleshy, sessile. Stipules none. Flowers solitary, axillary or terminal, short-peduncled. Petals white. Etymology. Dedicated to Honckeny, a Geranan botanist. Geographical Distribution. A well-marked genus of a single species (the H. oblongifolia, Torr. 4' Gr., of the Northwest Coast passing by insen- sible gradations into the ordinary form), which is indigenous to the arctic and northern temperate shores of the Old and the New World ; on the Atlan- tic coasts extending southward in the United States to lat. 40°, in Europe to lat. 30°, N. Note. The flowers are perfect and similar in all the specimens we have examined. Nor do we notice any albumen exterior to the embryo. — The name indicated by Gmelin would have taken precedence if noticed in time : but it can hardly be said that the genus was established by him. PLATE 110. HoNKENYA PEPLOiDES, EhrJi. ; — a flowering stem of the natural size. (Coast of New England, Oakes, Olney.) 1. An expanded flower, magnified, showing the disk, &c. 2. A detached petal, more enlarged. 3. Magnified stamen, inside view. 4. Outside view of the same. 5. Magnified longitudinal section of the whole flower, showing the inser- tion of parts, the naked columella, &c. 6. An ovule detached and more magnified. 7. Dehiscent capsule, with the persistent calyx, enlarged. 8. Seed, more magnified. 9. Vertical section of the same, through the embryo and albumen. CARYOPIIYLLACEiE. 33 Plate HI. ALSINE {Tourii.), Wahl. Petala integerrima, rariusve retusa. Stamina 10, Ovari- um imiloculare. Styli 3. Capsula polysperma, usque ad basim 3-valvis ; valvis integerrimis sepalis interioribus oppo- sitis. Semina estrophiolata. — Folia plerumque setacea, su- bulata seu linearia, exstipulata. Alsine, Gaertn. Fr. t. 129. Wahl. Fl. Lapp. p. 129 (excl. spec). Fenzl in Endl. Gen. 5227 «& Ledeb. Fl. Ross. 1. p. 341 ; non Linn. ArenarijE Sp., Cherleria (Hall.) et Minuartia (Lcefl.), Linn, et Auct. Greniera, Gay in Ann. Sci. Nat. (ser. 3.) 4. p. 27. Tliree-valved Saud\iort. Calyx of five (or rarely four) almost distinct sepals, im- bricated in asstivation, persistent. Petals as many as the sepals and alternate with them, somewhat perigynous, im- bricated in aestivation, entire, very rarely retuse or obcordate, sometimes obsolete. Stamens twice as many as the sepals (very rarely fewer), inserted into a hypogynous or obscurely perigynous more or less glandular-lobed disk : filaments fili- form or subulate : anthers introrse, two-celled, the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary one-celled : styles 3, one opposite each of the two outermost sepals, the other alter- nate with the third and fifth sepals, very rarely as many as the sepals and opposite them, the inner face stigmatose. Ovules indefinite, borne on a central columnar placenta, am- phitropous. Capsule one-celled, chartaceous, dehiscent quite to the base into as many quite entire valves as there are styles, usually three, when they are as nearly as may be opposite the three inner sepals ; rarely as many as the sepals, when they are alternate with them. Seeds numerous, globose-reni- form, campylotropous, not strophiolate, the crustaceous testa smooth, granulated or muricate. Embryo coiled into a most- 34 CARYOPHYLLACE^. ly incomplete ring around the outside of the farinaceous albumen. Herbs usually caespitose and with subulate or setaceous leaves, destitute of stipules. Flowers solitary or cymose, white, rarely rose-color. Etymolooy. The name is derived from SXaos, a grove, in allusion to the situations many species affect. Geographical Distribution. A genus of many species, all natives of the temperate and frigid regions of the northern hemisphere. Note. Als/ne was a general name applied by Tournefort and his prede- cessors to all the Chickweeds. Linnaeus restricted the name to A. media and A. segetalis, one of which is a Stellaria, the other a Linnaean Arenaria of the stipulate section, that is, a Spergularia. Wahlenberg reestablished the genus on its substantial character, viz. the capsule dehiscent into three separate and entire valves ; and the acute Fenzl has adopted and confirmed it, after excluding, of course, the stipulate species (Spergularia) and A. peploides (Honkenya). Into this genus fall all the Arenarias of the Flora of North America that are truly indigenous within the geographical limits to which this work extends, excepting A. lateriflora, which is a Moehringia ; — leaving no representative with us of Arenaria proper (the pod of which opens at the apex by twice as many teeth as there are styles) besides the natural- ized Arenaria serpyllifolia. To Alsine also belong some of our species which, on account of their obcordate petals, have been referred to Stellaria, viz. A. Nuttallii (Stell. Nuttallii, Torr. 4" Gr., Alsine Drummondii, Fenzl, ined.), A. macropetala (Stell. macropetala, Torr df Gr.), and A. Walteri (Stellaria uniflora, Walt.). PLATE in. Alsine squarrosa, Fenzl (Arenaria, Michx.) ; — from the Pine barrens of New Jersey. 1. Diagram of the flower in a transverse section of the bud. 2. An expanded flower, magnified. 3. External view of a stamen, more magnified. 4. Internal view of the same. 5. Magnified vertical section of the pistil, placenta, receptacle, &c. 6. An ovule detached and more highly magnified. 7. Dehiscent capsule, in the calyx, enlarged. 8. A seed, more magnified. 9. Vertical section of the same, tlirough the embryo and albumen. CARYOPHYLLACE^f:. 35 Plate 112. MGEHRINGIA, L. Petala integerrima. Stamina 8 v. 10. Ovarium 2-4-lo- culare : styli totidem. Capsula in valvas recurvatas duplo stylorum numero dehiscens. Semina plura, strophiolata. — Folia exstipulata, patula, ovata, oblonga, seu linearia. McEHRiNGiA et ArenarivE Sp., Linn. Gen. et Auct. (Gsertn. Fr. t. 129). McEHRiNGiA, Fenzl in Endl. Gen. 5235, & in Ledeb. Fl. Ross. 1. p. 371. Torr. Fl. N. Y. l.p. %'. Calyx of four or five herbaceous sepals, united at the base, imbricated in aestivation, persistent. Petals as many as the sepals and alternate with them, more or less perigy- nous, obovate or oblong, entire, imbricated (or occasionally convolute!) in aestivation, deciduous. Stamens twice as many as the petals (8 or 10) : filaments subulate, pubescent or smooth, inserted into the edge of a nearly hypogynous disk : ANTHERS introrse, two-celled, the cells opening longi- tudinally. Ovary plainly divided in M. lateriflora into as many cells as there are styles by manifest dissepiments : STYLES 3 (opposite the two outer sepals and the sinus be- tween the third and fifth), sometimes 2 or 4, the inner face stigmatose. Ovules rather numerous, borne on a central columnar placenta, amphitropous. Capsule membranaceous, one-celled, dehiscent into twice as many valves (usually 6) as there are styles. Seeds few or rather numerous, reniform, campylotropous, smooth and shining, distinctly strophiolate at the hilum. Embryo coiled around the outside of the farinaceous albumen into a nearly complete ring. Herbs with flaccid stems, and spreading, usually broad and flat leaves, destitute of stipules. Peduncles terminal, often becoming lateral by the evolution of an axillary branch. Flowers white. 36 CARYOPHYLLACEiE. Etymology. Dedicated to Maehring, a German physician and botanist, of the time of Linnaeus. Geographical Distribution, &c. A genus founded on a tetramerous plant (M. muscosa, Linn.), but now extended so as to comprise a number of usually pentamerous species ; — all natives of the colder portions of the northern hemisphere. Note. The ovary of M. lateriflora is three-celled, and plainly shovi^s (vi'hat appears to be a general rule when there are three carpels in a pentamerous flower) that two of the carpels are placed opposite the two exterior sepals, while the third necessarily opposes, not the third sepal, but the sinus between it and the fifth. PLATE 112. McEHRiNGiA lateriflora, Fenzl; — of the natural size. 1. Diagram of the flower, in transverse section of a bud, showing the three- celled ovary, &c. (The petals in this instance were convolute in aestivation, as in the Sileneae ; but they are usually imbricated.) 2. An expanded flower, enlarged. 3. Magnified vertical section through the ovary, receptacle, &c. 4. Stamen, more magnified, outside view. 5. Inside view of the same. 6. An ovule, more magnified. 7. Dehiscent capsule in the calyx, enlarged. 8. A seed, with the cellular strophiole, magnified. 9. Vertical section of the same, through the crustaceous testa, the coiled embryo, and the albumen. CARYOPHYLLACEiE. 37 Plate 113. STELLARIA, L. Petala bifida, sen abortu minima v. nulla. Stamina 8, vel 10, V. abortu pauciora. Ovarium uniloculare. Styli saspius 3, Capsula ovoidea, in valvas duplo stylorum numero ultra medium dehiscens. Semina estrophiolata. — Folia patentia, exstipulata. Stellaria, Linn. Gen. 568 (excl. sp.). Gaertn. Fr. t. 130. Fenzl in Endl. Gen. 5240, & in Ledeb. Fl. Ross. 1. p. 375. Spergulastrum, Michx. Fl. 1. p. 275. Larbrea, St. Hil. in Mem. Mus. Par. 2. p. 261. Cliicliweed. Stitcliwort. Starwort. Calyx of five or sometimes four herbaceous sepals, united only at the base, imbricated in aestivation, persistent. Pe- tals as many as the sepals and alternate with them, more or less perigynous, deciduous, two-cleft or two-parted, or when small rarely entire, sometimes wanting. Stamens twice as many as the sepals (8 or 10), or by abortion fewer (3 to 5), inserted into a more or less manifest perigynous disk : FILAMENTS subulate or filiform : anthers introrse, two- celled, opening longitudinally. Ovary one-celled : styles 3 (respectively opposite the two outer sepals and the sinus between the third and fifth), sometimes 4 or even 5, rarely only 2, filiform, the whole inner face stigmatose. Ovules numerous, borne on a more or less elongated central placenta, amphitropous. Capsule membranaceous, globose or ovoid-oblong, one- celled, splitting to the base or beyond the middle into twice as many valves as there are styles, or at first into three valves (placed as in Alsine) which are soon two-cleft. Seeds in- definite, or sometimes very few, campylotropous, smooth or granulated ; the hilum not strophiolate. Embryo coiled into a complete ring, or nearly so, around the outside of the fari- naceous albumen. 38 CARYOPHYLLACE.E. Herbs usually diffuse, destitute of stipules ; the leaves opposite, spreading or retiexed, usually plane, sometimes petioled. Flowers peduncled, solitary or c}Tnose. Petals white. Etymologt. Name from stella, a star, from the appearance of the spreading petals. Geographical Distribcticx. A genus of numerous species, widely distributed over the worid, but (with the exception of SteUaria media, which has accompanied man everywhere) nearly restricted to the temperate and colder regions. PLATE 113. Stellaria LONGiroLiA. Muhh ; — a flowering stem. 1. A flower, enlarged. 2. A detached petal, more magnified. 3. A stamen, seen from within, equally magnified. 4. Magnified vertical section through the ovary, placenta, receptacle, die. 5. Capsule in the calyx, enlarged. 6-8. Stellaria borealis, Bigeloic. 6. Dehiscent capsule and calyx, enlarged. 7. A seed, more magnified. 8. Vertical section of the same, through the embrvo and the albumen. CARYOPHYLLACEiE. 39 Plate 114. CERASTIUM, L. Petala obcordata vel bifida. Stamina 10, raro pauciora. Ovarium imiloculare. Styli tot quot sepala (saepius 5), iisdem opposita. Capsula cylindracea seu elongata, apice in dentes duplo stylorum numero dehiscens. Semina estrophiolata. — Folia plana, exstipulata. Cerasticm, Linn. Gen. 535. Gaertn. Fr. t. 130. Fenzl in Endl. Gen. 5241, «fc in Ledeb. Fl. Ross. 1. p. 396. Mouse-ear Cliickweed. Calyx of five, or very rarely four, nearly distinct herba- ceous SEPALS, imbricated in aestivation, persistent. Petals as many as the sepals and alternate with them, obscurely peri- gynous, obcordate, two-cleft, or emarginate, very rarely entire, imbricated in aestivation. Stamens twice as many as the sepals, or rarely of only the same number, obscurely perigy- nous : FILAMENTS filifomi or subulate : anthers two-celled, introrse, opening longitudinally. Ovary one-celled : styles as many as the sepals and opposite them, or very rarely fewer, the whole inner face stigmatose. Ovules numerous on an elongated central placenta, amphitropous. Capsule membranaceous, longer than the calyx, usually cylindrical and prolonged, straight or curved, sometimes cy- lindraceous-conical, one-celled, dehiscent at the apex only by twice as many teeth as there are styles or sepals, the teeth or their margins commonly re volute. Seeds numer- ous, campylotropoiis ; the crustaceous testa granulated or papillose ; the hilum not strophiolate. Embryo coiled into a complete or incomplete ring around the outside of the farinaceous albumen. Herbs usually pubescent or woolly, branching, with flat exstipulate leaves, and cymose, or rarely solitary, peduncu- late flowers. Petals white. 40 CARYOPHYLLACE^. Etymology. The name is taken from Kepas, a horn; in allusion lo the shape of the exserted and often curved capsules. Geographical Distribution. Widely diffused over the world, chiefly in the colder and temperate regions of the northern hemisphere. C. vulga- tum and viscosum, originally natives of the Old World, have accompanied man everywhere. They are all insignificant weeds. The species illustrated is one of the few that are truly indigenous in the United States proper. PLATE 114. Cerastium nutans, Haf.; — a small specimen, of the natu- ral size. 1 . Diagram of the flower. (The five little circles of the inner ring indicate the position of the styles.) 2. An expanded flower, enlarged. 3. A stamen, magnified, inside view. 4. Pistil with the ovary, receptacle, &c., vertically divided ; magnified. 5. Dehiscent capsule, with the calyx, enlarged. 6. A seed, more magnified. 7. Vertical section of the same, through the embryo and the albumen. CARYOPHYLLACEiE. 41 Plate 115. SILENE, L. Calyx ebracteolatiis 5-dentatus. Petala 5 (sestivatione contorta) cum staminibus 10 carpophori apici hypogyne in- serta, Styli 3. Capsula basi sa^pius 3-locularis, apice in denies diiplo stylorum numero dehiscens. SiLENE, Linn. Gen. 772. Otth in DC. Prodr. 1. p. 367. Fenzl in Endl. Gen. 5248 (cum Silenanth. § Saponarise) & in Ledeb. Fl. Ross. 1. p. 303. Catch-fly. Campion. Calyx tubular, cylindrical, clavate, or nearly campanulate, 5-toothed, persistent ; the teeth or short lobes imbricated in aestivation. Petals 5, with long and linear claws, inserted on the summit of the short or usually elongated stipe (car- pophore) on which the ovary is raised; the dilated lamina entire or cleft, naked, or crowned at the base with a two- cleft appendage, convolute in asstivation. Stamens 10, in- serted with the petals, those opposite them with the filaments more or less evidently adnate to the base of their claws : anthers introrse, versatile, two-celled, the cells opening lon- gitudinally. Ovary three-celled (rarely four -five-celled) at the base, very rarely one-celled throughout : styles 3 (rarely 4 or 5), filiform, stigmatose down the inner face. Ovules numerous, borne on a central columnar placenta, horizontal, amphitropous. Capsule inclosed in the calyx or exserted, rarely strictly one-celled, usually imperfectly divided at the base into as many cells as there are styles, dehiscent at the apex by twice that number of teeth. vSeeds numerous, rcniform ; the crustaceous testa smooth, granulated, or muricate. ExM- BRYO coiled more than half-way around, or completely sur- rounding, the farinaceous albumeiL 1 42 CARYOPHYLLACE^. Herbs of diverse habit, with opposite or rarely verticil- late leaves, and variously cymose flowers. Stipules none. Petals white, rose-color, or purple. Etymology. The name is said to be derived from alaXov, saliva, in allu- sion to the viscid exudation of many species ; — from which the English name of Catch-fly is also derived. Geographical Distribution, &c. The Mediterranean basin is the great focus, not only of this large genus, but of the whole pink tribe : a few be- long to the warmer temperate region of North America, but a greater number of them are Western. Some are arctic or alpine. Silene is, also, the sole genus of its tribe indigenous to the United States : but several species of Lychnis, Saponaria, and Dianthus ornament our gardens ; and one, the Lychnis Githago ( Corn- Cockle), is a well-known weed in grain-fields. Properties. The root of Silene Virginica, a species allied to that here figured, has some reputation as an anthelmintic. Some species are homely weeds ; others bear handsome flowers. PLATE 115. Silene Pennsylvanica, Michx.; — of the natural size. 1. Diagram of the flower, with a section of the ovary towards the base. 2. Vertical section of the flower enlarged, displaying its organs. 3. A detached pistil entire, enlarged. 4. A magnified stamen, seen from the outside. 5. The same, seen from within. 6. An ovule detached and more magnified. 7. Dehiscent capsule, in the calyx, of the natural size. 8. Vertical section of the same enlarged, showing the stipe, seeds, &c. 9. A magnified seed. 10. Vertical section of the same through the embryo, albumen, &,c. Ord. MALVACEiE. Herbas, frutices, rariiisve arbores, miicilaginosas, pube Scepissime stellata, foliis simplicibus alternis stipulatis : di- cotyledoneae, dichlamydese, hypogyna, polyandri-monadel- phcB, 5-polygyna3 ; calyce 5-sepalo sestivatione valvato ; co- rolla 5-petala a3stivatione convoluta, petalis basi cum imo tubo staminiim connatis ; antheris reniformibus uniloculari- bus ; granulis pollinis hispidulis ; seminibus amphitropis parce albuminosis ; embryone ciirvato, cotyledonibus folia- ceis chrysaloideo-contortuplicatis. Malvace^, Juss. Gen. p. 271 (excl. § 5-7). R. Brown in Tuckey, Cong. p. 428. Kunth, Diss. Malv. p. 1. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 429. Endl. Gen. p. 978. Lindl. Veg. Kingd. p. 368. The Mallow Family belongs to a well-marked natural group (the Co- lumnifera3 of Linnaeus), the plants of which agree in having the calyx valvate and the corolla convolute in aestivation ; the stamens monadelphous in a column, or else more or less pentadelphous ; the embryo large, with folia- ceous cotyledons ; and the leaves alternate and stipulate. The proper Mal- low Family is readily distinguished from the other Columniferas by its strictly monadelphous stamens, one-celled reniform anthers, and simple leaves. This important, although not very large, family occurs in all parts of the world except the frigid zone. It is most copiously represented within the tropics and in the hotter parts of temperate regions, thence gradually dimin- ishing in number towards the poles. There are more species in the north- ern than in the southern temperate zone ; and more in the New than in the Old World. The Malvaceae of temperate regions are nearly all lierbs, one ornamental shrub, the Hibiscus Syriacus, forming the principal exception ; but within the tropics shrubby or even arborescent forms are common. Their pubes- cence is usually stellate, as shown in Plate 122, Fig. 1. The leaves are almost always petioled, usually palmately veined, and often lobed, but never truly compound. They are always furnished with a pair of stipules, which, however, are sometimes deciduous. The peduncles are axillary, and com- 44 MALVACE^. monly articulated above the middle, or just beneath the flower. In many cases each flower is subtended by an involucel of three or several, or rarely only one or two bractlets, forming what is usually denominated an exterior calyx ; the importance of which has beea over-estimated in the systematic arrangement of the order. The calyx and the corolla are almost without exception pentamerous. The former is herbaceous and persistent, and the sepals, which are strictly valvate in the bud, are more or less united towards the base. The petals are commonly more or less oblique or inequilateral, as is usually the case when their aestivation is convolute. Their insertion is hypogynous; but their short claws are connate with the base of the stamineal column, which union also gives to the corolla the appearance of being slightly gamo- petalous. The explanation of this union is given by the investigations of M. Du- chatre upon the organogeny of the flower in Malvaceae.* He has shown that the petals and stamens (at least those which ordinarily appear in Malvaceae) are identical in origin, both being developed from five original papilte alternate with the calyx-segments and next within them, therefore morphologically representing the corolla. These, by parallel and collater- al deduplication, give rise each to a petal and a cluster of stamens ; and the union of these five clusters constitutes the stamineal column. This view is beautifully exemplified by the genus Sidalcea (Plate 120) , recently proposed by myself,! i" vs'hich the column is not resolved into simple filaments, but bears five petaloid lobes or phalanges of stamens, situated opposite the petals, into the base of which a vascular communication may be traced. That the anthers of each lobe are the result of the collateral deduplication of a single organ is evident on inspection of those cases in which the phalanges are two-cleft, and their divisions again two-forked, &c., until we reach the sep- arate anthers; as in Plate 120, Fig. 9. Such stamens, perfectly resolved down to the column, compose the andrcBcium of Modiola (Plate 128), in which the five component phalanges are more or less discernible, of Nap^a (Plate 119), &c. The same, further multiplied by transverse deduplication so as to form several series usually becoming free at more or less unequal heights, constitute, perhaps, the entire androecium of most other Malveae. But what has become of the true stamineal verticil, the parts of which should alternate with the petals'? M. Duchatre has detected this in the five lobes or teeth which terminate the naked apex of the column in such Mal- vacete as Pavonia, Hibiscus, Malvaviscus (Plate 131, Fig. 7), &c., and which, when the column is short, may be seen to alternate with the petals. This, again, is confirmed by Sidalcea, in which the column, prolonged above the sympetalous phalanges, terminates in antheriferous filaments, or in pha- langes the principal, or five exterior, lobes of which apparently alternate with the phalanges of the outer column, and therefore with the petals them- selves. * In Jlnnales des Sciences JVaturelles, 3™^ ser. 4. p. 123. i Plantar Fcndhrianm, p. IS. MALVACEAE. 45 The anthers are reniform and one-celled by the confluence of the two lobes at their organic apex, as is shown by Plate 128, Fig. 3. The line of dehiscence is therefore transverse around the convex side, and the anther becomes two-valved. The cell of course exhibits, at an early stage, the septum which divides into two compartments the two loculi of the normal anther, the edge of which terminates in the line of dehiscence (Plate 117, Fig. 5). The grains of pollen are uniformly globose, and their coat mi- nutely hispid ; as in Plate 117, Fig. 6. The flowers are hermaphrodite, except in the solitary case of Napasa (Plate 119), which is dioecious. The pistils, from five (or very rarely fewer) to twenty or more in number, are more or less united in a ring around a central receptacle. The excep- tion to this in the tribe Malopeae, where the carpels are aggregated without apparent order into a head, is shown by Duchatre to arise from the ring be- coming deeply five-lobed in the course of its development, the reentering angles being carried inwards and upwards so as to produce an apparent capitulum as the ovaries enlarge and accommodate themselves to the space. The styles are usually combined at the base, or sometimes nearly to the summit. They correspond in number with the ovaries ; except in Pavonia and its allies, where the branches of the style and the stigmas are twice as many as the ovaries or the cells of the compound ovary, — a character which defines a well-marked natural group, the tribe Urenece. In the larger portion of the order, forming the tribe Malvea. as character- ized in the following conspectus, the mature carpels separate from each other with more or less facility, and from the persistent central receptacle. A small portion of the surface of the inner angle or base of the carpel usually remains adherent to the receptacle, or to the base of the calyx. The stig- mas are by all authors said to be capitate throughout the family ; but this is not the case in what I have termed the EumaJvecF, which include all the European, and a considerable portion of the North American representa- tives of this tribe. In these, the styles, or their uncombined portions, are stigmatose throughout their whole length down the inner face, as in Caryo- phyllaceae. In the tribe Hibiscefc, the carpels, usually of the same number as the pe- tals, are strictly combined into a several-celled compound ovary, and the fruit is a proper loculicidal capsule, the valves bearing the dissepiments upon their middle, and commonly leaving no central axis. The embryo nearly fills the seed, but is involved in a small quantity of mucilaginous, or at length fleshy albumen. It is incurved or inflexed, and the broad and foliaceous cotyledons are more or less plaited together in the middle, and then infolded in the opposite direction, often enwrapping the base of the radicle. The plants of the Mallow Family are uniformly destitute of noxious qual- ities, and nearly all of them yield a bland nuicilage. On this account they are largely used as emollients and demulcents. The principal oflicinal plant for this purpose in Europe is the Marsh Mallow (Althaja oflicinalis) : but 46 MALVACE^. the Okra or Gombo (Abclmoschus esculentus) , a well-known ingredient in soups, &c., in warm climates, is still more mucilaginous. Nearly all Mal- vaceas have a tough fibrous bark, which, in several plants of different parts of the world, is employed as a substitute for hemp. Of these the most impor- tant is Hibiscus cannabinus, which produces the Sz/n-hemp of India. But far the most important product of the family is cotton, which consists of the long hairs that cover the seeds in the genus Gossypium ; a tropical genus of great ambiguity as to the number of species, but which was originally given both to the New and to the Old World. Into the subjoined arrangement I have introduced all the admitted gen- era of the order. Several of them are known to me only by the published characters. Conspectus of the Tribes and Genera. Tribe I. MALOPE^'E. — Carpels indefinite, crowded together in a 5- lobcd or amorphous head, uniovulate. Radicle inferior. (None are North American.) * Styles stigmatose down the inner face. Malope, Linn., Cav. Mediterranean. * * Styles terminated by a capitate stigma. KiTAiBELiA, Willd. Southeastern Europe. Palava, Cav. Peru. Tribe II. MALVE.:E. — Carpels as many as the stigmas (5-20 or more), uniovulate or few-ovulate, disposed in a ring around a central axis, from which they at length separate. Column antheriferous at the summit. Subtribe I. Eumalve^. — Styles stigmatose down the inner face. Car- pels uniovulate, numerous. Ovule peritropous-ascending. * Stamineal column simple. -)- Involucel 6-9- (rarely 3-) cleft. Alth^a, Linn., Cav. Europe and Asia. Lavatera, Linn. European. Savinionia, Webb 4' Berthd. Canaries.* Nav^a, Webb 4" Bcrthel. Canaries.* -<- -)- Involucel 3-phyllous or wanting. Flowers perfect. Malva. (Plate 116.) Petals obcordate. Carpels cochleate-reniform, muticous, conformed to the seed. Callirrhoe. (Plates 117, 118.) Petals truncate, often erose-toothed. Carpels more or less beaked; the cell containing a dorsal process between the seed and the hollow beak. _ * Although in the generic characters the stigmas are said to be " capitellate," It IS evident from the figures that they are just as in Malva. MALVACE^. 47 H — I — •- Involucel none. Flowers dioecious. Nap^a. (Plate 119.) Dioecious. Calyx 5-toothcd. Stamens 15-20 in a single series. # * Stamineal column double, the outer pentadelphous. SiDALCEA. (Plate 120.) Involucel none. Carpels 5 -9. Subtribe 11. Side^. — Stigmas terminal, capitate. Carpels uniovulate. * Ovule peritropous-ascending. Radicle inferior. Malvastrum. (Plates 121, 122.) Involucel often inconspicuous and caducous or wanting. * * Ovule resupinate-pendulous. Radicle superior. Involucel none. SiDA. (Plate 123.) Carpels 5-1.5, erect, partly included in the calyx, indehiscent or 2-cleft at the apex, at length separating from the axis. Anoda. (Plate 124.) Carpels numerous, united in a depressed stellari- form pod, the dissepiments obliterated before dehiscence. Lawrencia, Hook. South Australia. Cristaria, Cav. Peru and Chili. Gaya, Kunth. Tropical America. Bastardia, Kunth. (Bastardia § 1. Abutiloides, Endl.) Tropical America. Subtribe III. Abutile^. — Stigmas capitate. Carpels 2-9-ovulate. * Involucel none. Abutilon. (Plates 125, 126.) Carpels 3-9-ovulate, not bilocellate, somewhat 2-valved, scarcely separating from the axis. Wissadula, Medik. Tropical America and Asia. * * Involucel usually present, Meliphlea, Zuccarini. Mexico. Sph^ralcea. (Plate 127.) Carpels 2- 3-ovulate, not bilocellate, tardily separating from each other and from the axis. MoDioLA. (Plate 128.) Carpels 2-ovulate, separable ; the cells divided by a transverse partition. Tribe III. URENE^. — Carpels or cells of the ovary half as many as the stigmas (viz. 5, the stigmas 10), uniovulate. Radicle inferior. # Fruit 5-coccous ; the carpels opposite the petals. -I— Flowers in an involucratc capitulum. Malachra. (Plate 129.) Proper involucel none. Involucre 3- several- leaved. ■*- -f- Flowers not capitate. Urena, Li7in. (Cocci glochidate.) Tropical, chiefly of the Old World. Pavonia. (Plate 130.) Involucel 5- 15-leaved. Cocci naked, or some- times 3-awned. * * Fruit baccate ; the cells opposite the sepals. Malvaviscus. (Plate 131.) Petals convolute-connivent. Column exserted. 48 MALVACEAE. Tribe IV. HIBISCE^, Endl. (excl. Malvaviscus) . — Carpels as many as the stigmas, 3-10 (usually 5), combined into a loculicidal few -many- seeded (or rarely indehiscent) capsule ; the dissepiments borne on the middle of the valves. Column antheriferous for a great part of its length, naked and 5-toothed at the apex. # Cells of the ovary uniovulate. Involucel polyphyllous. KosTELETZKVA. (Plate 132.) Capsule depressed, 5-celled, 5-seeded. Decasciiistia, Wiglit -7- fidis, segmentis cuneatis dilatatis laciniato-lobatis incisisve, floralibus 3-.5-partitis segmentis lanceolatis sa;pe incisis ; stipulis ovatis ; pedunculis in racemuni folin- sum elongatum digcstis ; involucello nullo; petalis eroso-creuulatis ; carpeiJis laevibus dorso trilobato-cristatis, rostro maximo minus incurve. — Gray, PI. Fundi. p. 17. Nuttallia pedata, J^att. in Hook. Ezot. 3. t. 172. RIalva pedata, Torr. i,- Gray, Fl. N. Jim. l./>. 226, excl. syn. " N. digitata, Bart." — Some indigenous specimens are tliree feet high ; and in cultivation it attains tlie lieiglit of four or five feet, leafy to the top, and producing a long succession of iiandsome flowers from the axils of the leaves. The petals are deep cherry-red, witii a tiiice of fiurple, decidedly smaller than those of C. digitata, being less than an inch in ength. The root is not thickened in any of my indigenous specimens, nor does it show a tendency to become so in the living plant. I suppose the j)lant truly an annual or a biennial. C. DIGITATA : subglauca ; radice crassa sa?pe napiformi : caule simplici (vix sesquipedali) ; foliis radicalibus primariis rotundato-cordatis crenato-lobatis vel 5-fidis, seqiientibus caulinisque pedato-r)-7-parlitis, segmentis linearibus plerum- que elongatis integcrrinus sen 2-3-fidis, floralibus parvis scene integerriniis ; stipulis lanceolatis ; pedunculis subcorymbosis; involucello nullo ; petalis aj)ice fimbrialis ; carpellis reticulato-rugulosis dorso vix cristatis, rostro breviiisculo inflexo. — Nutt. in Jour. Jicad. Pkilad. 2. p. 181 ; Graij, PL. Fendl. I. c. iSut- tallia digitata, Burt. Ft. A\ Am. 2. t. 62 ; Hook. Ezot. Fl. 3. t. 171. Malva digi- 54 MALVACE^. PLATE 117. Callirrhoe involucrata, Gray; — summit of a prostrate stem, in flower and fruit, from a live plant raised in the Cambridge Botanic Garden, from Arkansan seeds. 1. Transverse section of a flower-bud, enlarged, showing the aestivation and arrangement of parts. (In one instance the petals were seen to be irregularly imbricated in a;stivation.) 2. Vertical section of the flower, magnified, showing the insertion, &c. 3. A stamen from the bud, more magnified. 5. The same, with the anther cut across, showing the normal partition. 6. Grain of pollen (hispid, as in all Malvaceae), highly magnified. 7. The gynaecium, enlarged, the rest of the flower cut away. 8. An ovule detached and magnified. 9. Receptacle in fruit, with one ripe carpel left in place, magnified. 10. Magnified transverse section of the receptacle and a portion of the ripe carpels ; one of them showing a section of the seed and embryo. 11. Vertical section of a ripe carpel, seed, and embryo, magnified ; show- ing the internal dorsal process, the hollow beak, &c. 12. A seed detached entire, equally magnified. 13. An embryo detached entire, showing the way it is curved and the coty- ledons folded back upon each other .above, and infolded below, as in most Malvaceae. PLATE 118. Callirrhok pedata; — summit of a flowering branch and a primordial radical leaf, from a live plant raised from Texan seeds {Wright), of the natural size (a small specimen). 1. Vertical section of a flower, magnified, showing the ovules, &c. 2. Receptacle with half the ripe carpels in place, magnified. 3. Posterior view of a ripe carpel, showing the 3-lobed crest, magnified. 4. Vertical section of the same and of the contained seed, embryo, &c., showing the conspicuous dorsal process at the base of the large beak, the at length ascending radicle, &c. 5. Vertical section of a carpel of Callirrhoe Papaver magnified. 6. Carpel of Callirrhoe triangulata, enlarged. 7. Vertical section of the same, showing a less conspicuous internal pro- cess below the beak. lata, Torr. &,- Gray, Fl. I. c. Nuttallia cordata, LindL Bot. Reff. t. 1938, ex icone. — Tiie figure in tlie Botanical. Register (which I liad wrongly referred to M. triangulata) certainly belongs to the present species, as the naked calyx, the fimbriate edge of tlic petals and their (pink) color sliow. But the radical leaves figured are only the primary ones, and are all undivided. The corolla in this species is less red and considerably larger than that of C. pedata, but small- er than in C. Papaver: the petals are from an inch to an inch and a quarter in lengti), and their whole summit is finely and beautifully Iringed. In the fruit, as in other respects, the species is intermediate between C. pedata and C. Papa- ver, but is abundantly distinct from either. Since these characters have been verified, there is no room to doubt that the Nuttallia digitata figured by Barton truly represents this species, and not the C. pedata, as was assumed in the flora of jV. Jlmcrica. Although it sometimes flowers the first season from the seed, yet the root early becomes iiapiform, or thickened fusiform, and is perennial. MALVACE/E. 55 Plate 119. NAPiEA, Clayt. Flores dioici ! Involucellum nullum. Calyx teres, 5-den- tatus. Tubus stamincus simplicissimus, ad apicem in filamen- ta 15-20 uniserialia solutus. Styli intus longitudinaliter stigmatosi. Fructus 8 - 10-coccus, depressus ; carpellis sub- reniformibus muticis, monospermis, ab axi secedentibus. Se- men reniforme. Radicula centripeto-infera, — Herba procera, foliis palmato-multifidis laciniatis maximis, floribus umbella- to-fasciculatis parvis. NAPiEA, Clayt. Fl. Virg. ed. 1, & ed. 2. p. 102. Linn. Gen. 838, ex parte. Gray, Man. Bot. N. U. S. p. 69, & PI. Fendl. p. 20. SiD^ Sp., Cav., DC., Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. Glade Mallow. Flowers dioecious. Calyx naked (not involucellate), terete, somewhat turbinate, rather deeply five-toothed, the triangular teeth valvate in ccstivation, persistent. Petals 5, obovate, entire, convolute in aestivation, hypogynous, their claws adnate to the base of the stamineal column. Ster. Fl. Stamens 15 to 20, monadelphous in a simple hypogynous column, the dilated base of which coheres with the claws of the petals : filaments a single series at the summit of the column, short : anthers reniform, (by confluence) one-celled. Pistils abortive. Fert, Fl. Stamineal column 15-20- lobed at the apex, not antheriferous. Ovaries 8 or 10, united in a circle around a central receptacle : styles as many as the ovaries, united below, the distinct portion filiform, stig- matose (minutely hispid) for the whole length of the inner face. Ovule solitary in each carpel, peritropous-ascending, amphitropous ; the micropyle pointing to the base of the cell. Fruit depressed, formed of a ring of eight or ten charta- ceous cuneatc-reniform and bcakless (barely apiculale) smooth 56 MALVACEyE. carpels, which at length separate and fall away from the small central axis, fmally bursting on the inner edge or tardi- ly two-valved. Seed reniform, smooth. Embryo arcuate- incurved in soft albumen : cotyledons ovate, foliaceous, somewhat infolded : badicle centripetal-inferior. Herb tall and coarse, from a perennial root, with large palmately 7-11-parted alternate leaves; the lobes acumi- nate, pinnatifid-incised and toothed. Stipules ovate, free. Flowers small, umbellate-fascicled at the summit of the flowering branches, together forming an ample corymbose panicle. Petals white. Etymology. Named by Clayton from vanrj, a wooded valley or mountain glade, or, poetically, the nymph of the groves, alluding to the situations in which the plant grows. Geographical Distribution, &c. Only a single species of the genus is known, which was discovered in the Valley of Virginia, growing in rich calcareous soil, and is also found in similar situations in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Illinois. Linnaeus added, as a second species, the N. hermaphrodita or N. laevis, well known in the gardens (a plant of uncertain, though said to be of North American, origin), which, notwithstsnding considerable resemblance in habit, is a genuine Sida (S. Napaea, Cav.), and from which the original Napeea is abundantly distinguished by its inferior radicle, introrsely stigma- tose styles, and dicEcious flowers. PLATE 119. Nap^a dioica, Linn.; — branch from a pistillate plant cul- tivated in the Botanic Garden, Cambridge. 1. Vertical section of a staminate flower, enlarged. (Ohio, Sullivant.) 2, 3. Magnified stamens from the same. 4. Vertical section of a pistillate flower, enlarged, showing the sterile stamineal column, the styles, ovules, &c. 5. An ovule detached and more magnified. (Micropyle inferior.) 6. Fruit of the natural size. (From Ohio, Sullivant.) 7. The same (with the calyx) enlarged ; one carpel (9.) removed. 8. A side view of a seed, magnified. 9. Detached carpel cut across, as w-ell as the contained seed, showing a transverse section of the embryo, — magnified as in fig. 7. 10. Vertical section of the seed (8.) and of the embryo, magnified. 11. Embryo detached entire, magnified. MALVACEAE. 57 Plate 120. SIDALCEA, Gray. Involucellum nullum. Tubus stamineus duplex ! nempe in phalanges 5 exteriores petalis oppositas, atque circiter 10 angustiores interiores, vel filamenta subindefinita per paria coalita, solutus. Styli intus longitudinaliter stigmatosi. Fructus 5-9-coccus, carpellis reniformibus monospermis ab axi secedentibus. Semen reniforme. Radicula centripeto- infera. — Herbae (Am. Bor.-Occ. ), fioribus panic alato-racemo- sis, purpureis, roseis, sen albis. SiDALCEA, Gray, PI. Fendl. in Mem. Anier. Acad. n. ser. 4. p. 18. SiD^ Sp., Lindl., Nutt.,Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. ] . p. 234, no. 10, 14 - 17. Calyx naked (destitute of an involucel), persistent ; the five sepals united at the base, valvate in asstivation. Petals 5, obovate or obcordate, convolute in asstivation, hypogynous, their claws adnate to the base of the stamineal column. Stamens monadelphous in a column which gives oif about the middle or near the apex a series of five broad and mem- branaceous phalanges, situated opposite the petals (convolute in aestivation), each bearing from four to eight anthers on very short filaments, and at the summit divides into an inner set of about ten narrow and usually diantheriferous phalan- ges, or into about twenty filaments, most of which are united below in pairs : anthers one-celled, as in the order. Ovaries 5 to 9, united in a circle around a central receptacle : styles as many as the ovaries, united below, filiform, stigmatose the whole length of the inner face. Ovule solitary in each car- pel, peritropous-ascending, the micropyle inferior. Fruit of five to nine membranaceous reniform carpels, which are muticous, or apiculate with a short soft beak, one- seeded, separating from the central receptacle when ripe, 58 MALVACEAE. opening by laceration at the inner edge, or tardily somewhat two-valved. Seed reniform. Embryo arcuate-incurved, part- ly surrounding the soft albumen : cotyledons foliaceous, cordate, conduplicate-infolded : radicle inferior. Herbs mostly hairy or hirsute, with rounded and common- ly palmately-cleft or parted leaves, free stipules, and usually virgate stems, terminated by a raceme or racemose panicle of purple, rose-colored, or white flowers. Etymology. Name compounded of Sida and Alcea, the ancient names of two allied Malvaceous genera. Geographical Distribution, &c. A genus of eight described species (vide Plantce Fendlcrianfe, 1. c.) indigenous to Southern Oregon, California, and New Mexico ; therefore not falling within the geographical range of this work, but introduced here for the purpose of illustrating its remarkable stamineal column, by which the genus is strikingly distinguished from all other true Malvaceae. From the want of an involucel the species formerly known have been referred to Sida, along with other heterogeneous forms. PLATE 120. SiDALCEA DiPLOSCYPHA, Gray; — flowers, &c., of the nat- ural size, from a Californian specimen by Fremont. 1. Diagram of the ajstivation, &c. of the flower, with a magnified cross section of the compound ovary. (The exterior phalanges of sta- mens are seen to be convolute in the bud, as well as the petals, and the inner to consist of ten smaller phalanges in two series, five alternating with the exterior set, and five placed opposite them.) 2. The stamineal column entire, magnified ; the large and petaloid exte- rior phalanges spreading ; the summits of the styles exserted from the centre of the 2-antheriferous inner phalanges. '^. A'ertical section of the same and of the ovary, &c., more magnified. 4. Mature fruit, with the segments of the calyx cut ofi", magnified. .5. Side view of a detached carpel, more magnified. 6. Vertical section of the same, and of its seed and embryo. 7. The embryo detached entire, and more magnified. 8. The same, with the cordate cotyledons spread out flat. 9. SiDALCEA CANDIDA, Gray (Santa Fe, Fendler) ; — the stamineal col- umn magnified. (The twice-forked outer phalanges show that each arises from the repeated deduplication of one fundamental stamen.) 10. SiDALCEA DELPHiNiFOLiA, Gray (California, Hartweg) \ — stamineal column and styles, magnified ; the phalanges erect, as in the bud. 11. Fruit magnified (calyx cut away), half the carpels removed, to show tiie receptacle, and one divided vertically to show the seed. 12. One of the carpels bursting on the inner side. MALVACEAE. 59 Plate 121, 122. MALVASTRUM, Gray. Involucellum nullum vel 1-3-phyllum. Stigmata termi- nalia, capitellata. Ovulum in loculis solitarium, peritropo- adscendens. Fructus 5-20-coccus, carpellis muticis rostra- tisve ab axi secedentibus. Semen reniforme. Embryo arcuatus vel annularis ; radicula centripeto-infera. Malvastrum, Gray, PI. Fendl. in Mem. Amer. Acad. (n. sor.) 4. p. 21. Malv^s: et Sid^ Sp., Auct. Calyx naked or furnished with an involucel of from one to three subulate and deciduous bractlets, or sometimes with a conspicuous three-leaved persistent involucel, five-cleft, persistent ; the segments valvate in asstivation. Petals 5, hypogynous, usually oblique or obliquely emarginate, convo- lute in asstivation. Stamens indefinite, monadelphous in a simple column, the base of which is united with the claws of the petals, hypogynous: filaments all arising from the summit of the column : anthers reniform, one-celled, open- ing around the whole convex side. Ovaries 5 to 20, united in a circle around a central receptacle : styles as many as the ovaries, united below ; stigmas terminal, capitate. Ovule solitary in each carpel, peritropous-ascending, amphitropous, the micropyle inferior. Fruit a ring of coriaceous or crustaceous reniform one- seeded carpels, which at length separate from each other and from the central axis, and open by rupture on the inner edge, or are indehiscent, or sometimes two-valved, pointless or ros- trate, and sometimes bearing two tubercles or short spines on the back. Seed reniform. Embryo curved into a semicircle around a little soft albumen, or incompletely annular : coty- ledons broad and foliaceous, cordate, conduplicate-infolded : radicle centripetal-inferior. 60 MALVACEiE. Herbs or low shrubby plants, with alternate stipulate leaves, and axillary or racemose, spicate or glomerate flowers. Corolla flame-colored, orange-colored, or yellow. Etymology. Name prolonged from Malva ; given by De Candolle to his section of tliat genus which included the true Mallows as well as many which are referrible to the present genus, as constituted in Plantce FendleriancE, 1. c. Geographical Distribution, &c. The genus comprises a considerable number of species, chiefly American, and indigenous to the warmer parts of the country, from the plains of Missouri to those of Paraguay and the Andes of Chili. It probably should also comprise the Malvse ^ Capenses of De Candolle ; but it has no European representatives. Note. The species have been variously referred, those with a small or caducous involucel, or none at all, to Sida, from which they differ in their as- cending ovule and inferior radicle ; those with a manifest involucel usually to Malva, from which their capitate stigmas at once distinguish them. PLATE 121. Malvastrum coccineum. Gray; — branch of a flowering plant raised from seeds brought from Missouri by Mr. Sprague. 1. Flower-bud, with the (caducous) 2-bracteolate involucel, enlarged. 2. Vertical section, more magnified, showing the ascending ovules, &c. 3. Summit of a style with its capitate stigma, more magnified. 4. Fruit with the calyx (from Fendler's Santa Fe specimens), enlarged. 5. Same, more magnified, with only one carpel left on the receptacle. 6. Seed, magnified. 7. Vertical section of a carpel, seed, and contained embryo, more magnified. 8. Embryo detached entire, magnified. PLATE 122. Malvastrum Wrightii, Grmj; — branch in flower, from Texas, Wright; of the natural size. 1. Some of the stellate pubescence of the leaves, magnified. 2. Flower-bud, with the persistent involucel, enlarged. 3. Vertical section through the flower, showing the ovules, &c., magnified. 4. An anther, more magnified. 5. Summit of a style and capitate stigma, more magnified. 0. Fruit and fructiferous calyx, of the natural size. (Carpels dehiscent.) 7. The same, with all but one carpel removed from the axis, magnified. 8. Vertical section of a carpel, seed, and embryo, magnified, y. Seed entire, magnified. 10. Embryo extracted entire, magnified. 11. Tlie same, with the cotyledons spread out. MALVACE^. 61 Plate 123. SIDA, L., Kutith. Involucellum nullum. Stigmata terminalia, capitellata. Ovulum in loculis solitarium, resupinato-pendulum ! Fruc- tus 5-15-coccus, calyce subinclusus ; carpellis erectis, nudis, apice sajpe bivalvibus, ab axi tarde secedentibus. Semen subtrigonum. Embryo conduplicatus ; radicula supera! SiDA, Linn. Gen. 837, excl. spec. Kunth in H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 5. p. 256, excl. spec. Adr. Juss. in St. Hil. Fl. Bras. 1. p. 173. Gray, PI. Fendl. 1. c. p. 22. Malvinda, Medik. Malv. 23. SiD^ Sp., DC, Prodr. 1. p. 459. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 231. Calyx naked (destitute of an involucel), or very rarely subtended by one or three bractlets, usually angled in the bud, five-cleft, the segments valvate in sestivation. Petals 5, usually oblique, convolute in asstivation, hypogynous, deciduous. Stamens numerous, monadelphous in a simple hypogynous column, the dilated base of which is united with the claws of the petals : filaments all arising from the summit of the column : anthers reniform, one-celled, open- ing by a semicircular line, two-valved. Ovaries 5 to 15, united around a central receptacle : styles as many as the ovaries, united below : stigmas terminal, capitate. Ovule solitary in each carpel, borne on the inner angle near the summit of the cell, nearly anatropous, resupinate-pendulous, the raphe therefore dorsal or external, and the micropyle ascending next the axis. Fruit of 5 to 15 erect and straight or incurved one- seeded (beaked or bcakless) carpels, which arc more or less included in the persistent calyx, indehiscent or usually two- valved at the apex, and tardily separate at maturity from the central axis. Seed suspended, often somewhat trigonous, or with a sinus at the hilum which is directed to the summit 62 MALVACEAE. of the cell. Albumen little, miicilaginous or fleshy. Em- bryo abruptly bent (the curvature inferior) so that the flexu- ose-biplicate foliaceous cotyledons are incumbent on the RADICLE, which lies next the inner angle of the carpel and points to its apex ! Herbs, or sometimes shrubby plants, with usually undi- vided alternate leaves, narrow stipules, and axillary solitary or clustered flowers. Peduncles articulated. Petals yellow, white, or rarely purple. Etymology. An unexplained name, used by Theophrastus and the early botanists. Geographical Distribution. Chiefly tropical or subtropical plants, the greater number American. Several species are indigenous in the Southern United States, especially in Texas ; one or two of them occur as weeds in the Northern States, but were probably introduced from the South. Note. In the Planta Fendlerianm I have indicated three sections of the genus, but I have not at present the means of ascertaining whether they will embrace all the genuine species known. PLATE 12.3. SiDA SPINOSA , Linn. ; — branch in flower, of the natural size. 1. Diagram of the aestivation of the sepals and petals, and section of the ovary (the cells of which are opposite the petals.) 2. A petal enlarged. 3. Vertical section of the flower, magnified, displaying the union of the base of the petals with the column of stamens, the resupinate- pendulous ovules, capitate stigmas, &.c. 4. An anther, more magnified. 5. An ovule detached, more magnified. 0. Fruit with the persistent calyx, enlarged. 7. Back view of one of the carpels (dehiscent at the apex). 8. Vertical section of the same, and of the suspended seed. 9. Seed entire, magnified. 10. Embryo detached entire, magnified. MALVACE^. 63 Plate 124. ANODA, Cav, Calyx in fructu paten tissimus. Capsiila polycocca, supeme depresso-plana, stellariformis ; carpellis radiantibus parietibus demum obliteratis apertis. Csetera fere Sidae. Anoda, Cav. Diss. 1. p. 38. t. 10, 11, & Ic. 5. t. 431. Kunth, 1. c. p. 265. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 458. Schlecht. in Linneea, 11. p. 205. Endl. Gen. 5287. Calyx naked (destitute of an involucel), deeply five-cleft ; the segments valvate in asstivation. Petals 5, obovate, convolute in aestivation, hypogynons. Stamens numerous, monadelphous in a simple hypogynons column, the dilated base of which is united with the claws of the petals : fila- ments all arising from the summit of the column : anthers reniform, one-celled, two-valved. Ovaries numerous (10 to 20), closely united" in a depressed ring around a central re- ceptacle : STYLES as many, united below : stigmas terminal, capitate. Ovule solitary in each carpel, resupinate-pendulous from the summit of the inner angle of the cell, almost ana- tropous ; the raphe therefore dorsal and superior ; the micro- pyle centripetal-superior. Fruit of 10 to 20 closely combined radiate-spreading carpels, subtended by the spreading persistent calyx, orbicu- lar, strongly depressed (the upper surface flat, the lower convex); the carpels usually beaked on the back, indehis- cent, the whole interior parietes or dissepiments obliterated, the remainder at maturity falling away from the dilated receptacle in the form of a kind of replum. Seed nearly horizontal, the raphe or hilura superior; the testa crusta- ceous. Embryo inflexed or incurved in sparing albumen : cotyledons foliaceous, cordate, replicate-infolded : radicle centripetal-superior. 64 MALVACE^. Herbs usually hirsute, with alternate angulate or hastate- lobed leaves on slender petioles, subulate stipules, and solitary axillary peduncles bearing single flowers. Corolla violet, white, or yellow. Etymology. The origin and application of the name are not explained by Cavanilles. It has been thought to come from avoBos, impassable, impervi- ous; the application of which is not apparent. But Schlechtendal (in Linnaa, 11. p. 205) has directed attention to the true source of the name, which is mentioned by Burmann {Thesaur. Zeyl. p. 1) as the Ceylonese generic appellation of Abutilon and some other allied plants. Geographical Distribution. A genus of six or seven known species, all natives of Mexico. One of them was also found growing spontaneously around Lima, by Dombey ; and it has recently been gathered by Dr. Riddell in Texas, where it is doubtless indigenous. A. cristata, Schkcht. (A. triloba and A. Dilleniana, Cav.) has long been in cultivation. Note. Anoda is a tolerably well-marked genus, differing from Sida in the depressed stellate fruit, from Abutilon in the solitary ovules, and from both in the obliteration of the dissepiments of the originally many-celled capsular fruit, the firmer exterior part of each carpel at length falling away from the axis like a kind of replum, usually carrying the seed with it. — The column is slightly five-lobed at the summit, (the lobes opposite the petals, in the normal mode of Malvaceae,) and the styles also show a tendency to form five parcels, which are deflexed between the divisions of the stamens. — The species are not yet well distinguished. PLATE 124. Anoda hastata, Cav., Schlecht.; — from an incomplete specimen gathered in Texas by Riddell, combined with a cultivated specimen in flower and fruit. 1. Vertical section of the column, pistil, &c., magnified. 2. Transverse section of the compound ovary, magnified. 3. Enlarged transverse section through the receptacle in fruit, with the remaining part of one carpel, or valve, and its seed, in place ; the dissepiments or sides of the carpels being entirely obliterated. 4. A similar valve and seed from the opposite side, equally enlarged. 5. A similar valve, detached. fi. A'crtical section of a seed and embryo, magnified. 7. Embryo entire (brought into a vertical position), magnified. MALVACE^. (35 Plate 125, 126. ABUTILON, Tourn., GcErtn. Involucellum nullum. Stigmata capitellata. Ovula in loculis 3, raro 4-9, omnia seu inferiora patula vel resupina- to-pendula. Fructus 5 - polycoccus ; carpellis unilocellatis subbivalvibus, ab axi vix secedentibus. Radicula adscendens vel centripeta. — Folia cordata. Abutilon, Tourn. Dill. Elth. (excl. spec). Gfertn. Fr. 2. p. 251. t. 135. Kunth in H. B. K. Nov. Gen. «& Sp. 5. p. 270. t. 474. Adr. Juss. in St. Hil. Fl. Bras. 1. p. 196. t. 40-42. Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 230. Endl. Gen. 5292. SiDa: Sp., Linn., Cav., L'Her., DC. Bastardise Sp., Adr. Juss. Endl. 1. c. Iiidiasi MallOAv. Velvet-leaf. Calyx naked (destitute of an involucel), five-cleft, persist- ent ; the segments valvate in aestivation. Petals 5, obovate, often retuse, convolute in asstivation, hypogynous, their claws coherent with the base of the stamineal column, at length deciduous. Stamens indefinite, monadelphous in a simple column, the dilated hypogynous base of which is united with the claws of the petals : tilaments usually all arising from the summit of the column : anthers reniform, one-celled, opening by a semicu'cular line around the convex side, two- valved : pollen (as in the whole order) globose, hispid. Ovaries 5 to 20 or more, closely united in a circle around a central receptacle, not divided by any false partition or in- ternal process : styles of the same number as the ovaries, united below : stigmas terminal, capitate. Ovules from 3 (or rarely fewer?) to 9 in each carpel, affixed to its inner angle above or about the middle, amphitropous or almost anatropous ; the uppermost ascending or patulous, the lower more or less rcsupinate-pendulous (as in Sida). 06 MALVACEAE. Fruit a whorl of 5 to 20 or more united follicular carpels, which scarcely separate from each other or from the central axis at maturity, usually invested helow by the persistent calyx, their summits often radiate-spreading, rostrate or pointless, coriaceous or membranaceous, dehiscent by the ventral suture at the apex, and frequently also by the dorsal suture, each three - six-seeded, or by abortion one - two- seeded, the cell destitute of any internal process or partition. Seeds round-reniform or subclavate-reniform, the lower resu- pinate-pendulous, the upper often horizontal, or, when there are several, ascending, the umbilical sinus superior or dorsal : testa crustaceous, smooth, or minutely hairy. Embryo in- curved, in sparing fleshy albumen : cotyledons very broad, foliaceous, cordate, biplicate and infolded, partly inclosing the radicle, which is centripetal or in the lower seeds cen- tripetal-superior. Herbs, or sometimes shrubs, or even trees in the tropics, often tomentose or velvety with a fine stellate pubescence. Leaves alternate, palmately veined, almost always cordate, serrate or entire, rarely lobed. Stipules free, deciduous. Peduncles axillary, solitary or several, one -several-flowered, articulated below the apex, sometimes paniculate by the reduction of the upper leaves of the branches to bracts. Corolla yellow or orange. Etymology. The name is of unknown origin or meanintr, probably Oriental : it appears to have been introduced by Dodoneus and Bauhin. The genus has commonly been united to Sida. Geographical Distribution. A genus of numerous species, which be- long chiefly to the tropical regions of the Old and the New World. Three or four species are indigenous to the southern borders of the United States, namely, in Florida and Texas ; and one (the common Indian Mallow or Velvet-leaf), a native of India, has escaped from gardens and become spar- ingly naturalized around dwellings and by the road-side in the Northern States. Properties. These plants possess the demulcent qualities of the whole family ; and in India and Brazil some species are employed in popular medicine the same way as is the officinal Marsh Mallow in Europe. MALVACE^. 67 Note. Tlie carpels, when only five in number, are opposite the sepals, at least in the species here figured (Plate 125) ; while in Sida spinosa, and [ believe in other species, they are situated opposite the petals. — When the ovules are only three in number they are either placed one above the other, as in A. Avicennas, or, more commonly, the two upper are collateral, as shown in Plate 125, Fig. 1 and Fig. 5. From this species and its allies, Wissadula, Medik., appears to differ only in having a partition across the cell above the lower seed.* — I do not possess sufiicieut materials for properly characterizing the sections into which the genus Abutilon is to be divided. The type of one of them ( Gayoides), with vesicular muticous fruit, is Sida crispa, Linn., which, having three ovules (and usually two seeds) in each carpel (Plate 126), cannot be a species of Bastardia, to which genus Adrien de Jussieu referred it.f To the same group, on account of its entirely similar aspect and structure, excepting the one-seeded carpels, I should refer the Bastardia nemoralis, Adr. Juss.,| and thus restrict the latter genus to the original species with a suspended seed (the section Abutiloides, Endl.). Abutilon trichopodum, Ach. Rich.,§ which is also a native of Key West, is very closely allied to A. crispum, but appears to be distinct. PLATE 125. Abutilon velutinum, n. sp. ; — a branch of the natural size, in flower and ripe fruit ; from Texan specimens, wild and cultivated. 1. Transverse section of a flower-bud (to show the aestivation), and of the ovary, magnified. The section passes through the upper part of the ovary, so as to exhibit the pair of collateral ovules which occupy the upper portion of each cell. 2. Magnified vertical section of a flower, showing the ovules in their nat- ural position. (One of each upper pair is concealed by its fellow.) 3. A detached ovule more highly magnified. 4. Enlarged vertical section through the dehiscent fruit and the investing calyx, dividing one of the five carpels so as to exhibit two of the seeds in place. 5. Vertical section through the back of one of the carpels and the three seeds it contains, to show their position, viz. two of them collateral in the upper and broader part of the cell. * I have seen no representative of this genus. I have, indeed, a flowering specimen of Sida periplocifolia, [i. Cariba-a, DC-, from Key West, which Acli. Richard (who does not describe the iiilernul structure of tlie fruit), in the Hot- any of La Sagra's work on Cuba, liolds, I suppose incorrectly, to be identical with the Oriental S. periplocifolia, Linn.; but the ovary exhibits no trace of transverse partitions ; so that the Caribbean species is a true Abutilon t In St. Hilaire, FL Bras. Merid. 1. j>. 104. t Op. cit. p. lOf), t. 39. § In La Sagra, Hist. Cith., part. Hot. PL Vase. p. 155. t. 17. 68 MALVACEAE. 6. Vertical section through a seed and embryo, magnified. 7. Transverse section of the same, showing how the cotyledons are folded. 8. Embryo detached entire and magnified. PLATE 126. Abutilon (Gayoides) crispum, Don; — branch from a Texan specimen, in flower and fruit ; of the natural size. 1. Vertical section of a flower, magnified ; showing the three ovules in each cell. 2. An ovule detached, more highly magnified. 3. Vertical section of the fruit, enlarged ; one carpel showing two seeds. 4. A seed more magnified. 5. Vertical section of the same, displaying the embryo. 6. Embryo detached and more magnified. 7. The same, with the cotyledons spread out. MALVACEAE. 69 Plate 127. SPH^RALCEA, St. Hil. Involucellum 2-3-phyllum, setaceiim, SEcpe deciduiim. Stigmata capitellata. Ovula in lociilis 2 - 3. Fructus sub- globosus polycoccus ; carpellis unilocellatis, 3 — 1-spermis, superne 2-valvibus, tardius inter se solubilibus et ab axi secedentibiis. Embryo arcuatus. Radicula infera, vel sem. superioris centripeto-supera. SpHa:RALCEA, St. Hil. «& Adr. Juss. in PI. Us. Bras. t. 52, & Fl. Bras. 1. p. 209. Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 228. Endl. Gen. 5272. Phymosia, Desv. in Hamilt. Prodr. Fl. Ind. Occ. p. 43, ex Endl. MALv.a: Sect. Sph5;roma, DC. Prodr. 1. p. 435. SpH.a:ROMA, Schlecht. in Linnaea, 11. p. 352. Calyx involucellate with two or three usually deciduous subulate or setaceous bracts, five-cleft, persistent ; the seg- ments valvate in aestivation. Petals 5, obovate or obcor- date, often oblique, convolute in aestivation, hypogynous, their claws united with the base of the stamineal column. Stamens indefinite, monadelphous in a simple hypogynous column : filaments all arising from its summit : anthers reniform. Ovaries 15 to 20, closely united in a ring around a central receptacle, destitute of any internal process or partition : styles 15 to 20, united below : stigmas capitate. Ovules 2 or 3 in each carpel, peritropous ; the upper one as- cending, the lower descending. Fruit of 15 to 20 compressed carpels, united in a globu- lar ring, truncate at the summit ; the carpels compressed, straight, excised at the insertion, often pointed, membrana- ceous or coriaceous, two-valved at the summit and frequent- ly splitting down the whole length of the dorsal suture, tardily separating from each other and from the central receptacle. Seeds 2, 3, or by abortion solitary in each car- 70 MALVACEAE. pel, reniform, peritropous. Embkyo semicircular-incurved in fleshy albumen : cotyledons foliaceous, cordate, plaited in the middle and infolded : radicle centripetal-inferior, or in the upper seed centripetal-superior. Herbs or shrubs, mostly hoary with a stellate pubescence, with alternate and usually lobed or toothed leaves, and axil- lary flowers. Stipules subulate, deciduous. Corolla ver- milion, flesh-colored, or violet. Etymology. Name compounded of o-(/)aipa, a sphere, and Alcea, an ancient name of Mallow, in allusion to the spherical fruit. Geographical Distribution. Natives of the warmer temperate and subtropical regions of America, in both hemispheres ; the greater part Mex- ican. One species extends north to the Arkansas River ; another is found farther north in Oregon. None of them are yet known to occur within the geographical limits of this work ; but they may be expected in Western Texas, PLATE 127. Sph^ralcea miniata ; — summit of a branch from Fendler's Santa Fe collection ; of the natural size. 1. Diagram of the aestivation of the calyx and corolla. 2. Vertical section of a flower, magnified. 3. Fruit, with the persistent calyx. 4. The same, with the calyx spread open and all but one carpel removed. 5. Vertical section of a carpel and its two seeds, more magnified. 6. Seed detached, more magnified. 7. Vertical section of the same and of the embryo. 8. Embryo detached entire, and still more magnified. MALVACEyE. 71 Plate 128. MODIOLA, Mcench. Involucellum 3-phyllum persistens. Stamina 10-20. Stigmata terminalia introrsum subcapitata. Fructus poly- coccus ; carpellis reniformibus, dorso cuspidatis, apice 2- valvibus, ab axi secedentibus, intns processu septiformi transverse divisis, locellis monospermis. Radicula centri- peto-infera. — Herbse humifnsas. MoDioLA, Mcench. Meth. p. 620. Adr. Jiiss. in St. Hil. Fl. Bras. 1. p. 210. t. 43. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 228. Malv^ Sect. MoDioLA, DC. Prodr. 1. p. 435. Calyx involucellate with three foHaceous and persistent bracts, five-parted, persistent ; the segments valvate in aesti- vation. Petals 5, obovate, convohite in asstivation, their claws united with the base of the stamineal column. Sta- mens 10 to 20, monadelphous nearly to the summit in an urceolate column ; the short filaments in a single series, when only ten in number united in pairs so as to form five forked phalanges, when more numerous with separate fila- ments interposed : anthers reniform, or somewhat didymous and at first two-celled. Ovaries 14 to 20, united in a ring around a central receptacle, each divided in the middle by a kind of transverse partition, the chambers each one-ovuled : STYLES united below, subclavate : stigmas terminal but in- trorse, oblong-capitate. Ovules 2 in each carpel, amphitro- pous, peritropous, the micropyle of both inferior. Fruit a depressed ring of rather coriaceous carpels, which at maturity separate from each other and from the dilated central receptacle ; each strongly reniform, cuspidate on the back, two-valved at the top, two-seeded, the seeds separated by the valve-like process which forms a transverse partition, or the upper seed sometimes abortive. Seeds reniform. 72 3IALVACE^. Embryo in fleshy albumen, arcuate : coxyLEDONs foliaceous, cordate, plaited together and infolded : radicle centripetal- inferior, or in the lower seed, from the strong incurvature of the base of the carpel, more or less ascending. Herbs, usually procumbent and spreading or creeping, hirsute with simple hairs, with alternate palmately-lobed and incisely-toothed leaves, somewhat adnate stipules, and small purplish flowers on solitary and simple axillary pedun- cles, which are articulated near the apex. Etymology. From modiolus, a little measure, alludin": to the shape of the fruit. Geographical Distribution. A genus of a few humble weeds, be- longing to the warmer parts of Eastern America, from Virginia to Buenos Ayres. Note. The union of the short filaments in phalanges, as described and figured in A. St. Hilaire's Flora Brasiliensis, is barely observable in M. Ca- roliniana (M. multifida, Mcench). The radicle is inferior in both seeds. PLATE 128. MoDioLA Caroliniana ; — branch, of the natural size, from a plant raised in the Botanical Garden, Cambridge, from seeds sent from Florida. 1. Diagram of the aestivation. 2. Vertical section of a flower, magnified, laying open one ovary. 3. An anther, more magnified (plainly formed of two confluent cells). 4. A detached pistil more magnified, the ovary vertically divided. 5. Fruit and receptacle vertically divided, magnified ; one of the carpels and its seeds divided, showing the embryos in place, the transverse partition, &c. 6. A seed more magnified. 7. Section of the same across the cotyledons and the radicle. 8. Embryo detached entire, magnified ; the cotyledons somewhat infolded. MALVACE^. 73 Plate 129. MALACHRA, L. Flores in capitiilum pedimculatiim plurifiomm, involucro 3-pleiophyllo cinctum, dispositi. Involucellum proprium nullum. Caetera fere Pavonias. — HerbsB pilis pungentibus hispidae. Malachra, Linn. Gen. 1266. Jacq. Ic. Rar. t. 548, 549. Cav. Diss. 2. t. 33. f. 2 (excl reliq.). DC. Prodr. 1. p. 441. excl. spec. 3, 5, 10, &14. Adr. Juss. in St. Hil. Fl. Bras.l.p.216. Endl. Gen. 5291. Ach. Rich. Fl. Cub. 1. p. 117. Calyx not involucellate, jBve-cleft, persistent ; the seg- ments three-nerved, valvate in asstivation. Petals obovate, oblique, convolute in aestivation, hypogynous, their claws united with the base of the stamineal column. Stamens definite (about 20), monadelphous in a simple hypogynous column, which is shorter than the corolla and naked, often five-toothed, at the apex : filaments short, all emitted singly from just below the apex of the column : anthers reniform, one-celled. Ovaries 5, situated opposite the petals, more or less united in a ring around a central axis : styles united into one, which is ten-cleft at the summit : stigmas 10, capitate. Ovule solitary in each carpel, peritropous-ascend- ing from the inner angle near the base of the cell ; the micropyle inferior. Fruit pentacoccous ; the achenia-like one-seeded carpels obovate-wedge-shaped, very obtuse and pointless, falling away separately from a slender axis, dehiscent at the base or along the ventral suture from below upwards. Seed conformed to the cell, obovate-triangular, erect, slightly ex- cised at the hilum ; the testa crustaceous. Embryo large, somewhat inciu-ved in the scanty albumen : cotyledons broad and foliaceous, cordate, plicate in the middle and chrysaloid- infolded : radicle inferior. 6 74 MALVACEAE. Herbs, or rarely somewhat shrubby plants, growing in wet places, hispid with sharp bristly hairs, and the stems usually marked with tomentose-pubescent lines. Leaves long-petioled, rounded, usually palmately lobed. Stipules free. Peduncles axillary, terminated by a head of five or more sessile flowers, which are inclosed by an involucre of three or more cordate floral leaves. The head frequently exhibits several setaceous bracts, some of which consist of the stipules of the involucral leaves ; but there is no involu- cel at the base of the calyx. Corolla yellow, or white with a tinge of red. Etymology. From ^aXdxr], an ancient name of some Malvaceous plant, probably the Hollyhock, so called on account of its emollient properties. Geographical Distribution. A genus of a few chiefly tropical plants, both of the Old and the New World. The sole representative in the United States has recently been detected in Texas by Mr. Charles Wright. PLATE 129. Malachra Mexican a, Schroder? — a portion of a stem with a leaf, peduncle, &c., of the natural size; from a specimen culti- vated in the Cambridge Botanic Garden from seeds of the Texan plant. 1. One of the three leaves of the involucre, of the natural size. 2. Diagram of the six-flowered capitulum. The smallest figures are sec- tions of the stipular bractlets. 3. Vertical section of the column, ovary, &c., magnified. 4. The pistil magnified, with the 5-celled ovary cut across. 5. The 5-coccous fruit, in the calyx, magnified. 6. The same, vertically divided ; two carpels taken away. 7. One of the separated carpels, equally magnified. 8. Vertical section of the same, and of its seed and embryo. 9. A seed detached entire, magnified. 10. The embryo detached entire, magnified. MALVACEiE. 75 Plate 130. PAVONIA, Cav. Involucelliim 5- 15-phyllum, persistens. Stamina saspius indefinita. Stigmata 10, capitata. Friictus 5-coccus ; car- pellis acheniiformibus monospermis, fere discretis (nudis vel apice 3-aristatis). Radicula infera. — Pedunculi miiflori. Pavonia, Cav. Diss. 3. p. 132. t. 45-49. Lam. 111. t. 58-5. Adr. Juss. in St. Hil. Fl. Bras. 1. p. 2-^0. t. 44-47. Endl. Gen. 5275. Pavonia, Lopimia, Lebretonia, Goethea, etc., Nees & Mart., DC. Malache, Ttqw, Ehret. t. 50. Thornthonia, Reichenb. Consp. p. 202. Calyx persistent, iiivolucellate with from five to fifteen persistent bracts, five-cleft ; the segments valvate in aestiva- tion. Petals obovate, convolute in aestivation, spreading, or sometimes convolute-connivent, the claws united with the base of the stamineal column. Stamens numerous, rarely- few or definite, monadelphous in a simple column, which is shorter or a little longer than the corolla, and naked and five- toothed at the apex ; the filaments arising from towards its summit or from nearly the whole length of the column : ANTHERS reniform. Ovaries 5, situated opposite the petals, more or less united in a five-lobed ring around a small cen- tral axis : styles united into one, which is ten-cleft at the summit : stigmas terminal, capitate, minutely hispid. Ovule solitary in each carpel, peritropous-ascending from the inner angle towards the base of the cell ; the micropyle inferior. Fruit pentacoccous ; the acheniiform carpels united barely at the base and obovate or rounded, or rarely by contiguous plane faces, dry, crustaceous or coriaceous, naked or some- times armed at the apex Avith three retrorscly hispid awns, separating at maturity, indehiscent, or somewhat two-valved. Seed solitary, ascending, conformed to the cell, obovate- 76 MALVACE^. reniform, acute at the base. Albumen little or none. Em- bryo incnrved: cotyledons foliaceous, cordate, plicate in the middle and chrysaloid-infolded : radicle inferior. Shrubs, or rarely herbaceous plants, with alternate and petioled stipulate leaves, and usually solitary flowers on ax- illary peduncles. Corolla yellow, white, rose-color, or red. Etymology. Dedicated to Joseph Pavon, a Spanish botanist who ac- companied Dombey and Ruiz to South America, and became one of the authors of the Flora Peruviana. Geographical Distribution. A genus of a considerable number of species, mostly with handsome flowers, nearly restricted to tropical Ameri- ca and India. Two Mexican species extend into Texas ; and another, the Malva Le Contei of Buckley (in Sill. Jour. 45, p. 176), resembling: the Brazilian P. hastata, Cav., was found by Major Le Conte in Georgia. Note. Pavonia, as left by Adr. Jussieu, who has best characterized it, exhibits a series of forms which too closely connect it with Urena on the one hand, and with Malvaviscus on the other. The typical state of the genus is well represented by our figure. The Pavonice Urenoidea of Jussieu (§ Ty- phalea, DC.) have the cocci tipped with three retrorsely barbed awns; while Urena has them hispid or echinate all over the back with glochidate bristles, has fewer anthers usually on very short filaments, and a five-cleft involuccl. But P. Le Contei, Torr. 4" Gray, ined., with naked carpels has also (judging from flowers which are not in good condition) very few and subsessile anthers, and the five leaflets of the involucel are a little united. P. Drummondii, Torr. c|- Gray, FL, on the other hand, having convolutely connivent (scarlet) petals, and a filiform exserted and soon spi- rally twisted column, to which may be added a fruit which is at first fleshy, although separable into five cocci, belongs to the P. Malvariscoidea: of Jussieu (Malvaviscus? § Anotea, DC-, but the petals are auriculate). This group should probably be restored to Malvaviscus, or form a distinct genus. PLATE 130. Pavonia Wrightii, n. s-p. ; — a branch in flower and fruit, of the natural size, from a plant raised in the Botanic Garden from seeds sent from Texas by Mr. Charles Wright. 1. Diagram of the aestivation, position, &c. of the parts of the flower. 2. Vertical section of the flower, magnified. 3. The five ovaries, with the base of the compound style, magnified. 4. Fruit, with the calyx and involucel, enlarged. 5. A separate carpel, seen laterally, more magnified. 0. Vertical section of the same, and of the contained seed and embryo. 7. Magnified embryo; and 8. the same with the cotyledons spread out. MALVACEAE. 77 Plate 131. MALVAVISCUS, Dill. Involucellum 7- 12-phyllum. Petala inasqiiilatera basi hinc lobulo aucta, erecta, in tiibiim convoluta. Tubus sta- mineus filiformis longe exsertus. Stigmata 10, capitata. Fructus baccatus 5-locularis, loculis monospermis. Radicu- la infera. Malvaviscus, Dill. Elth. p. 210. t. 170. Cav. Diss. 3. p. 131. t. 48. Kunth in H. B. K. Nov. Gen. 5. p. 283. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 445 (excl. sect. 2.?). Endl. Gen. 5278. A. Rich. Fl. Cub. 1. p. 131. t. 14. AcHANiA, Svvartz, Fl. Ind. Occ. 2. p. 1222. Calyx subtended by an involucel of seven to twelve linear persistent bracts, five-cleft, persistent ; the segments valvate in aestivation. Petals d, inequilateral, auriculate by a small lobe towards the base on one side, hypogynous, strongly convolute in aestivation, not expanding, but remaining erect and spirally convolute into a sort of tube, the claws united with the base of the stamineal column. Stamens indefinite, monadelphous ; the column long and filiform, much exserted, becoming spirally twisted, its naked apex five-toothed : fil- aments short, emitted in several series from the upper part of the tube : anthers oblong or reniform, opening round the convex side. Ovaries combined into a five-celled globular compound ovary ; the cells opposite the sepals : styles united into one, which is ten-cleft at the apex : stigmas 10, termi- nal, capitate or truncate, minutely hispid. Ovule solitary from the inner angle of each cell, amphitropous, pcritropous, the micropyle inferior. Fruit baccate, depressed-globose, usually five-grooved, five-celled ; the cells one-seeded. Seed ascending, obovate. " Embryo arcuate in very sparing mucilaginous albumen : 78 MALVACEAE. COTYLEDONS foliaceous, plaited and infolded : radicle in- ferior." Shrubs, with alternate stipulate usually rounded and ob- scurely lobed leaves, and axillary peduncles bearing single showy flowers. Corolla usually blood-red or scarlet. Etymology. Name compounded of Malva, mallow, and viscus, bird- lime, or something glutinous, from the mucilaginous or pulpy character of the fruit. Geographical Distribution. Natives of Tropical America, one spe- cies growing in the warmer part of Texas. M. Floridanus, Nutt., is, I believe, an Hibiscus. Note. None of the indigenous specimens of M. Druramondii I have examined show the fruit, nor has it yet been produced upon the specimens in cultivation in the Botanic Garden, where the plant flowers freely through the summer. PLATE 131. Malvaviscus Drummondii, Torr. df Gray; — branch in flower, of the natural size, from a plant raised from Texan seeds. 1. Diagram of the cEstivation and position of the parts of the flower, with a magnified cross-section of the ovary. 2. Section of the convolute corolla in flower. 3. A petal detached, of the natural size. 4. An anther, magnified. 5. Flower vertically divided through the column, the ovary, &c., enlarged. 6. Ovule detached and more magnified. 7. Summit of the stamineal column, showing the naked five-toothed apex. 8. Fructified ovary, with the calyx and involucre, of the natural size. 9. An immature seed, enlarged. MALVACEAE. 79 Plate 132. KOSTELETZKYA, Presl. Ovarii lociili unioviilati. Capsula depressa 5-sperma. Cse- tera fere Hibisci. KosTELETZKYA, PresI, Rei. Haenk. 2. p. 130. t. 70. Endl. Gen. 5276. Hibisci Sect. Pentaspermum, DC. Prodr. 1. p. 447 (excl. spec). Torr. &. Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 236. Calyx involucellate with from seven to ten subulate or setaceous persistent bracts, five-cleft ; the segments valvate in aestivation. Petals 5, convolute in asstivation, obovate, spreading, hypogynous, their claws united with the base of the stamineal column. Stamens indefinite, monadelphous ; the column slender, its naked apex five-toothed : filaments short, emitted from nearly the whole length of the upper half or more : anthers reniform, one-celled, two-valved. Ovaries 5, combined into a five-celled compound ovary ; the cells opposite the sepals : styles united into one nearly to the summit, there five-cleft : stigmas depressed-capitate. Ovule solitary and ascending from near the base of the inner angle of each cell, nearly anatropous, the micropyle inferior. Fruit a depressed-orbicular capsule, more or less five- angled, coriaceous, five-celled, five-seeded, loculicidally five- valved ; the valves alternate Avith the persistent sepals, bear- ing the dissepiment on their middle, leaving only a short central axis. Seed ascending, somewhat reniform ; the crustaceous testa smooth. Embryo arcuate in sparing albu- men : COTYLEDONS foliaccous, cordate, plaited and chrysaloid- infolded : radicle inferior. Herbs, sometimes sutfruticose, with the alternate petioled leaves hastate, sagittate, or the lower cordate, sometimes lobed. Stipules setaceous, deciduous. Peduncles axillary, 80 MALVACE^. solitary, one-flowered, often racemose or paniculate at the summit of the branches from the reduction of the leaves to bracts, articulated below the apex. Flowers rose-color, pur- ple, or yellowish, not very large. Etymology. Dedicated, I suppose, to a Bohemian botanist, Kosteletzky. Geographical Distribution. The genus consists of several chiefly American, tropical or subtropical species, the greater number Mexican. One species only, K. Virgiiiica (Hibiscus Virginicus, Linn.), is known in the United States, which is common on the coast from Virginia southward, and is sparingly found as far north as Long Island. PLATE 132. KosTELETZKYA YiRGiNicA, Prcsl ; — a branch in flower and fruit, of the natural size. 1. Diagram of the position and aestivation of the envelopes of the flower, (with a magnified transverse section of the ovary). 2. Vertical section through the column, ovary, receptacle, &c., magnified. 3. An anther, more magnified. 4. Capsule, dehiscent, with the calyx, &c., enlarged. 5. One of the valves of the same, seen from within. 6. A seed, more magnified. 7. Embryo detached entire, still more magnified. MALVACEAE. 81 Plate 133. HIBISCUS, L. Involucellum polyphyllum. Ovarium 5-loculare, loculis pliiriovulatis : stigmata 5, capitata. Capsula 5-loculare, calyce (non longitudinaliter fisso) stipata, loculicide 5-valvis ; loculis oligo-polyspermis. Hibiscus, Linn. Gen. 846 (excl. spec). Gasrtn. Fr. 2. p.250. 1. 134. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 446 (excl. sect. plur.). Adr. Juss. in St. Hil. Fl. Bras. 1. p. 242. Endl. Gen. 5277. Ketmia, Tourn., Adans. Rose-Mallow. Calyx involucellate with numerous (usually ten or more) subulate or filiform persistent bracts, five-cleft, not spatha- ceous and deciduous after flowering ; the segments valvate in aestivation. Petals 5, obovate, usually spreading, convolute in aestivation, the claws united with the dilated base of the stamineal column. Stamens indefinite, monadelphous ; the column usually elongated or filiform, five-tbothcd at the naked apex, hypogynous ; the filaments emitted from the greater part of its length : anthers reniform, two-valved. Ovaries 5, combined into a five-celled compound ovary, the cells opposite the sepals : styles united into one nearly to the apex, there five-cleft: stigmas 5, depressed-capitate (rarely connate), commonly hispid. Ovules several or nu- merous from the inner angle of each cell, horizontal or ascending, anatropous or nearly so. Fruit a five-celled capsule, stipate by or included in the persistent calyx, loculicidally five-valved ; the valves alternate with the sepals, bearing the dissepiments on their middle, leaving no, or scarcely any, central axis. Seeds numerous, or by abortion few in each cell, horizontal, or when few as- cending, obovate or globular ; the testa crustaceous, smooth, 82 MALVACEAE. squamulose, or hairy. Embryo arcuate in mucilaginous or fleshy albumen : cotyledons foliaceous, cordate, plaited and chrysaloid-infolded : radicle centripetal or inferior. Herbs, or often shrubs or trees, with alternate lobed or undivided leaves, and axillary peduncles which are usually articulated towards the apex and bear single large and showy flowers. Stipules often deciduous. Etymology. 'l^iaKos, an ancient name of the Marsh Mallow, applied by Linnaeus to an allied genus. Geographical Distribution. A genus of a considerable number of species, the greater part tropical or subtropical. Eight or ten species are indigenous to the warmer regions of the United States ; one of which ex- tends north along the coast to New England, and another to Ohio and Pennsylvania. Properties, &c. Several are highly ornamental in cultivation. All have the tough bark and the mucilaginous qualities of the order. Note. The Okra (H. esculentus, Linn.), so well known as a demulcent and for its culinary uses, and H. Manihot, Linn., belong to the genus Abel- MOSCHus, Medik., characterized by its tubular spatbaceous calyx, which splits down one side and is, with the involucel, deciduous. Of this no in- digenous representatives are known in the United States, except Hibiscus Collinsianus, Nutt. (if that be distinct from A. esculentus), of which I have no specimen for illustration. PLATE 133. Hibiscus Moscheutos, Linn. ; — a flower and floral leaf, of the natural size (the bases of the peduncle and petiole united). 1. Diagram of the aestivation of the floral envelopes. 2. Flower, with the column, ovary, &c., vertically divided, enlarged. 3. An anther, magnified. 4. An ovule, more magnified. 5. Transverse section of an ovary, magnified. 6. Dehiscent capsule and calyx, of the natural size. 7. A seed, enlarged. 8. Transverse section of the same. (The cotyledons should have been shown plaited on the back.) 9. Embryo detached entire, more magnified. Ord. BYTTNERIACEiE. Arbores, frutices, rariusve herbas ; aestivatione corollas in- derdum valvar! ; staminibus definitis, iisdem sepalis antepo- sitis ssepissime sterilibus vel abortivis ; antheris bilocularibus, loculis parallelis ; granulis pollinis laevibus ; ovario e carpellis 3-5 conjimctis composite 3 - 5-locularij rariusve simplici. — CsBtera fere Malvacearum. Byttneriaceje, R. Brown in Flinders, Voy. 2. p. 540. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 481, excl. § 1. Endl. Gen. p. 995. Lindl. Veg. Kingd. p. 363. Malvace^ Tr. BiJTTNERiEa;, St. Hil. FI. Bras. BiJTTNERrACE^, HeRMANNIACE^, &, DoMBEYACE^:, Bartl. The Byttneriacej; constitute one of the tropicul families which have been separated from the Malvaceae of Jussieu, but which manifestly belong to the same natural group with the proper Mallow Family. From the latter this order is at once distinguishable by its two-celled anthers, the cells of which are distinct and parallel, its smooth pollen, and usually few fertile stamens. The carpels are also uniformly few in number and perfectly con- solidated into a compound pistil, or in some cases reduced to one simple pistil. From the Sterculiaceas, taken collectively, no absolute character has been indicated to distinguish them. Dr. Lindley, indeed, in his recent work cited above, through some mistake, states that the anthers of Byttneriaceaa are turned inwards, and rests his diagnosis upon this character ; but the anthers are plainly extrorse in the greater part, if not in all, of the plants of the family. The exterior stamens, which constitute the fertile series when there is only one, are situated opposite the petals and are usually coherent with their base, just as in MalvacesE. Each single stamen of Melochia (Plate 134), therefore, is plainly equivalent to one of the five fascicles of which the Mal- vaceous column, when examined hi an early stage, is seen to be composed, and doubtless originates from a simple deduplication of the petal to which its base coheres ; while the interposed series of sterile filaments, in Melochia reduced to five teeth alternate with the petals (Plate 134, Fig. 4), represent the true stamineal verticil, and correspond with the five naked lobes at the summit of the column of Malvaviscus (Plate 131) and of the Hibisceae. 84 BYTTNERIACE^. The Byttneriaceae belong to the intertropical regions of both worlds, to Australia, and to the Cape of Good Hope. Two plants of the family, how- ever, both of the tribe Hermannieae, extend northward to lat. 30^ in Texas, and therefore claim a place in this work. In their sensible properties these plants accord with Malvaceae, both as to the mucilaginous juice and the toughness of the fibrous bark. The greater part are also pervaded, more or less, by a bitter and somewhat astringent extractive substance ; and the seeds yield a fatty oil. By far the most im- portant product of the order is chocolate, one of the most nutritious of vege- table substances, which is made from the roasted seeds of Theobroma Cacao (a tree which forms whole forests in Equatorial America). The shells, or crustaceous integuments of the seed, partake of the same qualities, and are used as a substitute for chocolate itself or for coffee. BYTTNERIACE^. 85 Plate 134. MELOCHIA, L. Calyx 5-fidiis. Petala obovato-spathulata. Stamina 5, petalis opposita, monadelpha. Ovarium brevissime stipita- tum aut sessile, 5-loculare ; loculis superposite 2-oviilatis : styli 5, basi comiati. Capsula membranacea, pyramidato- pentagona, secus angulos aciitatos loculicide 5-valvis. Em- bryo rectus. Melochia, Linn. Gen. 829 (excl. ppec). Jacq. Hort. Vindob. t. I?0. Gsrtn. Fr. t. 113. Cav. Diss. 6 t. 172. f. 1. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 490. Endl. Gen. 5337. Melochia Sp., St. Hil. FI. Bras. 1. p. 156. Calyx five-cleft, persistent ; the segments valvate in assti- vation. Petals 5, hypogynons, alternate with the segments of the calyx, oblong-obovate or spatulate, very obtuse, erect- spreading, convolute in SBStivation, deciduous. Stamens 5, opposite the petals and shorter than they, hyijogynous : fil- aments filiform or subulate, monadelphous at the base into a short tube which is connate with the claws of the petals opposite the filaments, and often bears five alternate inter- posed teeth or small lobes which represent a series of abortive filaments : anthers oblong, extrorse, two-celled ; the cells parallel, obtuse at both ends, opening longitudinally for their whole length. Pollen globular, smooth. Ovaky sessile or nearly so, of five united pistils, five-celled ; the cells placed opposite the petals, two-ovuled : styles 5, united below, introrsely stigmatose at the summit. Ovules two in each cell, inserted one above the other on the inner angle, amphi- tropous, ascending, the micropyle inferior. Capsule membranaceous, often pyramidal, five-angled with the salient angles compressed or produced, five-celled, loculicidally dehiscent through the projecting angles ; the 86 BYTTNERIACE^. dissepiments Ijorne on the middle of the valves, and tardily- separating from the filiform axis. Seeds 2, or by abortion solitary, in each cell, obovate, ascending, amphitropous or partly anatropous, not incurved ; the testa smooth and crus- taceous. Embryo straight in the axis of the fleshy albumen and nearly of its length : cotyledons broad and foliaceous, round-reniform, plane : the radicle terete, inferior. Shrubs, or sometimes herbs, the pubescence, if any, stel- lular ; with alternate and ovate or oblong serrate leaves, on distinct petioles, and small stipules. Peduncles terminal or opposite the leaves, bearing an umbellate fascicle of small flowers. Corolla violet, purple, or white. Etymology. A name of uncertain origin, thought by Linnaeus to have come, by the accidental change of a letter, from ^oXoxt), an ancient name of some Mallow-plant. Geographical Distribution. A genus of tropical American plants, as now restricted ; one widely diffused species, however, extends northward into Texas, beyond lat. 30°. PLATE 134. Melochia pyramidata, Linn.; — a branch of the natural size, in flower and fruit ; raised in the Botanic Garden, Cambridge, from Texan seeds. 1. Diagram of the aestivation, and of the position of the stamens. 2. Magnified section through the base of the flower-bud, showing the cohesion of the base of the petals with the short tube of filaments, also the position of the cells of the ovary. 3. Vertical section of a flower (dividing one cell of the ovary and show- ing its ovules), enlarged. 4. Two stamens, with a portion of the ring at the base and the interposed teeth, or rudimentary sterile filaments, magnified. 5. Transverse section of an anther, more magnified. 6. Grains of pollen, highly magnified. 7. A capsule enlarged. 8. Transverse section of the same in dehiscence, more magnified. 9. A seed magnified. 10. Transverse section of the same, cutting across the cotyledons. 11. Embryo detached entire, and more magnified. BYTTNERIACE^. 87 Plate 135. HERMANNIA, Tourn. Calyx 5-fidus. Petala obovato-spathulata, nnguibus sse- pius iiivolutis. Stamina 5, petalis opposita ; filamentis dila- tatis planis, basi moiiadelphis ; aiithera? loculis acuminatis. Ovarium stipitatum, 5-loculare ; loculis multiovulatis. Cap- sula loculicide 5-valvis. Semina plurima, reniformia. Em- bryo arcuatus. Hermannia, Tourn. Inst. t. 432. Dill. Elth. t. 147. Linn. Gen. 628. Juss. Gen. p. 289. Cav. Diss. 6. t. 177-182. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 493. Endl. Gen. 5340. Calyx five-cleft, persistent, often vesiculose-inflated in fruit ; the segments valvate in asstivation. Petals 5, con- volute in aestivation, alternate with the segments of the calyx, spathulate or obovate, erect-spreading, hypogynous, deciduous, the usually dilated claw with involute or convo- lute margins. Stamens 5, opposite the petals and shorter than they, hypogynous : filaments flat and dilated, mona- delphous at the base around the stipe of the ovary into a ring which is adnate to the very base of the claws of the petals: anthers extrorse, connivent, sagittate, two-celled; the cells acuminate and often tipped with a minute gland, opening longitudinally for the whole length. Ovary stipi- tate, five-celled, the cells (at least in the American species) opposite the sepals : styles more or less distinct, or united into one, introrsely stigmatose at the apex. Ovules numer- ous in two series from the inner angle of each cell, anatro- pous or amphitropous, ascending or horizontal. Capsule coriaceous or nearly membranaceous, usually five- lobed, five-celled, loculicidal, the dissepiments adhering to the middle of the valves. Seeds several or numerous in each cell, reniform : the testa coriaceous or crustaceous. often 88 BYTTNERIACE^. pitted. Embryo arcuate, or almost hippocrepiform, in fleshy albumen : cotyledons foliaceous, flat : radicle slender, cen- tripetal. Shrubs, or nearly herbaceous plants, usually hoary or hir- sute with stellular pubescence ; the leaves alternate, stipulate. Peduncles axillary, one - many-flowered ; the pedicels com- monly articulated. Flowers yellow, or sometimes purple. Etymology. Dedicated by Tournefort to Paul Hermann, Professor of Botany at Leyden in the latter part of the seventeenth century. Geographical Distribution. This genus belongs to the Cape of Good Hope (where it is numerous in species) ; with the exception of two plants recently detected in Mexico and Texas, which appear to be truly congeneric with South African Hermanniae. Of one of them (No. 802 of Coulter's Mexican collection) Mr. Bentham informs me he has long possessed a spe- cimen from the Montpellier Garden, under the (apparently unpublished) name of Hermannia Brasiliensis, Delile. It is most likely the " H. inflata, Link ^'^' ■^*' Calyx of five nearly equal and distinct herbaceous sepals, quincuncially imbricated in aestivation, not produced or tu- bular at the base, persistent. Petals 5, alternate with the sepals, equal, usually obovate or obcordate, somewhat un- guiculate, hypogynous, convolute, or frequently one petal wholly exterior, or in the same plant occasionally quincun- cially imbricated in aestivation, caducous. Hypogynous GLANDS 5, alternate with the petals. Stamens 10, hypogy- nous, inserted in two series on the short receptacle ; the five exterior opposite the petals, and shorter than the five interior, which are opposite the sepals and the glands : filaments all antheriferous, subulate, flattened-dilated below, distinct to the base, or usually somewhat monadclphous, persistent : an- thers oblong, fixed by the middle, introrse, versatile ; two- celled, destitute of any manifest connective, the cells opening longitudinally. Pistil of five carpels (opposite the petals) united to a prolonged and columnar central axis (gynophore) which extends almost to the apex of the styles : ovaries two-ovuled : styles distinct at the summit, their inner face stigmatose. Ovules collateral and pendulous (always ?) from about the middle of the inner angle of the cell, anatropous or scmianatropous ; the raphe ventral ; the micropyle superior. Fruit of five membranaceous follicular carpels, with their 12S GERANIACE^. inner face partly imbedded in excavations of the dilated base of the long and beak -like central axis, from which they sep- arate at maturity, and are ruptured on the inner face, remain- ing attached to the base of the persistent and indurated flat- tened styles ; which separate from the prolonged 5-angular axis or beak from below upwards, and are circinately recurv- ed, their inner face smooth or rarely a little hairy. Seed by abortion solitary in each carpel, pendulous, anatropous or half anatropous, the crustaceous testa usually reticulated or pitted, destitute of albumen. Embryo conformed to the seed : cotyledons large and foliaceous, convolutely folded together so that the transverse section is like a letter S ; the RADICLE short, conical, inflexed upon the cotyledons and ap- plied to them near one of their margins, descending. Herbs, rarely suffrutescent plants, usually caulescent, with tumid nodes, and opposite (or the uppermost some- times alternate) stipulate leaves, which are usually rounded and palmately lobed or parted, rarely ternately or pinnately dissected. Peduncles terminal, or becoming alar or lateral, one - two-flowered, four-bracteate at the origin of the pedi- cels. Flowers purple, reddish, or white. Etymology. The name is derived from yepavos, a crane, from a fan- cied resemblance of the prolonged axis of the fruit to the beak of that bird. PLATE 150. Geranium maculatum, Linn.; — a flowering branch. 1. Diagram of a flower, with the corolla convolute in aestivation. 2. Diagram of the calyx and corolla, with one petal exterior in sestivation. 3. Flower enlarged, the calyx and corolla removed, showing the glands, &c. 4. A long and a short stamen, more magnified. 5. The pistil and receptacle, magnified. 6. Vertical section of the base of the same, more magnified. 7. One of the ovules detached and more magnified than those in fig. 6. 8. The fruit with the calyx, of the natural size, the dehiscent carpels borne on the upwardly recurved styles. 9. A seed, magnified. 10. A transverse section of the same. 11. Embryo detached and divided across the cotyledons, magnified. GERANIACEiE. 129 ' Plate 151. ERODIUM, L'Her. Filamenta 5 breviora ananthera. Aristae carpellorum sas- pius ab apice ad basin elastice soluta3, intus barbatas, inferne spiraliter tortas. CsBtera Geranii. — Folia plerumque pinna- tisecta. Erodidm, L'Her. Geran. t. 2-6. Willd. Sp. 3. p. 6525. DC. Fl. Fr. 4. p.838,i&Prodr. I.e. St.Hil. Fl. Bras. l.p. 96. Endl. Gen. 6045. Geranii Sp., Tourn., Linn., etc. Stoi'ksbill. Calyx of five nearly distinct and equal herbaceous sepals, quincuncialLy imbricated in aestivation, not produced or tubu- lar at the base, persistent. Petals 5, hypogynous, alternate with the sepals, equal, someAvhat unguiculate, convolute or sometimes quincuncially imbricated in aestivation, caducous. Hypogynous glands 5. alternate with the petals. Stamens 10, hypogynous, inserted in two series on the short recepta- cle ; the five exterior opposite the petals, sterile (destitute of anthers) and shorter than the five fertile, which are opposite the sepals and the glands : filaments dilated below, mem- branaceous, persistent, distinct or slightly monadelphous : an- thers oblong or cordate, introrse, two-celled, the cells open- ing longitudinally. Pistil, (fcc, as in Geranium. Ovules two in each ovary, inserted one above the other on the mid- dle of its inner angle, anatropous, pendulous, or the upper resupinate-ascending. Fruit of five small coriaceous (and internally dehiscent or often indehiscent) achenia-like carpels, awncd by the long and indurated persistent styles ; which at maturity separate elastically from the long and slender beak-like axis, com- monly from the apex downwards, and are villous with strong hairs along the inner face, the lower part twisting spirally. 130 GERANIACE^. Seed solitary in each carpel, becoming half-anatropous by the greater development of its upper portion, the raphe ven- tral and occupying the lower half of the seed, which is therefore peritropous-pendulous (not ascending), destitute of albumen ; the testa smooth. Embryo filling the seed, con- duplicate : COTYLEDONS narrowly oblong, sometimes (in E. moschatum) pinnatifid, usually flexuose-convolute, incum- bent on the descending radicle, which reaches the hilum. Herbs, rarely sufTrutescent plants ; with opposite stipulate leaves (one usually smaller than the other), which are more commonly pinnate and bipinnately parted or lobed, rarely palmately lobed. Peduncles terminal, or becoming lateral as if arising from the axil of the smaller leaf, umbellately two - several-flowered, with an involucel of four bracts at the origin of the pedicels. Flowers usually purple or white. Etymology. The name is taken from epwStdy, a heron or slorli, from a fancied resemblance of the beak of the fruit to the long bill of those birds. Note. E. cicutarium, which sparingly occurs in the United States, was, I doubt not, introduced from Europe ; and I suspect that it was likewise in- troduced with cattle into the plains of California and Oregon, where it is widely diffused, so as to be a characteristic plant. E. macrophyllum, Hook. (Sf Am., appears to be truly indigenous in California, as is the related spe- cies here figured in Texas. Its later flowers are apetalous ! PLATE 151. Erodium Texanum, n. sp. : — summit of a flowering plant, of the natural size, from Texan specimens of Lindheimcr and Wright. 1. Diagram of the flower (the petals in the specimen quincuncially imbri- cated in aestivation!), with a transverse section of the ovary. 2. The stamens and pistil, glands, &c., magnified. 3. A sterile filament, separated. 4. An inside, and 5. an outside view of a perfect stamen, magnified. 6. Pistil with the hypogynous glands, magnified. 7. Vertical section of the same, showing the ovules. 8. An ovule detached and more magnified. 9. Fruit and calyx, the bearded styles separating from the beak, enlarged. 10. One of the achenia-like carpels, with the base of the style, magnified. 11. The same (with less of the style), more magnified, vertically divided through the seed and embryo. 12. Seed extracted entire and magnified. 13. Magnified embryo, cut across to show the convolute cotyledons, &c. Ord. BALSAMINACE^. Herbas simplicifoliae exstipulatas, caule succo aqneo turgi- do : dicotyledoneae, hypogynas, pentandras, irregulares ; peri- anthio colorato asymmetrico postice saccato ; staminibus superne connato-cohaerentibns ; ovario 5-loculari, loculis 2- pluriovulatis ; fructu ssepius capsular! elastice dissilientibus ; seminibus exalbuminosis anatropis ; embryone recto, cotyle- donibus magnis crassis. Balsamine^, a. Rich, in Diet. Hist. Nat. 2. p. 173. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 685. Bartl. Ord. Nat. p. 422. Kunth in RIem. Soc. Hist. Nat. Par. 3. p. 384, & Fl. Berol. 1. p. 82. Roper, Flor. Bals. (1830), & in Linnaja, 9. p. 119. Wiglit & Arn. Prodr. Ind. Or. 1. p. 134. Arn. in Linnsea, 9. p. 112. Wight, III. Ind. Bot. p. 156. t. 61. Bernh. in Linnaea, 12. p. 669. Endl. Gen. p. 1173. Balsaminaceje, Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. ed. 2. p. 138, & Veg. Kingd. p. 490. The Balsam or Jewel-Weed Family comprises only the large genus Impatiens, Linn., with Hydrocera, a small East Indian genus, which has more symmetrical flowers and a drupaceous fruit. Its nearest affinities are with the OxalidacejB and Linacesn, especially the former, from which it differs most strikingly by its remarkably irregular and strictly pentandrous flowers. A character in which Impatiens accords wilii most Zygophyllaceae has apparently been overlooked or misunderstood, namely, the internal membranaceous appendages of the filaments. These five subulate appendages are connivent and more or less coherent over the summit of the pistil. In our native species, they cover the stigma so close- ly as entirely to prevent the access of the pollen in the greater part of the fully developed flowers, which conse(iucntly fall away unfertilized ; but some- times the growing ovary pushes the stigma through the apex of this cap so as to secure its fertilization. Meanwhile the fruit is chiefly produced from a succession of small flower-buds, in which apparently no such appendages are interposed between the anthers and the stigma, and in which- the ovary is fertilized at a very early period, while the floral envelopes are yet minute and almost regular. Tlie gravid ovaiy as it eidarges detaches the 132 , BALSAMINACEiE. rest of the bud from the receptacle and carries it upwards on its apex, like the calyptra of a Moss. These minute fertile flower-buds, which begin to be produced earlier than the ordinary blossoms, were several years since pointed out to me by Dr. Torrey in our native species, and are mentioned in his Flora of the State of New York. They had already been noticed in the European Touch-me-not by Mr. Weddel ; * but I am not aware that the frequent sterility of the ordinary, conspicuous flowers, and its cause, had been observed. Several more or less conflicting opinions prevail respecting the morphology of the irregular floral envelopes in this family, and how they are to be di- vided between the calyx and the corolla. Those of Roper and of Kunth are best sustained; and differ chiefly (when the flower, which Kunth takes as it hangs resupinate on the stalk, is brought into its proper position) as re- spects the anterior, eraarginate leaf of the flower. This Roper counts as a petal, referring to the calyx only the two lateral sepals and the spur ; the two anterior sepals which are needed to complete its symmetry being abor- tive or wanting in Impatiens. The view of Kunth, and also of Arnott, who consider this organ as a pair of sepals united by their contiguous margins, is that which is adopted in this work. It accords better than any other with the more regular, though minute, fertile flower-buds (Plate 153, Fig. 5), in which I observe no organs corresponding to the rudimentary ante- rior sepals of Roper ; but I have no opportunity of comparing it with Hy- drocera. The plants of this family are not endowed with any important useful prop- erties. Their succulent stems abound with a watery juice, which is slightly acrid, and is said to be diuretic. The blossoms are usually ornamental. * Vide Adr. de Jussieu, Monographie des Malpigkiac6es, p. 85. BALSAMINACEiE. 133 Plate 152, 153. IMPATIENS, L. Sepalum posticum maximum saccato-calcaratum. Petala 4 per paria connata, sen 2 inaequaliter bipartita. Capsula carnoso-cartilaginea ; valvis a placenta centrali persistente elastice dissilientibus. Impatiens, Linn. Gen. 1008. Lam. 111. t. 725. Schkuhr, Handb. t. 270. Wight & Am. Prodr. Ind. Or. 1. p. 135. Endl. Gen. 60G0. Balsamina, Tourn. Inst. p. 418. t. 235. Juss. Gen. p. 270. Gasrtn. Fr. 2. p. 151. t. 113. Balsamina «&. Impatiens, Rivin. Tetrap. Irreg. 4. p. 146. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 685. Balsam. Toucli-me-not. Jewel-weed. Calyx petaloid, deciduous, apparently of four, but really of five SEPALS, the two anterior being united into one, very irregular ; the two lateral sepals exterior and at first valvate in aestivation, or soon incumbent, the others smaller than they, often minute ; the posterior one (nectary of Linnaeus) very large, saccate and usually spurred at the base, often re- sembling the cornucopias in shape, its margins incumbent upon the anterior in aestivation ; the two anterior (and inner- most in asstivation) united into one, which is notched at the apex, orbicular and concave or gibbous. Petals hypogynous, lateral, deciduous, two in number and alternating with the two lateral and the posterior sepals, deeply and unequally two-cleft or two-parted, usually considered to represent four petals (the two superior and the two lateral) united in pairs, the anterior petal wanting ; the two lateral lobes or petals smaller than the others and exterior, so as to cover their edges in aestivation. Stamens 5, hypogynous, alternate with the cells of the ovary, short : filaments broad and thickish, connivent, somewhat coherent, furnished with a membrana- 134 BALSAMINACE^. ceous subulate appendage which arises from the inner face towards the summit ; these five appendages are connivent or coherent over the apex of the pistil, where they retain the stamens after they separate from their insertion : anthers oval or cordate, fixed by the base, introrse, two-celled (the cells distinct, or sometimes connate-confluent at their apex, opening longitudinally or obliquely down the inner face. PoLLEN-grains oval, simple. Ovary five-celled, the cells alternate with the sepals and with the stamens : style none : stigma small, sessile, entire or minutely five-tooth- ed. Ovules few or several in a single series and pendu- lous from the inner angle of each cell, anatropous ; the raphe thickened, sometimes produced beyond the chalaza, ventral. Capsule oblong, prismatic or nearly terete, becoming one- celled by the obliteration of the dissepiments, with a thick and fleshy axis or placenta, bursting elastically when ripe by loculicidal dehiscence (usually from the base upwards) into five valves ; the valves thick, with a fleshy exocarp and an almost cartilaginous epicarp, often splitting in two longitudi- nally, strongly revolute (in the Balsams), or twisting spirally (in the Touch-me-not), as the pod falls in pieces. Seeds few or several in each cell, pendulous from the central axis, oval, with a fleshy and often four-ribbed testa, destitute of albumen. Embryo straight, filling the cavity of the seed : COTYLEDONS oval, thick and fleshy, or plano-convex: radi- cle very short, superior. Herbs, commonly annual, with succulent stems, and alter- nate, or sometimes opposite or verticillate, simple pinnately- veined leaves, destitute of stipules. Peduncles axillary, one-flowered, or racemosely several-flowered. Flowers vari- ously colored, articulated with the apex of the pedicel, com- monly resupinate-pendulous, so that the great saccate-spurred sepal appears to be inferior. Many of the large and fully developed flowers fall away without forming fruit ; while others, especially the earlier ones, become fertilized in the bud while yet minute ; when the growth of the fertilized ovary detaches and carries up on its apex, like a calyptra, the BALSAMINACEiE. 135 iinexpanded flower-bud. The development of the floral en- velopes bemg arrested at an early period, these flowers are spurless and less irregular (and their filaments are nearly, if not entirely, destitute of the internal appendages), so that their morphological structure is more readily made out than in the conspicuous flowers. Etymology. From tiie Latin word inipaliens ; so called in allusion to the sudden bursting of the pods, especially when touched. Tiie popular name of Touch-me-not alludes to the same peculiarity. Geographical Distribution. One species of this genus is indigenous in Europe and Northern Asia; two are natives of North America; while the remainder, fully a hundred in number, belong to the tropical or sub- tropical regions of the Old World, especially on the slopes of mountains, the greater part to Eastern Asia. They flourish only in moist and shady places. Properties. These are of no importance, although the European spe- cies was formerly employed as a diuretic. The Garden Balsam (Impatiens Balsamina, L.), an Indian species, is a well-known ornamental annual, the flowers of which double with great facility, and sport into numerous varie- gated forms. PLATE 152. Impatiens fulva, NutL; — summit of a branch both in flower and fruit, of the natural size. (From Cambridge, Massa- chusetts.) 1. Diagram of the flower, brought into its true position as respects tiic axis, the transverse line underneath denoting the position of the bract. 2. The sepals and petals displayed in their relative position; the flower here exhibited in the inverted or resupinate-pendulous position in which it naturally hangs on the stem, so as to bring the spur or sac anterior. 3. Vertical section of a flower through the spur, the stamens, and the ovary, enlarged. 4. A flower with the sepals and petals removed, showing the connivent stamens, magnified. 5. One of the stamens seen from within, showing the dehiscence of the anther, and the internal membranaceous appendage of the filament ; magnified. 136 BALSAMINACEiE. PLATE 153. Impatiens fulva : — further analyses of the flower and fruit. 1. Stamens in their natural position, discharging their pollen, magnified. 2. Vertical section through the stamens and pistil, more magnified, show- ing the ovules, and how the internal appendages of the stamens together embrace the summit of the pistil. 3. An ovule detached, and more magnified ; its thickened raphe project- ing beyond the chalaza. 4. Stamens and pistil, magnified; the upper portion of the two filaments next the eye cut away, and the connivent appendages turned back from the pistil so as to show its summit. 5. Iliglily magnified transverse section, or diagram, of one of the minute, prematurely fertilized flower-buds ; the line underneath denoting the position of the bract. (The two lateral sepals valvate and inclosing all the rest of the flower.) 6. The sepals and petals of the same, displayed in their normal position ; namely, with the sepal that represents the spur in the ordinary flowers (here barely concave) next the axis ; highly magnified. 7. A fertilized flower-bud of the same kind, with its bract, magnified. 8. The same, with the enlarging ovary carrying away the undeveloped floral envelopes on its summit, magnified. 9. The same at a later period, the fertilized ovary much more enlarged. 10. A ripe capsule, of the natural size. 11. The same after dehiscence, with one seed detached, and others still attached to the persistent axis ; the spirally twisted valves cohering to the apex of the axis. 12. A seed, magnified. 13. The same transversely divided, showing the thick cotyledons. 14. The same vertically divided contrary to the cotyledons. 15. Embryo of the same, divided through the short radicle, sliowing the plumule, &c. Ord. LIMNANTHACEiE. Herbae parviilas Tropaeoloideas ; foliis pinnatisectis ; flori- biis omnino symmetricis et regularibus 6- v. 10-andris ; ovulis erectis ; radicula iiifera. LiMNANTHEJE, R. Br. in Lond. & Edinb. Phil. Mag. 1833. Lindi. Bot. Reg. t. 1673. Meisn. PI. Vase. p. 135. Endl. Gen. p. 1175. LiMNANTHACE.aE, Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. ed. 2. p. 142. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 209. TROP.ffi:oLACEjE, Tr. LimnanthejE, Lindl. Veg. Kingd. p. 36G. The Limnanthes Family was founded by Mr. Brown, (who first de- tected its real affinities,) upon two plants only, each the type of a genus ; namely, Floerkea, an inconspicuous annual of the Northern United States, and Limnanthes Douglasii of California, which, brought into cultivation from seeds sent to England by the lamented Douglas, who discovered it, is now a well-known annual in our gardens. The latter bears abundance of pretty white flowers with a pale-yellow centre. Recently two additional species of Limnanthes have been discovered in California, by Mr. Hartweg and by the enterprising Fremont, one of which has pure white, the other rose-colored blossoms. This small family is closely allied to the Lidian-Cress Family, or Tropa^o- lacea; (of which the Tropaeolum majus, the Nasturtium of the gardens, is a familiar representative), and perhaps should be combined with it, as has been done by Lindley, notwithstanding the dissimilarity of external appear- ance. For this dissimilarity is chiefly owing to the irregularity of the flowers of Tropaeolum ; while those of Limnanthes and Floerkea are perfectly reg- ular, as well as symmetrical. In this respect, therefore, they differ only as the Hellebore or the Columbine differs from the Larkspur and the Aconite, which nevertheless evidently belong, not only to the same order, but to tlie same tribe. A more important distinction, however, is to be found in the insertion and direction of the ovule and seed, which are erect from the base of the cell in the present family, but suspended in Tropa;olaceffi. Tlie embryo has the same structure in botli : the cotyledons are very large, so as to fill the whole seed, thick and fleshy, plano-convex, or even hemi- spherical, extended below tlieir insertion so as to be deeply auriculale at the base, and forming a narrow cavity in which the very short radicle is entirely concealed. 10 138 LIMNANTHACEiE. The sensible qualities of the Limnanthacese likewise accord with those of the Tropaeolaceae, both having the peculiar volatile acridity and well-known pungent taste of the Cress or Mustard Family. The fleshy fruits of the Garden Nasturtium are accordingly used as a substitute for capers. But the few and insignificant plants of the present family are of no economical account ; except that all the species of Limnanthes would be ornamental in cultivation. LIMNANTHACE^. 139 Plate 154. FLOERKEA, Willd. Sepala 3, Petala 3, oblonga, calyce breviora. Stamina 6. Ovaria 3, vel abortu pauciora. — Herba tenella, parviflora ; foliis saepius 5-foliolatis. Floerkea, Willd. in N. Berl. Schrift. 3. p. 148. Nutt. Gen. 1. p. 228. Lindl. in Hook. Jour. But. 1. p. 1. t. 1. R. Br. in Lond. & Edinb. Jour. Sci. 1833. Torr. & Gray, Fi. N. Amer. 1. p. 210. Endl. Gen. 6065. False Mermaid. Calyx of three herbaceous sepals, united at the base, a httle imbricated in aestivation, persistent. Petals 3, oblong, shorter than the calyx, inserted on the margin of a fleshy perigynous disk which fills the base of the calyx, its thin edge produced into three minute lobes, alternate with the petals. Stamens 6, three alternate with the petals and in- serted just within the lobes of the disk, and three opposite them, marcescent : filaments subulate, distinct ; those op- posite the sepals at first longer than the others : anthers globular, didymous, fixed near the base, introrse, two-celled, the cells opening longitudinally. Pistil of three carpels (placed opposite the sepals), or sometimes only two, united by their styles : ovaries globose, cohering only at their base to an axis: style central, two -three-cleft at the summit: stigmas terminal, capitate. Ovule solitary in each ovary, erect from its base, anatropous. Fruit of three, or by abortion one or two, fleshy and tuberculate-roughened globular achenia. Seed filling the cell, the membranaceous testa cohering with the pericarp, destitute of albumen. Embryo large ; the cotyledons thick and fleshy, plano-convex : radicle very short, inferior, en- tirely included within the notched base of the cotyledons : plumule conspicuous. 140 LIMNANTHACE^. Herb small and inconspicuous, decumbent, a little succu- lent, annual ; the alternate leaves petioled, destitute of stip- ules, pinnately five-foliolate, or the upper trifoliolate or three- parted ; the leaflets lanceolate or oblong, entire or sometimes two - three-cleft. Flowers small, solitary, on slender axil- lary peduncles ; the minute petals white. Etymology. Dedicated by Willdenow to Floerke, an obscure German botanist. Geographical Distribution. The single species of this genus grows in marshes, and along the moist banks of streams, in the Northern and Western United States. PLATE 154. Floerkea proserpinacoides, Willd.; — an entire plant, in fruit and flower, of the natural size. 1. Diagram of the flower. 2. An open flower, magnified. 3. Vertical section of a flower, more magnified. 4. A stamen magnified, seen from within. 5. The same, seen from the outside. 6. Fruit (only two carpels ripened) and the persistent calyx, magnified. 7. A carpel transversely divided, showing the cotyledons. 8. The same vertically divided, so as to cut away one cotyledon. Ord. RUTACE^. Herbae alternifolise, exstipulatas, glanduloso-pimctatrc : di- cotyledonea3, hypogynas, dichlamydeae, regulares, 4-5-merse, diplostemoneae, hermaphroditae ; aestivatione imbricativa ; ova- rio gynophoro brevi vel disco glanduloso insidente 2-5-lobo 2 - 5-lociilari ; stylis in unicum connatis ; capsulse lobis introrsum dehiscentibus ; semiiiibus reniformi-arcuatis 2- pleiospermis ; embryone in axi albuminis carnosi pi. m. arcuato, idem longitudine asquante. RcTACE^, Juss. Gen. p. 296, ex parte. Endl. Gen. p. 1159. RuTE^, Adr. Juss. in Mem. Mus. 12, p. 4G1. RcTACEARUM pars, DC. Prodr. 1. p. 709. Lindl. Veg. Kingd. p. 469. The Rue Family, taken in the restricted sense, belongs to the Old World (and to the Mediterranean region, with one genus in Nepaul and Japan), with the solitary exception of the recently discovered and still unpublished Texan plant which forms the subject of the next illustration. It is distinguished from the Zygophyllaceae by the exstipulate alternate leaves dotted with pel- lucid glands ; and from Zanthoxylaceas by their perfect flowers. The Dios- mcaj are not sufficiently distinguished by the spontaneous separation of the epicarp from the endocarp of the fruit, and the generally exalbuminous seeds. The sensible qualities of Rutaceous plants are exemplilied by the connnon Rue. Their strong odor, nauseous bitterness, and acridity are due to the volatile oil with which the herbage is charged. The Spanish Ruta montana is so acrid, that it is said to blister the hands that gather it through three pairs of gloves, and produces ulcerous pustules when applied to the naked skin. The oil of Rue is a powerful stimulant and antispasmodic, and a dangerous emmenagogue and vermifuge ; in over-doses it is an acrid-narcotic poison. Notwithstanding their almost fetid odor, the leaves of the fresh plant were used by the Romans as a condiment ; and they are still employed in some parts of Southern Europe to flavor salads. The Dio,smca;, in which similar sonsil)le qualities prevail, although less acrid and often tonic and fel)rifugal, arc much more numerous in genera and species than the proper Rutaceac. With the exception of the Fraxinella, 142 RUTACE^. indigenous to Southern Europe, they belong to the southern hemisphere, and especially to the Cape of Good Hope and Australia. The few of the New World, however, are tropical, principally Brazilian. The odorous leaves of the Bucku plants, or true Diosmeee of South Africa, are antispas- modics, diuretics, &c. But the American species furnish the most impor- tant medicines; such, especially, as the Angostura bark, which is thought to be the produce of Galipea cusparia, and which in South America is esteemed as the most valuable of all febrifuges, " being adapted to the most malignant bilious fevers ; while the fevers in which Cinchona is chiefly ad- ministered are simple intermittents, for the most part unattended with dan- ger. The Indians also use the bruised bark as a means of intoxicating fishes ; which is a very singular coincidence with what is mentioned by Dr. Saunders, of the same use being made of the Cinchona bark by the Peruvi- ans." Lindley. RUTACE^. 143 Plate 155, RUTOSMA, Nov. Gen. Calyx 4-lobus, persistens. Petala 4, concaviuscula, inte- gerrima. Stamina 8, petalis breviora. Ovarium 2-lobum, 2-loculare, disco S-lobo eporoso insidens, fmctiferum breviter stipitatum ; loculis 8-ovulatis. Stylus gracilis : stigma ca- pitatum, integrum. — Herba graveolens, humilis ; caulibus e radice crassa simpliciusculis ; foliis linearibus integerrimis ; inflorescentia racemiformi. Calyx four-cleft, much shorter than the corolla, herba- ceous, persistent. Petals 4, alternate with the lobes of the calyx, oval, dotted like the rest of the plant with large pellu- cid glands, not unguiculate, entire, inserted on the base of the thickened hypogynous disk, convolute-imbricated in aestivation, barely spreading in anthesis, deciduous. Stamens 8, inserted on the disk just within the petals and shorter than they, or the longer ones (the four opposite the sepals) nearly equalling them in length : filaments subulate-filiform, naked : anthers oval, introrse, fixed by the base, glandular-apiculate ; the cells apposite, opening longitudinally. Hypogynous disk produced above the insertion of the stamens and around the base of the ovary into eight equal glandular lobes, which are not nectariferous-punctate as in Ruta. Ovary at first sessile on the disk, obcordate-two-lobed, two-celled, the cells op- posite two of the sepals : style central, long and slender, undivided, deciduous : stigma ovoid-capitate, entire. Ovules 8 in each cell, pendulous (or the uppermost rcsupinatc ascend- ing) from a thickened axile placenta which projects into the cells, anatropous. Capsule coriaceous, raised on a short stipe above the disk, deeply obcordate-two-lobed, somewhat flattened contrary to 144 RUTACEiE. the partition, the lobes dehiscent down their inner side to their junction. Seeds 8, or by abortion fewer, in each cell, amphitropous, reniform ; the testa crustaceous, muricate- scabrous. Embryo arcuate in the axis of thin fleshy albu- men, nearly of its length : cotyledons narrowly oblong, ■rather fleshy, parallel with the hilum : radicle about the length of the cotyledons, superior. Herb low, dotted all over with glands, exhaling the strong odor of Rue, with numerous nearly simple stems arising from a stout and perpendicular perennial root, beset with simple and entire filiform-linear alternate exstipulate leaves, race- mosely floriferous above ; the short-pedicelled flowers all extra-axillary, therefore terminal, becoming lateral by the successive evolution of axillary buds. Petals yellow. Etymology, Properties, &c. Name composed of pwrj, the Rue, and oa-/n7j, scent. It has just the odor, and doubtless the other sensible proper- ties, of the Garden Rue. The genus is very nearly allied to Ruta and Aplophyllum ; but differs from the former in its plane petals, shorter sta- mens, eight-lobed disk without nectariferous pores, and muricate seeds ; and from both by the two-celled ovary. Geographical Distribution. This single representative of the proper Rue Family in the New World was recently discovered in Western Texas by Mr. Lindheimer and by Mr. Wright. Dr. Gregg also gathered it at Monterey, in Northern Mexico, where it is called Ruda del Campo. PLATE 155. RuTosMA Texana, n. sp.; — a small plant, in flower and fruit, of the natural size ; from Lindheimer'' s collection. 1. Diagram of the flower. 2. The summit of a flowering stem, enlarged, showing the glands of the stalks, leaves, and parts. of the flower. 3. Anther, with the summit of the filament, magnified; outside view. 4. The same, seen from within. 5. Pistil with the eight-lobed disk, &c., magnified. 6. Vertical section of the same, showing the insertion of the organs, &c. 7. An ovule, more magnified. 8. Dehiscent capsule, with the persistent calyx and disk, magnified. 9. The same, v/ith the capsule and some of the seeds vertically divided. 10. A seed, more magnified. 11. Vertical section of the same, and of the embryo, more magnified. 12. Embryo detached and magnified. Ord. ZANTIIOXYLACEiE. Frutices vel arbores Rutoideas, interdum aculeatae ; foliis pellucido-punctatis saepissime pinnatis ; floribus abortu imi- sexualibus ; carpellis discretis, vel pi. m. in ovarium com- positum coalitis, 2 - 4-ovulatis ; fmctu carnoso 1 - 5-cocco, rarius samaroideo ; embryone recto. Zanthoxyle^, Nees & Mart, in Nov. Act. Acad. Nat. Ciir. 1823. Adr. Juss. in Mem. Mus. 12. p. 422, 4'J7 (Sitbord. Rutacearuni). Endl. Gen. p. 1145. ZANTHoxYLACEiE, Torr. & Gray, FI. N. Am. 1. p. 213. Xanthoxylace^, Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. ed. 2. p. 135, &, Vcg. Kingd. p. 472. Wight, 111. Ind. Bot. p. 165. t. 66. Pteleace^, Kunth in Ann. Sci. Nat. 2. p. 345. The Prickly-Ash Family consists of trees and shrubs, principally of tropical regions and in great part American. It is represented in the United States by three species of the typical genus, two of which belong to our Southern Atlantic border, and one (the common Prickly Ash) to the North- ern States, and by two species of Ptelea, one of which extends northward to the Great Lakes. They are not found north of the tropic of Cancer on the western side of our continent, nor in the Old World, except in China and Japan, of which the Ailanthus, or Tree of Heaven, which flourishes so fa- mously in the United States as a shade-tree, is a native. The Ailanthus, however, although appended to this family, having no dots in the leaves nor albumen in the seeds, and solitary ovules, is not thought properly to belong to it. This family is distinguished from Rutacea; and the Diosmeae by the monoe- cious or dioecious flowers ; and from Anacardiaceas by the pellucid dots of the leaves, geminate ovules, albuminous seeds, straight embryo, &,c. Pungent aromatic qualities with bitterness prevail in the order. They arc due to an ethereal oil and its resin, which is contained in the pellucid oil- receptacles which dot the leaves and the fruit, and to a bitter-acrid crystal- lizable substance, called Xanthopicrite, with a yellow coloring matter, which are principally contained in the bark. The properties of all the species of Zanthoxylum accord with those of our Prickly Ash. The leaves are fra- 146 ZANTHOXYLACE^. grant and pungent to the taste ; the fruits are as pungent as pepper ; the bark, which is the officinal portion, is acrid-aromatic and very bitter. It is a powerful stimulant and somewhat tonic, much used in chronic rheumatism, and as an irritant it is popularly employed to relieve the toothache. The Southern Z. Carolinianum possesses identical properties, but is more power- fully acrid. Some exotic species are valued as febrifuges, others as anti- dotes to poisons. The typical genus, Zanthoxylum, comprises between fifty and one hun- dred known species, of which the greater part belong to tropical America, several to the equinoctial regions of the Old World, and three to the Atlan- tic United States, one of which (the original species) extends northward to Canada. ZANTHOXYLACEiE. 147 Plate 156. ZANTHOXYLUM, Golden, L. Flores abortu dioici aut monoici. Stamina petalis numero asqualia et alterna. Pistilla totidem vel pauciora, gynophoro subgloboso sen cylindrico insidentia. Folliculi carnosi 1-2- spermi. Semina nitida. — Rami aculeati. Folia pinnata. Zanthoxylcm, Colden, PI. Coldenh. p. 68. Linn. Gen. 150. H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 6. p. 1. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 725. Adr. Juss. 1. c. Torn & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 214, 680. Endl. Gen. 5972. Fagara, Linn. Adans. Fam. 2. p. 364. Lam. III. t. 84. Pterota, p. Browne, Jam. p. 189. OcHROXYLUM, Sclireb. Gen. 508. Kampmannia, Raf. in N. Y. Med. Repos. (hex. 2.) 5. p. 350. Prickly Ash. Toothaclie-trec. Flowers by abortion dioBcious or monoecious. Calyx of four or five, rarely three, herbaceous or petaloid sepals, much smaller than the corolla, distinct or united at the base, imbri- cated in aestivation, deciduous, in one species obsolete. Pe- tals as many as the sepals, usually five or four, hypogynous, imbricated in aestivation, deciduous. Ster. Fl. Stamens as many as the petals and alternate with them, inserted just within them at the base of an ovoid gynophore, which bears the rudiments of from one to five abortive pistils on its sum- mit : filaments filiform or subulate : anthers introrse, two- celled, the cells opening longitudinally. Fert. Fl. Stamens none or rudimentary. Pistils as many as the petals and opposite them, or fewer, sometimes reduced to one, borne on the summit of the fleshy globular or cylindrical gynophore, connivent, sometimes a little united below : ovaries two- ovuled : styles short or slender, connivent or somewhat connate towards the summit : stigmas introrsely capitate or clavate. Ovules 2, collateral, pendulous from the middle of the inner angle of the cell, anatropous, the raphe ventral. Fruit of as many fleshy cartilaginous or drupaceous folli- 148 ZANTIiOXYLACE^. cles as there are pistils, or by abortion fewer, sessile or stipi- tate, punctate, one - two-seeded, splitting down the ventral suture, or at length two-valved. Seed pendulous from the apex of the placental edge of the carpel, which inclines to separate from the valves, between amphitropous and anatro- pous, ovoid or globular, black and shining ; the testa thin and a little fleshy, at length brittle and transparent, covering a thick crustaceous integument. Ejibryo straight, in the axis of fleshy albumen and nearly of its length : coxrLEDONs broadly oval or orbicular, foliaceous : radicle short, superior. Trees or shrubs, commonly armed with stipular prickles ; the alternate or rarely opposite leaves mostly pinnate, often fascicled ; the petiole sometimes prickly, rarely alate ; the leaf- lets entire or serrulate, punctate with pellucid dots. Flowers small, greenish or whitish, fasciculate, spicate, or cymose, the clusters or cymes axillary or terminal. Etymology. Name from ^av66s, yeUoio, and ^vkov, wood. Xanihoxylum is the proper orthography, but the other form was adopted by Linnaeus. Note. The genus was founded on our Northern Prickly Ash, here figured, which has a single perianth, usually described as a calyx. But as the stamens alternate with its parts, just as with the petals of Z. Carolinianum, I take it for the corolla, and suppose that the calyx is abortive. Our subgenera are : § 1. EuzANTHOXYLUM. (Zanthoxylum, Colden.) — Calyx abortive. Petals (bearded at the tip), stamens, and pistils 5. Flowers in lateral fascicles. 1^ 2. OcHROxYLUM. — Sepals, petals, and stamens 5. Pistils 3. ^3. Pterota. — Sepals, petals, and stamens 4. Pistils 1-2. Petiole winded. PLATE 15fi. Zanthoxylum Americanum, Mill.; — branch of a stami- nate plant in flower, and of a pistillate plant taken a little later. 1. A pistillate flower; 2. a staminate flower, enlarged. 3. Vertical section of the latter, showing the abortive pistils, &c. 4. Enlarged pistillate flower, with the perianth laid open. 5. Vertical section of one of the pistils, magnified, showing one ovule. 6. Transverse section of an ovary, through both ovules, magnified. 7. An ovule, more magnified. 8. Fruit, of the natural size. (Two pistils abortive, the others stipitate.) 9. The same enlarged, two carpels dehiscent. 10. A seed, magnified. 11. Vertical, and 12. transverse section of the seed and embryo, magnified. 13. Diagram of a staminate flower of Zanthoxylum Carolinianum. 14. Expanded staminate flower of the same, magnified. ZANTHOXYLACEiE. 149 Plate 157. PTELEA, L. Flores polygami, 4-5-andri. Ovarium 2-loculare, stylo brevi superatum : stigma 2-lobum. Friictiis samaroideus, 2-locularis ; loculis abortu monospermis. — Fmtices inermes ; foliis plerumque 3-foliolatis ; floribus cymosis. Ptelea, Linn. Gen. 152. Mill. Ic. t. 211. Lam. 111. t. 84. Gserln. Fr. t. 49. DC. Prodr. 2. p. 84. Adr. Juss. in Mem. Mus. 1. c. p. 510. t. 26. Torr.»fcGray,Fl.N.Am.l.p.2]4. Endl. Gen. 5977. Bellucia, Adans, Fam. 2. p. 344. Shrub Trefoil. Flowers by abortion polygamous. Calyx of four or five small and nearly distinct sepals, at first imbricated in aesti- vation, deciduous. Petals 4 or 5, hypogynous, much longer than the calyx, imbricated in aestivation, widely spreading, deciduous. Stamens as many as the petals and alternate with them, hypogynous, in the sterile flowers as long as the corolla, in the fertile shorter and with smaller or imperfect anthers : filaments subulate, thickened below, hairy on the inside : anthers ovate or cordate, introrse, two-celled ; the cells opening longitudinally. Pistil abortive in the sterile flowers, in the fertile raised on a short and thick gynophore : OVARY compressed, two-celled : style short : stigma two- lobed. Ovules 2 in each cell, inserted one above the other, but close together, on the middle of their inner angle, ampiiit- ropous ; the upper one of each cell only becoming fertilized, with the micropyle superior ; the lower pushed downwards by the other, so that its micropyle becomes centrifugal. Fruit a two-celled samara, surrounded by a broad and reticulated wing, orbicular, indehisccnt : the cells one-seeded. Seed oblong, amphitropous, the short raphe ventral and basi- lar, with a smooth or somewhat wrinkled coriaceous testa. Embryo straight in the axis of fleshy albumen (nearly of its 150 ZANTHOXYLACEiE. length) : cotyledons oval-oblong, plane : radicle short, su- perior. Shrubs, or small trees, unarmed; with alternate or some- times opposite trifoliolate, or rarely pinnately quinquefoliolate leaves, without stipules ; the leaflets ovate or oblong, entire or serrulate, punctate with pellucid dots. Flowers small, greenish-white, in terminal cymes or compound corymbs. (Pistil sometimes tricarpellary and three-winged.) Etymology. HreXia, an ancient name of the Elm-tree, transferred to this genus on account of the winged key-fruit, which resembles that of the Elm. Geographical Distribution. This genus consists of one species in- digenous to the Middle, Southern, and Western United States, and one in Florida, and two or three others in New Mexico and Mexico. Properties. The bark and foliage is bitter and strong-scented, and is reputed to be anthelmintic. The fruit is said to be used as a substitute for hops. PLATE 157. Ptelea trifoliata, Linn.; — a flowering branch of the natural size. 1 . Diagram of a tetramerous flower. 2. A tetramerous sterile flower, enlarged. ^ 3. Vertical section of the same. 4. A stamen more magnified, seen from the outside. 5. The same, seen from the inner side. ''- 6. A pentamerous fertile flower, enlarged. 7. A fertilized pistil, magnified, the ovary transversely divided. 8. Vertical section of the same. 9. An ovule, more magnified. 10. A fruit, of the natural size. 11. A magnified seed, from the right-hand cell, in its natural position. 12. Vertical section of the same, showing a small, probably not fully grown embryo at the apex of the albumen. 13. This embryo detached and more magnified (inverted).* * The seeds examined appeared to be mature ; but the embryo was probably arrested in its development. Adr. de Jussieu has represented it, as described above, with large and flat cotyledons, occupying nearly the whole length of the albinnen. Ord. OCHNACEiE. Frutices vel arbores, alternifoliae, gynobasicae, ligno ama- rissimo ; a Zanthoxylaceis foliis simplicibus epunctatis ova- riisque uniovulatis, a Simarubaceis simplicifoliis embryonis radicula intra cotyledones baud retracta et filamentis esqiia- matis, diversa. OcHNACE^, DC. in Ann. Mus. 17. p. 398, & Prodr. 1. p. 735. Bartl. Ord. Nat. 383. Meisn. PI. Vase. p. G6. Endl. Gen. p. 1141. Lindl. Veg. Kingd. p. 474. The OchnacejE constitute a small family of trees or shrubs, natives of tropical India, Africa, and America; the greater portion belonging to the New World. The most northern genus is Castela, which is principally West Indian, but one species is found in Northern Mexico and along the coast of Texas. This has neither the large and fleshy gynophore nor the united styles of the rest of the family, and is the type of the tribe Casteleag, which has extrorse anthers, a pendulous and albuminous seed, and usually polygamous flowers ; in all these points (except in the direction of the an- thers) and in other particulars agreeing with the Zanthoxylaceae ; but dif- fering from them in the simple and entire coriaceous leaves being entirely destitute of pellucid dots and of aromatic qualities, and also in the uni- ovulate carpels. The tribe Ochneas, on the other hand, has perfect flowers, introrse anthers, and erect seeds, which are destitute of albumen. It is hardly to be distinguished from the entire-leaved plants of the Simarubaceae, or Quassia Family ; except that in the latter the seed is pendulous, the short radicle is retracted within the base of the large cotyledons, as in Floerkea (Plate 154) and the Nasturtium ; and the filaments are furnished with an internal appendage or petaloid scale, in the manner of most Zygophyllaceae (Plates 147, 149). The sensible qualities of this family entirely coincide with its relation- ship. The species arc all endowed with the pure and intense bitterness, without aromatic properties, of the Simarubaceae, as exemplified by the ofli- cinal Quassia-wood. The wood of Castela Nicholsoni, tlie subject of our illustration, which represents this order in Texas and Northern Mexico, is very bitter. In Antigua it is said to be as bitter as that of Quassia itself. The oil expressed from the seeds of a species of Gomphia is used in salads in Brazil. 152 OCHNACE.E. Simaruba glauca, DC, (with perhaps one or two other West Indian Simarubaceae,) grows on Key West; but I am not aware that it has been met with on the mainland, or elsewhere within the limits of the United States proper. OCHNACE^. 153 Plate 158. CASTELA, Tuv'pin. Flores polygamo-dioici, axillares, 4-meri, 8-andri. An- therse extrorsse, longitudinaliter dehiscentes. Ovarium gyno- phoro brevissimo insidens, profunde 4-lobum. Styli 4. Dru- psB 4, patentes. Radicula supera. — Frutices spinescentes, foliis subsessilibus coriaceis integerrimis. Castela, Turpin in Ann. Mus. 7. p. 78. t. 5. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 738. Hook. Bot. ftlisc. 1. p. 271. t. 56. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 680. Endl. Gen. 5956. Ooatbiisli. Flowers by abortion polygamo-dioecious. Calyx small, of four ovate or triangular sepals, united at the base, decid- uous. Petals 4, oval, concave, much larger than the se- pals, hypogynous, imbricated in aestivation, deciduous. Sta- mens 8, inserted alternate with and opposite the petals into the base of a very short gynophore or hypogynous disk : riLAMENTs subulate : anthers cordate-ovate, fixed near the base, extrorse, two-celled, the cells opening longitudiually for their whole length : they are similar but smaller in the fertile flowers. Pistil wanting or abortive in the sterile flowers ; in the fertile seated on the very short gynophore, of four carpels united only at the axis : ovary deeply four- lobed, four-celled, the cells opposite the petals : styles dis- tinct or united at the base, acute, revolute, stigmatose down the inner face. Ovule solitary and pendulous in each coll, anatropous. Fruit consisting of four distinct and widely spreading substipitate drupes, or by abortion fewer ; the rugose or pitted compressed endocarp at length two-valvcd after the fleshy exocarp dries up. Seed solitaryj conformed to the 11 154 OCHNACEiE. cell, obovate, pendulous, anatropous, with the micropyle a little produced, the testa membranaceous. Embryo large, in thin fleshy albumen : cotyledons broad and flat, foliaceous : RADICLE short, superior. Shrubs low, with spinescent branches, also bearing spines in the axils, and subsessile alternate leaves, of a thick and rigid texture, shining above, silvery-canescent underneath, mucronate, entire, with revolute margins. Stipules none. Flowers small, solitary or somewhat fascicled in the axils of the leaves, subsessile, "saflron-colored," the fruit red. Etymology. Eedicated to M. Cas^e/, author of a poem upon plants. Geographical Distribution. A genus of three or four known species, mostly natives of the Antilles ; one of which is also found on the coast of Texas (by Drummond and Mr. Wright), in Northern Mexico (by Dr. Gregg), and in the Galapagos Islands, according to Dr. J. D. Hooker. They grow in arid places. Properties. These plants are intensely bitter ; but are not applied to any known use. PLATE 158. Castela Nicholsoni, Hook., probably also C. erecta, Tur- pin ; — branch of a plant with staminate flowers, of the natural size (from Texas, Wright). 1. An unexpanded staminate flower, magnified. 2. Diagram of the same. 3. Vertical section of the same, more magnified. 4. A separated sepal of the same. 5. A separated petal. 6. A stamen more magnified, seen from within. 7. The same, seen from the outside. 8. A fertile flower, magnified, copied from Hooker, I. c. 9. Fruit, of the natural size, from a North-Mexican specimen oi Dr. Gregg. 10. Enlarged vertical section of a drupe and its seed. 11. A seed detached and magnified. 12. Embryo (inverted), more magnified. Ord. ANACARDIACEiE. Frutices vel arbores alternifoliae, epunctatas, exstipulatae, succo resinoso seu viscoso-lacteo foBtse : dicotyledoneae, di- chlamydeas, hypogyno-perigynaB, ssepius abortii polygamse, 4- 5-merce, iso-diplostemoneas, regulares ; asstivatione imbrica- tiva ; ovario iinico uniloculari, stylo simplici vel 3-fido ; ovu- lo unico funiculo filiformi e basi loculi adscendenti libero, nunc parieti adnato, inserto ; fructu driipaceo ; semine exal- buminoso ; cotyledonibus plano-convexis planisve saepius radiculae curvatas seu uncinatas accumbentibus vel iucum- bentibus. Anacardie^, R. Br. in Tuckey, Congo, p. 431. Bartl. Ord. Nat. p. 395. AnacardiacEjE, Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. ed. 2. p. 1G6. Endl. Gen. p. 11527. Terebinthacearum Genera, Juss. p. 3G8. DC. Prodr. 2. p. 62. Terebinthace^:, Kuntli in Ann. Sci. Nat. 2. p. 333. The Cashew or Sumach Family consists of trees or shrubs; which are distinguished from the allied orders by their claminy or resinous juice (which is usually tnilky or colored, and blackens on exposure to the air) ; their alter- nate leaves destitute of pellucid dots and of stipules ; their usually polyga- mous regular flowers; their one-celled ovary (commonly surmounted by three short styles or stigmas), with a single ovule borne on a funiculus which rises from the base of the cell ; their indehisccnt and commonly drupaceous fruit ; and the exalbuminous embryo with broad and flat or plano-convex cotyledons. There are some exceptions, and some doubt as to the limits of the family, of which it is not needful here to speak. In several points, es- pecially through Pistacia, the Anacardiaceae are manifestly allied to the Walnut Family ; which Endlicher has accordingly placed by its side in his class Terebinthineee, notwithstanding the monochlamydeous or achlamyde- ous and amentaceous sterile flowers, in virtue of which it is usually retained near the Cupulifera;. The present family is chiefly tropical, in America, Africa, and India, al- though the largest genus, Rhus, belongs in great part to the warmer temper- 156 ANACARDIACEiE. ate regions. It is the only genus in the United States ; but two allied genera occur in California. In the Old World, Pistacia and two species of Rhus are natives of the Mediterranean region. The resinous juice is the most characteristic product of this family. That of Pistacia Lentiscus and P. Atlantica hardens into the well-known resin called INlastich ; while the fragrant and balsamic Scio turpentine is yielded by P. Terebinthus. In most cases the resinous juice is caustic or highly poisonous, as in our two venomous species of Rhus, and in allied Japanese species, as well as in many tropical trees of the order. This juice, turning dark-colored on exposure to the light and air, forms a natural black varnish, which is sometimes also used to lacquer various kinds of ware. The black varnish called Japan Lacquer, is obtained from Stagmaria verniciflua in the Indian archipelago ; a tree which the inhabitants of Sumatra consider it dangerous to sit or sleep beneath the shade of. Species of Semecarpus, Melanorrhcea, &c., yield similar, more or less poisonous varnishes in various parts of India. The fleshy receptacle of Anacardium occidentale and the kernel of the seed (the Cashew-nut) are edible, the latter being a substitute for almonds, yet its shell or rind, which has to be carefully separated or de- stroyed by roasting, like the juice of the bark, is so acrid that it blisters the skin. Of more importance as articles of food are pistachio-nuts, of the Levant and Northern Africa, the seeds of Pistacia vera and P. Atlantica, which are free from noxious qualities, and from which a bland oil also is expressed. Another tree of this family, the Mangifera Indica, notwithstand- ing the active properties of its juices, yields one of the most famous and luscious fruits of the tropics, namely, the mango, a stone-fruit which is as highly prized in tropical as the peach is in temperate countries. Tlie properties of the genus Rhus are more particularly mentioned under that genus. ANACARDIACEiE. 157 Plate 159, 160. RHUS, Tourn, Flores polygami, mono-dioici. Calyx 5-partitus. Petala 5, inter calycem et disciim pi. m. perigynum inserta. Stami- na 5. Ovarium subglobosum, stylis brevibus stigmatibusve obtusis 3 superatum. Ovulum ex apice funiculi filiformis liberi appensum. Drupa exsucca. Cotyledones radiculaj supers accumbentes. Rhus, Linn. Gen. 369. Lam. 111. t. 207. Gsertn. Fr. 1. t. 44. DC. Prodr. 2. p. 66. Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 216. Endl. Gen. 5905. Rhus, Cotinus, & Toxicodendron, Tourn. Inst. p. 610. PocoPHORUM, Necker, Elem. 934. Sumacli. Poison Oak. Poison-Trcc. Flowers by abortion pol^'gamo-dicBcious or polygamo- moncecious, or rarely perfect. Calyx of five sepals, united at the base, equal, quincuncially imbricated in asstivation, usually persistent. Disk fleshy, surrounding the base of the ovary but free from it, coherent with the very base of the calyx, annular or five-lobed, the lobes opposite the petals. Petals 5, alternate with the sepals, equal, sessile, inserted under the margin of the disk where it becomes free from the calyx (perigynous), quincuncially imbricated in aestivation, deciduous. Stamens 5, alternate with the petals, inserted on or just under the margin of the disk : filaments subulate, distinct : anthers obloqg or didymous, introrsc, two-celled, the cells opening longitudinally ; in the fertile flowers usually smaller and more or less imperfect. Ovary in the sterile flowers abortive ; in the fertile ovoid or globular, sessile, one- celled : styles 3, short, sometimes almost none : stigmas terminal, obtuse, or depressed-capitate. Ovule solitary, anat- ropous, resnpinale-suspendcd from the incurved apex of a long filiform funiculus \vhich rises from the base of the cell ; the micropyle superior. 158 ANACARDIACE^. Fruit a small and dry or nut-like drupe, smooth, granu- lated, or hairy ; the sarcocarp thin and juiceless ; the endo- carp bony or crustaceous, smooth or striate. Seed conformed to the cell, which it fills, amphitropous, commonly transverse, somewhat reniform, the hilum superior ; testa membrana- ceous or thickish. Albumen none. Embryo filling the seed : COTYLEDONS oval or oblong, flat, nearly foliaceous, usually transverse : radicle short, lying on the side next the fu- niculus, superior, incurved or uncinate and lying against the edge of the cotyledons (cotyledons accumbent); in R. Cotinus, where the apex of the fruit becomes lateral from unequal development, the radicle is descending. Trees or shrubs, sometimes climbing by rootlets, yielding a resinous, or sometimes viscous-milky, often caustic juice. Leaves alternate, pinnate with a terminal leaflet, or pinnate- ly trifoliolate, rarely simple, destitute of stipules, commonly deciduous. Flowers small, white or greenish, in axillary or terminal panicles, often thyrsoid, rarely in catkin-like spikes, more commonly dioecious than monoecious. Etymology. The ancient Greek and Latin name of tlie genus. Geographical Distribution. This rather large and polymorphous genus is widely distributed over the temperate and subtropical regions of the world, but is most abundant in North America, Japan, and at the Cape of Good Hope. A few species are tropical. Ten species are known within the United States proper; and one other abounds in Oregon and California, where it takes the place of our R. Toxicodendron. The Californian Rhus (Malosma) laurina. Nut/., belongs to the originally Chilian genus Lithrcea, of Miers. Division. The following subgenera are represented in the United States, viz. : — § 1. Cotinus, Tourn. — Flowers perfect. Drupes semi-obcordate, gla- brous, veiny, the apex brought down on one side ; the radicle therefore descending (as in Geranium). — Leaves simple. Panicles ample and loose, most of the pedicels abortive and becoming much elongated, plu- mose-villous. (To this section belongs R. Cotinus, the Venetian Su- mach or Smoke-tree of our gardens, and the closely allied R. cotinoides, Niitt., which Mr. Buckley found in Alabama.) § 2. Sumac, DC. (excl. spec.) — Flowers more or less polygamous, in a terminal thyrsoid panicle. Drupes ovoid or globular, red or crimson, ANACARDIACE^. 159 clothed, at least when young, with acid glandular hairs; the putamen smooth. — Leaves pinnate. § 3. Toxicodendron, Tourn. — Flowers polygamo-dioecious, in loose and slender axillary panicles. Drupes globular, glabrous, white, or dun- colored ; the putamen striate or ridged. — Leaves pinnate or trifoliolate. § 4. LoBADiUM, Raf. (Turpinia, Raf. Schmalzia, Dfsv.) — Flowers po- lygamo-dicEcious, in short ament-like spikes, rather preceding the leaves, each subtended by a scale-like bract. Disk deeply five-lobed, conspicu- ous. Drupes ovoid-lenticular, hairy, acid, reddish. — Leaves trifoliolate. Note. If R. Cotinus has incumbent cotyledons, as figured in Maout's excellent Alias Elementaire de Bolanique, p. 139, this with the other char- acters should suffice for the restoration of the Tournefortian genus Cotmus. I doubt if this is really the case, but possess no fruit quite perfect enough to settle the point. Properties. These are very similar in all our subgenera, except Toxi- codendron. The bark and the bruised foliage are aromatic or strong-scented and astringent. Those of the Sumachs abound in tannic acid, and are used in tanning morocco leather. The bark of R. Cotinus and of R. Coriaria has been used as a febrifugal tonic. The wood is orange-colored and yields a dye, while the bark is employed as a mordant. The fruit of all the Su- machs, especially of R. typhina and R. glabra, is pleasantly but sharply acid ; the acidity, which principally resides in the hairs or glands of the sur- face, is said to be owing to bimalate of lime. The bark and young wood yield when wounded a viscous or resinous and usually milky juice, which immediately turns yellowish, and finally brown, on exposure to the air. R. Copallina was thought to yield one of the resins known under the name of Gum Copal, but this is not the case. None of the Sumachs appear to be poisonous. It is probably through some mistake that this quality has been attributed to R. pumila, Michx., which belongs to the section Sumac as characterized above. But in the section Toxicodendron, not only the juice, but even the effluvium spontaneously exhaled under the influence of a hot sun, is well known to be extremely venomous to many people, although others may handle the plants with impunity. Our two poison- ous species, which abound throughout the United States, are R. Toxicoden- dron (the Poison Vine, Poison Oak, or Poison Ivy), and R. venenata (the Poison Sumach, or Poison-Tree, inappropriately termed Poison Dogwood or Poison Elder). The effects of the poison, which commence several hours after exposure, are violent itching, with tumefactit)n of the affected parts, especially of the face, followed by burning pain, fever, and a vesicular eruption. These symptoms reach their height on the fourth or fifth day, and the cuticle desquamates as the pain and swelling subside. The juice of these plants blackens on exposure to the air, and forms an indelible ink, and a natural dark varnish. The brilliant black varnish of Japan is the juice of R. vernicifera, a species nearly allied to our R. venenata, with which it was confounded by Linnajus, and endowed with similar venomous properties. 160 ANACAllDIACEyE. PLATE 159. Rhus (Sumac) glabra, Linn.; — a small panicle and leaf, somewhat reduced in size. 1. A sterile flower, enlarged. 2. One of the stamens, more magnified, inside view. 3. The same, seen from the outside. 4. Vertical section of a sterile flower, enlarged, showing the disk, the abortive pistil, &c. 5. A fertile flower, enlarged (the sepals proportionally longer), 6. Vertical section of the same, showing the disk, the somewhat imper- fect stamens, and the ovule, &c. 7. The ovule detached, with the long ascending funiculus from the apex of which it hangs, more magnified. 8. The fertilized pistil, more enlarged, surrounded by the disk, the calyx and corolla removed. 9. A drupe, with the calyx, enlarged. 10. Transverse section of the same and of the embryo, more enlarged. 11. Vertical section of the same, and of the seed and embryo. PLATE IGO. Rhus (Lobadium) aromatica. Ait.; — a flowering branch of the sterile plant, cultivated in the Botanic Garden, Cambridge ; of the natural size. 1. Diagram of a flower : the line underneath indicating the position of the bract ; the circle above, that of the axis of the inflorescence. 2. A magnified sterile flower, with its bract and a pair of bractlets, seen from the inner side. 3. Vertical section of the sterile flower, magnified. 4. An outside view of a stamen, more magnified. 5. An inside view of the same. 6. Pistil of a fertile flower, with the abortive stamens and deeply-lobed disk, magnified. 7. Vertical section of a fertile flower, magnified, showing the disk, the ovule, &c. 8. The ovule, with its funiculus, more magnified. 9. Drupes, of the natural size. 10. A drupe, with the persistent calyx and corolla, enlarged. 11. Vertical section of the same, and of the seed and embryo, more mag- nified. 12. A seed detached entire, with a part of its funiculus, magnified. 13. The embryo detached, with the cotyledons separated, more magnified. Ord. VITACE^. Frutifces sarmentosi, cirrhis oppositifoliis scandentes, succo aqueo, stipulis deciduis : dicotyledoneaB, subhypogynas, regu- lares ; calyce brevissimo ; petalis 4 — 5 sestivatione valvatis caducis ; staminibus A — 5 oppositipetalis ; ovario 2-loculari ; ovulis in quoque loculo geTuinis collateralihus erectis ; stig- mate unico ; bacca 1 - 4-sperma ; seminibiis osseis ; embryone minimo in basi albiiminis dense carnosi, radicula infera. ViTES, Juss. Gen. p. 267. ViNiFER^;, Juss. in Mem. Mus. 3. p. 444. ViTACEvE, Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. ed. 2. p. 30, & Veg. Kingd. p. 439. SarmentacejE, Venten. Tabl. p. 167. Ampelide^, Kunth in H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 5. p. 223. DC. Prodr. 1. p. G27. Wight, 111. Ind. Bot. p. 159. t. 57, 58. Endl. Gen. p. 796. The Vine Family, although its particular affinities and place in the series are not well made out, is readily distinguished by the very short and often truncate calyx, the valvate aestivation of the corolla, the stamens as many as the petals and inserted opposite them on the outside or under the edge of a fleshy or glandular disk (this is absent in Ampelopsis), which girts the base of, and sometimes adheres to, the two-celled ovary, with two erect collateral ovules in each cell ; the berry with from one to four bony seeds ; and the minute embryo at the base of hard fleshy albumen. It consists of woody plants, climbing by tendrils, which, like the peduncles, are opposite the leaves ; the leaves therefore alternate, or some of the lower opposite ; and with small greenish flowers in thyrsoid cymes or panicles. The branchlets are tumid at the nodes, where they often separate readily. The Indian and South African genus Leea, which connects this family with MeliaccK, bears no tendrils, and has monadelphous stamens and a 3-6-celled ovary with a single ovule in each cell, introduces certain exceptions into the ordi- nal character, which I have not here taken notice of. Although the true Grapes are jjlants of the northern temperate region, belonging to Middle Asia and to North America, yet tlie greater part of this small order is found within the tropics and in the Kast Indies. 162 VITACE^. The Grape-vine exemplifies the general properties which pervade the order ; although the true Grapes alone, and indeed only a portion of these, bear the edible berries, which, with their fermented juice, constitute the sole important products of the family. The leaves and young shoots are also acid, and more or Jess astringent. The fruits and the foliage of some Indian species of Cissus are acrid. The stem of the Grape is strongly charged with aqueous snp in the spring, which flows very copiously when wounded. Grapes contain several acids (the tartaric, malic, citric, and racemic), the peculiar sugar called grape-sugar, mucilage, and more or less of some as- tringent principle, in proportions varying greatly, not only in diiferent species, but also in the same species under diiferent circumstances of climate or cul- ture. In the warmer portions of the region of grape-culture, they contain so large a proportion of sugar that they are dried in the sun as raisins ; and those of a small, seedless variety are currants (Corinths) of the shops. The Grape of the Old World is the only species of much importance to man. The frost-grapes of the United States are extremely acerb ; and the fox-grapes have a strong musky flavor and a tough pulp. But some varieties worthy of cultivation, and with the advantage of being indigenous to our climate, have been produced in cultivation from our Vitis Labrusca ; such are the Isabella Grape, Catawba Grape, &c. VITACEiE. 163 Plate 161. VITIS, Tourn. Petala disco 4-5-lobo s. glanduloso extus inscrta, apice cucullato-induplicato calyptratim cohserentia et basi soluta, vel sub anthesi patentia. ViTis, Tourn. Inst. p. 613. t. 384. Sclikulir, Handb. t. 4'). Gtertn. Fr. t. 106. R. Br. ex Wiglit & Arn. Prodr. Ind. Or. 1. p. 124. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 243. ViTis &, Cissus, Linn. DC. 1. c. Endl. Gen. 4566, 4567. Orape-Vinc. Calyx very short, truncate, or obsoletely 5-4-toothed, the inside filled with a fleshy torus which expands around the base of the ovary into a 5-4-lobed hypogynous disk. Pe- tals 5 or sometimes 4, inserted under the edge of the disk, equal, concave, valvate in asstivation, their summits frequent- ly induplicate and lightly cohering, when the whole corolla separates from the base before expansion and falls away to- gether, sometimes expanding in the ordinary way, early de- ciduous. Stamens as many as the petals and opposite them, inserted just within them : filaments subulate or filiform, distinct, deciduous : anthers cordate-ovate, fixed near the middle, introrse, two-celled ; the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary two-celled, or accidentally three-celled, sessile, its base surrounded by and sometimes coherent with the fleshy disk, the lobes or glands of which are alternate with the stamens : STYLE short or none : stigma terminal, depressed, somewhat peltate, or slightly two-lobed. Ovules 2 in each cell, erect from its base, collateral, anatropous, the raphe next the axis. Fruit a two-celled (or by abortion one-celled) globular berry ; the cells two-seeded or by abortion one-seeded. Seeds erect, obovate or somewhat obcordate ; the membranaceous testa covering a thick and bony inner integument, which is strongly induplicate on each side of the raphe and more or 164 VITACE^. less so on the middle of the opposite side ; the cartilaginous- fleshy albumen thus appearing three-lobed on the transverse section. Embryo very small, next the hilum : cotyledons short and flat : radicle conical, inferior. Shrubs climbing by tendrils, the branchlets tumid at the nodes. Leaves alternate, or the lowest opposite, petioled, usually orbicular-cordate and palmately-lobed or angled, sometimes palmately or pedately parted, rarely quinately or bipinnately compound. Stipules membranaceous, deciduous. Tendrils and peduncles opposite the leaves. Flowers small, greenish, very numerous, often umbellate-fascicled in com- pound and thyrsoid panicles. or cymes. The North Ameri- can species are mostly dioecio-polygamous. Etymology. The classical Latin name of the Grape. Geographical Distribution, Division, &c. The true Grapes, which bear edible fruit, consist chiefly or entirely of the Vitis vinifera of the Old World, a native of the Caucasian region, but early carried westward by man ; and of a few North American species, of little economical importance, indigenous to the Atlantic region of the United States. These are pentan- drous, or only accidentally tetrandrous species, with the induplicate tips of the petals cohering in the bud, so that the corolla is thrown off from the base without expanding ; and the disk appears in the form of five nearly or quite distinct lobes or fleshy glands alternate with the stamens. Besides these, there are numerous tropical and subtropical species, the greater number Asiatic, with three in the Southern United States, which bear small and in- edible berries and tetramerous or pentamerous flowers, the corolla usually expanding before it falls off, and with a conspicuous annular or cup-shaped disk either lobed or toothed, sometimes (as in V. bipinnata) coherent with the ovary. These, when tetrandrous, form the Linneean genus Cissus; to which pentandrous species have also been referred when they have divided leaves, or an expanding corolla. But these characters are not presented in any constant combination which serves to characterize a genus distinct from Vitis. PLATE 161. Vitis Labrusca, Linn.; — cultivated (Isabella Grape). 1. A flower-bud, magnified ; one of the petals detached at the base. 2. Diagram of the same, showing the gestivation and position of parts. 3. Vertical section of the unopened flower, more magnified. 4. A magnified flower with the corolla, 5, thrown off. 6. Fruit, of the natural size. 7. Vertical section of a berry. 8. A seed detached and enlarged. 9. A transverse, and 10. a longitudinal, section of the same. 11. The embryo (from fig. 10) more magnified. VITACE^. 165 Plate 1G2. AMPELOPSIS, Mlchx. Petala 5, sub anthesi patentia. Discus plane nuUus ! — Folia digitata 5-foliolata. Ampelopsis, Miclix. Fl 1. p. 159, excl. spec. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 633, excl. spec. 1-2, 4-7. Ton-. & Gray, Fl. N. Ain. 1. p. 245. Heder^s Sp., Linn. Spec. 1. p. 202. Tii'g°iiiiaii Creeper. American Ivy. Calyx very short, turbinate, truncate, obscurely five-cre- nate, fleshy. Petals 5, cucuUate, thick and fleshy, hypogy- nous, valvate in aestivation, induplicate at the apex, separating from the apex to the base in anthesis, spreading, deciduous. Stamens 5, opposite the petals and shorter than they, hy- pogynous, deciduous : filaments subulate : anthers oblong, fixed near the base, introrse, two-celled, the cells opening longitudinally. Disk entirely wanting ! Ovarv ovate, ses- sile on a very short hypogynous torus into which the petals and stamens are inserted, two-celled : style none : stigma depressed-capitate. Ovules 2 in each cell, collateral, erect from the base, anatropous, the raphe next the axis. Fruit a spherical two-celled berry ; the cells two-seeded or by abortion one-seeded. Seeds obovate, with a membra- naceous testa covering a thicker bony integument, which is strongly induplicate longitudinally on each side of the raphe, and a little incurved on the opposite side ; the cartilaginous- fleshy albumen thus appearing deeply three-lobed on the transverse section. Embryo very small, next the liilum in the base of the albumen : cotyledons ovate, flat, shorter than the inferior radicle. Shrubby vine extensively climbing by tendrils; the branches tumid and readily separable at the nodes. Leaves alternate, with membranaceous caducous stipules, digitately 166 VITACE^. quinquefoliolate ; the leaflets oblong, acuminate, coarsely serrate. Peduncles and tendrils opposite the leaves. Flow- ers perfect, small, greenish, in paniculate cymes. Berries dark-colored. Etymology. The name is compounded of cifiTreXos, the Greek name of the Vine, and o\//tj, likeness. Geographical Distribution, &c. This genus, as here restricted, em- braces only a single species, the well-known Virginian Creeper, which is common throughout the originally forest region of Eastern North America, from Canada to Florida and Texas. It is distinguished equally from Vitis and from Cissus (if the latter be admitted as a genus) by the total absence of any hypogynous disk or glands. Properties. This common vine is used in this country as a substitute for Ivy, to mantle walls, &c., over which it spreads rapidly and luxuriantly. The bright green foliage, as well as the pedicels of the fruit, turn to a deep crimson in autumn. The berries are eaten by birds. PLATE 162. Ampelopsis quinquefolia, Mkhx.; — a flowering branch, of the natural size. 1. Diagram of the flower. 2. A flower-bud, enlarged. 3. An expanded flower, enlarged. 4. A stamen, more magnified, inside view. 5. The same, seen from the outside. 6. Vertical section of a flower, magnified. 7. Two berries, with their stalks, of the natural size. 8. Vertical section of a berry, magnified, dividing one seed. 9. A detached seed, more magnified. 10. A transverse section of the same. 11. An embryo, highly magnified, the cotyledons a little opened. Ord. RHAMNACE^. Frutices sen arbusculse simplicifolise, stipulis parvis vel obsoletis: dicotyledonese, perigynae, regulares, 4-5-andrge; calyce libero seu adhserente cBstivatione valvato ; staminihus petalis CBstivatione involuto-complicatis numero cBqualibus et iisdem oppositis, tnargini disco perigyno insertis ; ovulis solitariis erectis in qiioqiie loculo ovarii 1-4-locularis ; fructu drupaceo v. 2 - 4-cocco ; emhnjone niagno recto in axi al- buminis parci carnosi ; cotyledonibus carnosis seu foliaceis planis vel marginibns recurvis, radicula brevi infera. Rhamnorum Genera, Juss. Gen. p. 376. Rhamne^, R. Br. in Flind. Voy. 2. p. 554. DC. Prodr. 2. p. 29. Brongn. in Ann. Sci. Nat. 10. p. 320. Endl. Gen. p. lOlM. RHAMNACE.a;, Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. 2. p. 107, &, Veg. Kingd. p. 581. The Buckthorn Family consists of small trees or shrubs, with alternate, or rarely opposite, simple leaves, and small and regular tetrandrous or pen- tandrous flowers. The family is readily distinguished from all others by the valvate aestivation of the calyx ; the separately involute aestivation of the petals (which, however, are occasionally wanting) ; the position of the sta- mens before the petals, or alternate with the lobes of the calyx ; the inser- tion of the petals and stamens upon the margin of a conspicuous perigynous disk, which lines the calyx-tube, usually surrounds the ovary or its base, and sometimes coheres with it ; the erect and (with a single and doubtful excep- tion) solitary ovule in each cell ; and the large and straight embryo in scanty albumen, with broad cotyledons and an inferior radicle. The flowers are either perfect, or by abortion polygamo-mono'cious or dioecious. The fruit is drupaceous, or sometimes capsular or nut-like. The seeds are very rarely, if ever, arillate. The points of resemblance to Byttneriacca?, noticed by ]Mr. Brown when he established the present family on its proper basis, go to show that the position of the stamens before the petals is to be explained in Rliamnacese in the same manner as in the former order {vide supra, p. 83). Mr. Bennett* has explained the mode in which the originally internal * In Horsefield's PlantcB Javanicm Rariores, p. 131. 168 RHAMNACE^. raphe of tlie ovule becomes lateral, or even external, in several genera of this family, namely, by the twisting of the short funiculus. This displace- ment is best observed in Rhamnus, in which it is easy to see 'that the raphe of the ovule is internal, while in the seed the groove in which it is received is exterior. This family, comprising about forty genera and two or three hundred known species, is represented in almost every flora except the arctic and antarctic ; but is most abundant in the warmer part of the temperate zones and along the borders of the tropics. In the southern hemisphere the great- er number are South African and Australian, and are of peculiar forms. The North American genera all belong to the tribe FrangulecE. A bitter extractive principle abounds in the bark, with more or less as- tringency and acridity. Some are purgative or emetic, w'hile others, as the Quina of Brazil (Discaria febrifuga), yield an extract which is valued as a tonic and febrifuge. The bark and root sometimes yield a coloring matter, as also do the rather mucilaginous, nauseous, and often cathartic fruits of several species of Rhamnus. But the fruit of Zizyphus, especially of the Lotebush and Jujube, is esculent. The dried leaves of Sageretia iheezans are used by the poorer classes in China as a substitute for tea : those of Ce anothus Americanus have been similarly employed in this country. Conspectus of the United States Genera. * Drupe baccate or fleshy; the putamen bony, one -three-celled. Ovary immersed in the thickened disk. Zizyphus. (Plate 163.) Calyx-tube expanded, connate with the base of the ovary. Petals 5. Drupe baccate ; the putamen 1 - 3-celled. Albumen almost wanting. Cotyledons very thick and fleshy. CoNDALiA. (Plate 164.) Calyx free. Petals none. Putamen one-celled. Berchemia. (Plate 165.) Calyx free. Petals 5, entire. Putamen crustaceous, 2-celled. * * Drupe baccate ; the putamen separating into 2-4 nutlets. Calyx free. Sageretia. (Plate 166.) Disk thick and fleshy, surrounding the ovary. Drupe 3-pyrenous. Cotyledons plane. Leaves opposite. Frangula. (Plate 167.) Disk thin, lining the calyx-tube. Drupe 2-4- pyrenous. Seeds not sulcate ; raphe lateral. Cotyledons plane, fleshy. Rhamnus. (Plate 168.) Disk thickened at the margin, lining the calyx- tube. Drupe 2-4-pyrenous. Seeds sulcate on the back, the raphe in the groove (dorsal). Cotyledons foliaceous, their margins revolute. * * * Fruit at first drupaceous, soon dry and tricoccous. Ceanothus. (Plate 169.) Calyx colored ; the lobes inflexed, shorter than the unguiculate petals and filiform filaments. Seeds not sulcate. Cotyledons plane. RHAMNACEiE. 169 Plate 163. ZIZYPHUS, Tour7i. Calyx 5-fidus, tubo expanse inferne cum basi ovarii coiina- to. Petala obovata, unguiculata, patentia. Ovarium disco pia- no immersum, 2 - 3-loculare. Drupa baccata ; putamine osseo 2-3- vel abortu 1-loculari loculis monospermis. Embryo fere exalbuminosus ; cotyledonibus magnis crassis. — Fruti- ces spinescentes, floribus in cymulis axillaribus, fructu eduli. ZizYPHUs, Tourn. Inst. p. 627. t. 403. Lam. III. t. 185. GfEitn. Fr. 1. t. 43. DC. Prodr. 2. p. 19. Brongn. in Ann. Sci. Nat. 10. p. 354. t. 13. f. 2. Endl. Gen. 5717. Rhamni Sp., Linn., Pall., Desf. Jujube. liOtc-liusli. Calyx flat, with a very short and broadly turbinate tube, which is adnate to the base of the ovary, five-cleft ; the lobes triangular, carinate in the middle on the upper side, valvate in aestivation. Disk broad and nearly flat, surround- ing the ovary and more or less adnate to it, and lining the expanded tube of calyx, somewhat five-angled. Petals 5, short, inserted on the margin of the disk at the angles, alternate with the sepals, unguiculate, obovate, cucullate, complicate-infolded around the stamens in aestivation, at length widely spreading, deciduous. Stamens 5, inserted with the petals and opposite them, about their length or longer, spreading, deciduous : filaments subulate : anthers didymous, two-celled, introrse, the cells opening longitudinal- ly. Ovary nearly immersed in the disk, two - three-celled : styles two or three, distinct or united below : stigmas in- trorse or terminal. Ovules solitary in each cell, erect from the base, anatro])ous, the raphe next the axis. Fruit a mucilaginous-fleshy drupe, girt at the base by the persistent calyx, or by its tube from which the Hmb is 12 170 RHAMNACE/E. circumscissile ; the putamen thick and bony, ovoid or len- ticular, two - three-celled with a single erect seed in each cell, or by abortion one-celled and one-seeded, indehiscent. Seed not grooved, with a thin membranaceous testa. Al- bumen wanting, or an extremely thin layer. Cotyledons very large, thick and fleshy, plane (not involute) : radicle small, inferior. Shrubs, with rigid and more or less spinescent branches, alternate and nearly distichous triplinerved leaves, and small axillary greenish flowers, in little cymes or umbellate fascicles which seldom exceed the petiole. Stipules one or both spi- nescent, or minute, and often caducous. Etymology. Said to come from Zizouf, the Arabic name. Geographical Distribution. A pretty large, chiefly subtropical genus, belonging principally to the Old World, especially to the Mediterranean, Arabian, and East Indian regions. A few have been detected in tropical America, and one in Texas and on the northeastern borders of Mexico ; namely, the Rhamnus obtusifolius, Hook., the flowers and fruit of which have recently been obtained by Messrs. Lindheimer and Wright. Properties. The fruit in this genus is destitute of the purgative or active qualities which generally prevail in the family ; that of several spe- cies is esteemed as an article of food. The drupes of the Lote-bush (Z. Lotus), which gave its name to the ancient Lotophagi, are still gathered for food by the Arabs in Barbary. From Z. vulgaris and Z. Jujuba is ob- tained the well-known gummy extract called jujube paste. Two Brazilian species with edible fruit are known. That of the species here figured is said by Dr. Gregg to be edible, but rather astringent. Its fruit is formed in Texas the year after flowering, as noticed by Mr. Wright. PLATE 163. ZizYPHus obtusifolia (Rhamnus obtusifolius, Hook, in Torr. cj- Gray, Fl. 1. j). 685*) ; from Texas, Lindheimer. 1. A magnified flower, seen from above, showing the disk, &c. 2. A petal and stamen, more magnified. 3. Vertical section of the flower, magnified. 4. Magnified section of a drupe (by abortion one-celled) and of the embryo. 5. Transverse section of the same, showing the vestiges of the second cell. 6. The embryo, magnified. * Also Paliurus Texanus, Jl. Scheele in LiniKEa, 21, p. 580 (1648). RHAMNACE^. 171 Plate 164. CONDALIA, Cav. Calyx patens, 5-fidus. Petala nulla. Ovarium liberum, disco crasso arete cinctum, 1-2-loculare : styli in unum con- nati. Drupa carnosa ; putamine osseo uniloculari monosper- mo. — Suffrutices ramosissimi, glaberrimi, ramis spinescenti- bus, floribus axillaribus. CoNDALiA, Cav. Anal. Cienc. Nat. 1. p. 29. t. 4, & Ic. 6. p. 16. t. 525. DC. Prodr. 2. p. 28. Brongn. in Ann. Sci. Nat. 10. p. 355. t. 12. f. 3. Hook. Ic. PL t. 287. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 685. Endl. Gen. 5718. Calyx flat and open, with a very short turbinate tube, five-cleft, rarely four-cleft, the lobes ovate, valvate in aestiva- tion, carinate-one-nerved on the inside. Disk thick and fleshy, flat, adnate to and filling the tube of the calyx, sur- rounding the ovary, but free from it or nearly so. Petals none. Stamens 5, rarely 4, inserted into the edge of the disk alternate with the lobes of the calyx, shorter than they, deciduous : filaments subulate-filiform : anthers introrse, fixed by the middle, two-celled, the oblong cells opening longitudinally. Ovary free, nearly immersed in the disk, two-celled with a solitary erect ovule in each cell, or in C. obovata usually one-celled and one-ovuled : styles united into one: stigma small and entire, or in C. obovata thickish and three-lobed. Ovule erect from the base of the cell, anatropous. Drupe ovoid or globose, girt at the base by the entirely persistent calyx or its persistent tube, fleshy ; the putamen thick and bony, one-celled, sometimes imperfectly two-celled, indehiscent, one-seeded. Seed subglobose, with a smooth and very thin testa, not sulcate. Embryo surrounded by a rather thin layer of fleshy albumen : cotyledons oval, flat, rather fleshy : radicle short, inferior. 172 RHAMNACEiE. Shrubs much branched, glabrous, with spinescent branch- lets. Leaves alternate, pinnately veined, obovate or oblong, subsessile, rather coriaceous, deciduous. Stipules minute and caducous. Flowers small, greenish-white, solitary or two or three in a fascicle in the axils of the leaves, on very short peduncles. Etymology. The genus was dedicated to Ant. Condal, a Spanish phy- sician, who accompanied LcEfling in his journey up the Orinoco. Geographical Distribution, &c. Condalia was founded by Cavanilles upon a single Chilian undershrub, the C. microphylla ; to which Sprengel added the dubious C. paradoxa, from Monte Video, which probably be- longs to some very different genus. The Texan plant, recently figured by Hooker, appears to be a genuine species of the genus, although it has much larger leaves, sometimes tetramerous flowers, the ovary as well as the drupe commonly only one-celled, and the whole calyx persistent. It forms a shrub of considerable size, and in Northern Mexico, according to Dr. Gregg, it becomes a tree of twenty feet in height. The genus is scarcely sufficiently distinct from Zizyphus ; from which it differs principally in the absence of petals, the entirely free ovary, and the pinnate venation of the leaves. Properties. The black fruit of C. obovata, called capul by the Mexi- cans, like that of Zizyphus, is edible, sweet and pleasant, according to the memoranda of Dr. Gregg, who found it from Mataraoros to Monterey. PLATE 164. Condalia obovata, Hook.; — a branch of the natural size, in flower and unripe fruit ; from Texas, Wright. 1. Diagram in a cross-section of a flower-bud and ovary. 2. A flower, a flower-bud, part of a leaf, &c., magnified. 3. Vertical section of a flower, magnified, showing the solitary ovule. 4. A stamen more magnified, outside view. 5. The same, seen from within. 6. A drupe, with the persistent calyx, of the natural size. 7. The same, enlarged. 8. Vertical section of the same through the seed and embryo, magnified. 9. Transverse section of the same. 10. Magnified transverse section of a drupe, which exhibited the vestige of a second cell. 11. Embryo detached, more magnified. 12. Diagram of a flower of Condalia microphylla, with its two-celled ovary. RHAMNACE^. Plate 165. BERCHEMIA, Neck. Calyx 5-fidus, tubo brevi hemisphaerico. Petala sessilia, integerrima, calycem aequantia. Ovarium disco crasso semi- imersiim, libemm, 2-loculare. Drupa oblonga ; putamine crustaceo 2-loculari, 2-spermo. — Frutices sa3pius scandeii- tes, foliis simpliciter lineato-penninerviis, floribus axillaribus et in paniculis terminalibus. Berchemia, Necker, Elem. Bot. 800. DC. Prodr. 2. p. 22. Brongn. in Ann. Sci. Nat. 10. p. 356. 1. 13. f. 1. Wight & Arn. Prodr. Ind. Or. 1. p. 163. Hook. & Arn. Bot. Beech, t. 37. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 260. Endl. Gen. 5719. Rhamni Sp., Linn. Jacq. Ic. Rar. t. 336. ZizYPHi Sp., Willd., Pursh, Ell. CEnoplea, Hedvv. f. Gen. 1. p. 151. QEnoplia, Schultes, Syst. Veg. 5. p. 332. Supple- Jack. Calyx deeply five-cleft, with a very short hemispherical tube ; the lobes somewhat petaloid, erect or spreading, val- vate in asstivation ; the base persistent. Disk thick and fleshy, lining the tube of the calyx, and surrounding the ovary but free from it. Petals 5, obovate or lanceolate, sessile, entire, usually acute, about the length of the lobes of the calyx and inserted alternate with them into the edge of the disk, involute around the stamens in a3stivation, con- cave or cucullate-infolded, deciduous. Stamens 5, opposite the petals and inserted with them, usually shorter than they : filaments subulate : anthers ovate or cordate, two-celled, introrse, fixed below the middle, the cells opening longitu- dinally. Ovary half immersed in the disk, free, ovoid, two- celled: styles united into one: stigmas 2. Ovule solitary in each cell, erect from its base, anatro})ous, the raphe next the axis. 174 RHAMNACE^. Fruit an oblong or ovoid drupe, with a thin sarcocarp, or sometimes nearly juiceless ; the crustaceous putamen two- celled. Seed solitary in each cell, oblong, erect, with a membranaceous testa, not grooved ; the raphe lateral, or at length dorsal. Eivibryo in the axis of fleshy albumen and of about the same length : cotyledons narrowly oblong, flat and thin, parallel with the dissepiment : radicle short, infe- rior, slightly curved toward the axis. Shrubs erect, or often twining or climbing, with the alter- nate leaves oval or oblong, entire or nearly so, strongly pin- nately veined ; the veins numerous and nerve-like, approxi- mate, oblique, straight and simple, connected by minute transverse veinlets. Stipules subulate, minute. Flowers small, greenish-white, perfect or somewhat polygamous, sol- itary or cymulose in the axils of the upper leaves, and in slender terminal panicles ; the drupes blackish or purple. Etymology. The name, which is not explained by Necker, is supposed to commemorate some obscure botanist. Geographical Distribution. The genus, which is well marked in habit, consists of one species indigenous to the Southern United Stales, a few in subtropical North America, and several in tropical Asia. Properties. The fresh stems of our species are very lithe and tough ; whence the popular name. Note. In B. volubilis we do not find the seed to be stipitate ; the em- bryo is surrounded by a very distinct albumen ; and this is closely invested by a thin and delicate testa, which is not adnate to the pericarp. PLATE 165. Berchemia volubilis, DC. ; — a branch in flower, of the natural size. 1 . Diagram of the aestivation and position of the parts of the flower. 2. An expanded flower, magnified. 3. A vertical section of a flower, magnified. 4. Vertical section of a fertilized pistil, disk, &c., magnified. 5. A stamen more magnified, seen from the outside. 6. The same, seen from the inside. 7. Fruit of the natural size. 8. A magnified vertical section of a mature drupe, dividing both seeds. 9. A transverse section of the same. 10. The embryo detached, more magnified. RHAMNACEyE. 175 Plate 166. SAGERETIA, Bro7ign. Calyx 5-fidus, tubo urceolato. Petala obovata calyce bre- viora. Ovarium disco crasso cupulaeformi subinclusum, li- berum, 3-loculare, Driipa baccata, 3-pyrena. Semina ex- sulca. Cotyledones planae. — Frutices ramis virgatis, foliis suboppositis laxe penniiierviis, floribus spicatis. Sageretia, Brongn. in Ann. Sci. Nat. 10. p. 359. t. 13. f. 2. Torr. &, Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 263. Endl. Gen. 5720. Calyx five-cleft, with an urceolate or hemispherical tube ; the lobes ovate, acute, carinate in the middle of the upper side, valvate in aestivation. Disk thick and fleshy, cup- shaped, filling the tube of the calyx to which it adheres, closely surrounding the ovary but free from it. Petals 5, inserted on the margin of the disk, alternate with the lobes of the calyx and shorter than they, obovate, often emargi- nate, more or less unguiculate, involute around the stamens in aestivation, cucullate or concave, deciduous. Stamens o, in- serted with the petals and opposite them, about their length : filaments subulate : anthers ovate, two-celled, fixed near the base, introrse, the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary ovate, nearly immersed in the disk, free, three-celled : style very short and thick, three-grooved : stigmas 3, depressed- capitate. Ovule solitary in each cell, erect from its base, anatropous, the raphe next the axis. Fruit a globose baccate drupe, tripyrenous ; the pyrenae coriaceous, smooth and even, not grooved, obcordate, inde- hiscent, filled with the seed. Embryo in the axis of thin fleshy albumen : cotyledons flat and plane : radicle in- ferior. Shrubs with slender and virgate branches, spinescent branchlets, and mostly opposite oblong or lanceolate and ser- 176 RHAMNACE^. rulate leaves, on short petioles, their venation loosely pin- nately veined and reticulated. Stipules minute, deciduous. Flowers very small, greenish, crowded and often glomerate in slender axillary and terminal rigid spikes. Etymology. Dedicated by Brongniart to CI. Sageret, a French horticul- turist and vegetable physiologist. Geographical Distribution. Chietly tropical or subtropical plants, the greater part natives of Equinoctial America and Eastern Asia. One species extends up the coast from Florida to North Carolina. Note. The fruit was not described by Brongniart. It is here figured from some sketches, made by Dr. Torrey at the time the Rhamnacese were prepared for the Flora of North America, which show that it is much nearer that of Rhamnus, or rather Frangula, than that of Berchemia. Better materials and further details are still needed. PLATE 166. Sageretia Michauxii, Brongn.; — a flowering branch, of the natural size ; from Florida. 1. Diagram of the flower. 2. An open flower, magnified. 3. An exterior view of a stamen, more magnified. 4. The same, seen from the inner side. 5. A petal spread out, magnified. 6. Vertical section of a flower, magnified. 7. A drupe, of the natural size. 8. The same, enlarged. 9. One of the pyrenae, seen from the outside, magnified. 10. Transverse section of the same, and of the embryo. *^* The figures 7-9 are copied from sketches made by Dr. Torrey. RHAMNACEiE. 177 Plate 167. FRANGULA, Touryi. Calyx 5- (rarissime 4-) fidus, tubo urceolato intus disco tenui vestito. Petala brevia sen brevissima. Ovarium libe- rum, 2 - 4-loculare. Drupa baccata. 2-4-pyrena. Semina exsulca, rhaphe laterali. Cotyledones carnosas planae. — Frutices vel arbusculas ; foliis alternis penninerviis, venis rectis oblique parallelis ; floribus semper hermaphroditis. Frangula, Tourn. Inst. p. 612. t. 383. Mcench, Meth. Suppl. p. 271. Reichenb. Fl. Germ. 1. p. 488. Bennett in PI. Jav. Rar. p. 131 . Rhamni Sect. Frangula, Linn. Gen. 265. (Gaertn. Fr. 1. 110, Schkulir, Handb. t. 46.) DC. Prodr. 2. p. 26. Brongn. in. Ann. Sci. Nat. 10. p. 362. t. 13. f. 5. End!. Gen. 5722. Aldcr-Bucktliorn. Calyx five-cleft, rarely four-cleft, with an urceolate or campanulate tube ; the lobes ovate or triangular, more or less petaloid, and carinate-one-nerved within, valvate in aestiva- tion, deciduous by a circumscissile line after flowering, leav- ing the persistent cupulate tube at the base of the fruit. Disk a thin lining to the tube of the calyx, not surrounding the ovary. Petals inserted into the edge of the disk alter- nate with the lobes of the calyx, much smaller than they, erect, obovate, unguiculate, often emarginate, cucullate, invo- lute around the stamens in aestivation, deciduous. Stamens as many as the petals and opposite them, short : filaments subulate : anthers didymous, two-celled, introrse, the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary free, two - four-celled : styles commonly united into one : stigmas two to four, distinct or somewhat united. Ovule solitary in each cell, erect from the base, anatropous : the raphe at first next the axis. Fruit a globular baccate drupe, two -four-celled, con- taining from two to four (commonly three) cartilaginous one-seeded pyrenae, which arc convex on the back, perforated 178 RHAMNACEiE. at the base. Seed erect, filling the nucules (pyrenae), con- vex (not at all grooved or excavated) on the back ; the char- taceous or membranaceous testa somewhat adnate to the putamen ; the raphe lateral, next to one marghi of the coty- ledons. Embryo large, surrounded by a thin layer of fleshy albumen : the broad cotyledons flat or plano-convex, usually fleshy, not at all revolute, parallel with the axis: radicle very short, inferior, turned a little from the hilum. Shrubs, or small trees, unarmed; with the deciduous or sometimes coriaceous and persistent leaves alternate, petioled, strongly pinnately veined ; the primary veins equal, parallel, straight or a little curved, running obliquely and without branching from the midrib to the margin. Stipules minute, deciduous. Flowers all perfect, white, sometimes reddish, clustered in axillary cymules or umbels. Etymology. Probably from frango, to break, in allusion to the brittle- ness of the stems. Properties. The bark of F. vulgaris yields a yellow coloring matter, and is purgative, acrid, and bitter. The drupes are more or less purgative. Geographical Distribution, Sic. This Tournefortian genus, which is surely distinct from Rhamnus, as Mr. Bennett has remarked, belongs to the northern temperate region ; three species are natives of Europe and North- ern Asia ; one, of the Azores ; and one, F. Californica, with coriaceous leaves and large dipyrenous fruit, of California, namely, Rhamnus Californi- cus, Esch., and R. oleifolius. Hook., to which must be added, apparently as varieties only, the R. laurifolius and R. leucodermis, Nutt., and even R. to- mentellus, Benth. PLATE 167. Frangula Caroliniana : — a branchlet in flower. 1. A flower magnified. 2. A petal : 3. inside view of a stamen, more magnified. 4. Vertical section of a flower, magnified. 5. Pistil magnified, with the three-celled ovary transversely divided. 6. A drupe, of the natural size. 7. Transverse section of the same, magnified, showing the flat cotyledons. 8. One of the cocci, seen from the inner side, more magnified. 9. Vertical section of the same, and of the seed and embryo. 10. A seed detached and magnified, showing the lateral raphe. 11. Embryo detached entire, magnified. RHAMNACEiE. 179 Plate 168. RHAMNUS, Tourn. Calyx 4-fidus, rariiis 5-fidus, tubo urceolato intus disco tenui s. margine incrassato vestito. Petala exigua vel nulla. Ovarium liberum, 2 — 4-loculare. Drupa baccata, 2 - 4-pyrena. Semina dorso sulcata, rhaphe dorsali. Cotyledones foliaceae, revolutae. — Frutices vel arbusculae, foliis vage penninerviis, floribus viridulis dioicis vel polygamo-subdioicis. Rhamnus & Alaternus, Tourn. Inst. p. 593. t. 366. Rhamni Sp., Linn. DC. Prodr. 2. p. 23. Brongn. 1. c. Endl. Gen. 5722. Cervispina, Dillen. Nov. Gen. t. 8. Moench, Meth. p. 686. Macorella, Neck. Elem. 2. p. 122. Cardiolepis, Raf. Neog. 1625, p. 2. Buckthorn. Calyx four-cleft, rarely five-cleft, with an urceolate tube ; the lobes valvate in aestivation, deciduous. Disk lining the tube of the calyx, thin below, more or less thickened upwards, entirely free from the ovary. Petals as many as the lobes of the calyx and shorter than they (usually very small), inserted alternate with them into the thickened mar- gin of the perigynous disk, unguiculate, frequently emargi- nate or two-lobed, concave or cucullate, involute around the stamens in aestivation, deciduous, often wanting. Stamens, &c., as in Frangula. Ovary free, ovoid, two - four-celled : STYLES united below : stigmas 2 to 4, terminal, obtuse. Ovule solitary and erect from the base of each cell, anatropous ; the raphe at first next the axis, but soon by torsion of the short funiculus becoming lateral, and in the seed dorsal. Fruit a globular and baccate two - four-celled drape, con- taining as many separable and cartilaginous pyrenas, which when ripe incline to open along the ventral and sometimes on the dorsal suture, conformed to the seed. Seed obovate, 180 RHAMNACEiE. with a cartilaginous testa, grooved longitudinally on the outer side, the raphe in the groove. Embryo in the axis of fleshy albumen, of about its length : cotyledons oval or orbicular, foliaceous, parallel to the axis and the raphe, their margins recurved on each side of the groove so as to become navicu- lar : RADICLE very short, inferior, turned a little from the hilum. Shrubs or small trees, sometimes with spinescent branches ; the leaves mostly alternate, loosely pirniately veined. Stip- ules linear or subulate, caducous. Flowers small, greenish, axillary, usually fascicled or cymose-clustered, rarely race- mose, either strictly polygamo-dioecious, or (as in R. lanceo- latus) subdicEcions, both kinds of flowers with well-formed stamens and often fruit-bearing, but the styles in the sub- sterile flowers much shorter than in the others. Etymology. 'Pd^ivos, the ancient Greek name of the Buckthorn. Properties. Tlie fruit and bark are purgative. Those of the common Buckthorn (R. catharticus, a European species, much used for hedges in the Northern United States) are drastic. From their unripe fruit the water-color called sap-green is prepared. " French berries," the fruit of R. infectorius, &c., are employed in calico-printing, and in dying morocco leather yellow. Geographical Distribution. Principally natives of the Northern tem- perate zone, the greater part belonging to the Old World. The only well- determined species of the United States are R. lanceolatus (including R. Shortii, Nutt., and R. parvifolius, Torr. <^ Gr.) and R. alnifolius, L^Her.; the latter pentandrous, apetalous, the seeds with a shallow but manifest dorsal groove and the cotyledons recurved in the manner characteristic of the genus. PLATE 168. Rhamnus lanceolatus, PwrsA. ; — Pennsylv., Pro/". Green. 1. A flowering branchlet of the truly fertile plant, of the natural size. 2. A similar flowering branchlet of the substerile plant. 3. Diagram of the flower. (In the ovary the raphes are becoming lateral.) 4. A flower (from Fig. 2), magnified ; and 5. with the calyx divided. 6. A petal, spread out and more magnified. 7. A magnified stamen seen from the outside, and 8. from the inside. 9. A truly fertile flower (from Fig. 1), magnified. 10. Vertical section of the same, more magnified. 11. A branch in fruit, of the natural size ; from the mountains of Virginia. 12. Vertical section of a drupe through the seeds and embryo, magnified. 13. Transverse section of the same, showing the recurved cotyledons, &c. 14. A seed, the dorsal groove towards the eye, cut across, and magnified. 15. Embryo spread out, magnified. (Cotyledons truly foliaceous.) RHAMNACE^. 181 Plate 169. CEANOTHUS, L. Calyx coloratus, 5-fidus, tubo ovario pi. m. adnato, lobis conniventibus. Petala calycem superantia. longe unguicula- ta, cucullata, patenti-deflexa. Stamina exserta. Fructus 3- coccus; coccis crustaceis bivalvibus. Cotyledones planse. Ceanothus, Linn. Gen. 267 (excl. spec). Mill. Ic. t. 57. Brongn. in Ann. Sci. Nat. 10. p. 369. t. 15. f. 4. Hook. Fl. Bor. Am. 1. p. 124. t. 45. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 264. Endl. Gen. 5726. Ceanothi Sect. Euceanothus, DC. Prodr. 2. p. 31. FoRRESTiA, Raf. in N. Y. Med. Rep. (hex. 5.) 2. p. 350. IVew Jersey Tea. Red-root. Calyx colored, five-cleft, with a hemispherical or turbinate tube ; the lobes triangular, membranaceous and petaloid, val- vate in aestivation (the bud five-lobed), usually remaining inflexed or connivent, deciduous by a circumscissile line, leaving the persistent tube at the base of the fruit. Disk fleshy or spongy, thickened upwards, adnate to the calyx- tube and closely surrounding the ovary, with which it is usually more or less coherent. Petals 5, inserted on the thickened margin of the disk alternate with the lobes of the calyx, much longer than they, exserted, deflexed or widely spreading in flower, conspicuously unguiculate, the limb cucullate, infolded around the stamens in asstivation, decidu- ous. Stamens 5, inserted with the petals and opposite them, as long as the petals or longer, often persistent : filaments filiform : anthers didymous or four-lobed, introrse, two- celled, the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary three-celled, immersed in the disk, and often adnate to it, sometimes three- angled, the angles often surmounted by a fleshy protuber- ance or a gland : styles 3, commonly united below into one : stigmas introrse or terminal. Ovule solitary in each cell, erect from its base, anatropous, the raphe next the axis. 182 RHAMNACE^. Fruit three-lobed, three-celled, tricoccoiis, girt at the base by the persistent and commonly adnate base of the calyx, at first drupaceous, but the usually thin sarcocarp soon dries up ; the endocarp dehiscent into three crustaceous or cartilagi- nous at length two-valved cocci. Seed solitary in each cell, erect, with a broad basilar caruncle at the hilum, obo- vate-lenticular, with a smooth crustaceous testa, not sulcate ; the raphe ventral. Embryo in the axis of fleshy albumen, of nearly its length and width : cotyledons oval or obovate, thin and flat : radicle very short, inferior. Shrubs, or suffruticose plants, sometimes spinescent ; with alternate (rarely opposite) usually serrulate leaves. Stipules minute and caducous. Flowers perfect, small, but usually handsome, being collected in umbel-like fascicles, which are aggregated into dense thyrsoid cymes or panicles at the ex- tremity of the branches ; the pedicels as well as the calyx and corolla usually colored, white, blue, or sometimes yellowish. Etymology. Kedvcudos, a name applied by Theophraslus to some prickly plant, and transferred by Linnseus to this genus, for no assigned reason. Properties. The root of C. Americanus is dark red, and yields a cinna- mon-colored dye. It possesses considerable astringency, as do the leaves, which were used during the American Revolution as a substitute for tea. Geographical Distribution. This pretty large genus, as now limited, is entirely North American. Five species are natives of the United States, the rest belong to Oregon, Northern Mexico, and especially to California. PLATE 169. Ceanothus Americanus, Z/n^.,- — a flowering branch. 1. Diagram of the flower. 2. A flower, magnified. 3. Vertical section of a flower, more magnified. 4. Side view of a petal and a stamen, still more magnified. 5. A magnified stamen, seen from the inner side. 6. An ovule, magnified. 7. A fruit, magnified, showing the thin and dry sarcocarp. 8. The same more magnified, dehiscent into three cocci and separating from the persistent base of the calyx. 9. Vertical section of a seed, at right angles to the cotyledons, magnified. 10. A magnified seed transversely divided, the inner side towards the eye. 11. Vertical section of the seed parallel with the cotyledons, displaying the embryo. Ord. CELASTRACE^. Frutices vel arbusculce simplicifoliae, stipulis minimis ca- ducis: dicotyledoneas, perigyiiEe, regulares, 4-5-mer8e, 4-5- andrsB, aestivatione calycis corollseque imbricativa ; stamini- bus petalis alternis disco insertis ; ovario libero 2 — 5-loculari, stylis in unum coalitis, loculis mii-pluriovulatis ; seminibus anatropis in capsularibus arillatis ; embryone in axi albumi- nis recto magno, cotyledonibus foliaceis planis. Celastrine^:, R. Br. in Flind. Voy. 2. p. 554. Brongn. in Ann. Sci. Nat. 10. p. 328. Baitl. Ord. Nat. p. 378. Endi. Gen. p. 1085. Celastrace^, Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. ed. 2. & Veg. Kingd. p. 58G. Celastrinearum Trih. Euonyme^:, DC. Prodr. 2. p. 3. Rhamnorcm Sect. 2, Juss. Gen. p. 377, excl. gen. The Staff-tree or Spindle-tree Family is at once distinguished from the Buckthorn Family (from which Mr. Brown long since separated it), by the imbricative ffistivation of the calyx and corolla, and by the stamens being alternate with the petals. The fleshy disk, moreover, is less perigynous, and the petals, large in proportion, are inserted by a broad base under its more or less free edge. The ovary, although often immersed in the disk, is free, or becomes so in fruit : its cells usually contain a pair of ovules, rarely a single, sometimes several. These are normally erect or ascending ; but they occasionally become resupinate-suspended (as in one section of Euony- mus, plate 171), the raphe thus becoming dorsal in the manner long ago shown by Mr. Brown,* and recently more fully explained by Mr. Bcnnett.f The Celastraceaj are likewise distinguished, at least the capsular genera, by their arillate seeds ; the arillus usually forming a fleshy or pulpy sac which incloses the seed, or sometimes a cup or ring around its base. In Euonymus Dr. Planchon has shown that this fleshy covering is developed from the cxostome of the ovule, and not from the funiculus, and he therefore names it a false arillus or arillodium.\ But in Celastrus, if our analyses * In tlie Appendix to King's JVarr alive, 2. p. 54!). — The same resupinatlon is scon in Sida (IMato 123), and in many other genera. t In Ilorseficld's Plunlcc Javaiiictc Rariores, p. 131. t In Jlnnalcs dcs Sciences KalurcUcs, 3'"'^ scr. 3. p. 281. t. 1 1. 184 > CELASTRACE.^. (Plate 170, Fig. 9 and 12) are truthful, this covering must be a growth from the funiculus itself, or a true arillus. The Aquifoliaceae, which were formerly confounded with this family, are distinguished by the more or less monopetalous corolla, on the base of which, and not on a fleshy disk, the stamens are inserted, and especially by the sol- itary suspended ovules, and the minute embryo at the extremity of copious albumen. Celastraceaj belong to the warmer portions of the temperate, and to the intertropical regions of both hemispheres. The greater part are subtropical and in the southern hemisphere, especially of the Old World. Euonymus is the only European and North Asiatic genus except a Catha ? (Celastrus Europaeus) in Granada ; while this genus and Celastrus occur in the United States, and Pachystima, Baf. (Oreophila, Nutt., not of Don) in the Rocky Mountains and in Oregon. Myginda, a West Indian genus, with drupaceous fruit, is found on Key West. The sensible properties which prevail in this family are very similar to those of the Rhamnacese. They are astringent and bitter, but at the same time often pervaded with some stimulant, or more or less acrid or nauseous products, which are frequently emetic or cathartic. The fruit or seeds of Euonymus are said to poison sheep ; but the drupes of an El8eodendron are edible. A fixed oil may be expressed from the seeds of several genera. The green leaves of Catha edulis (Khat of the Arabs), which is cultivated along with the Coffee-tree at Yemen, &c., are greedily eaten by the Arabs, who attribute to them the power of producing extreme watchfulness, so that a man may stand sentry all night long without drowsiness. They also re- gard them as an antidote to the plague. CELASTRACEiE. 1S5 Plate 170. CELASTRUS, L. Flores subdioici. Petala et stamina 5, in marginem disci cupiilasformis inserta. Ovarium liberum 2-4-loculare, locu- lis 2-ovulatis. Semina erecta, arillo carnoso colorato inclusa. — Frutices scandentes, foliis alternis. Celastrus, Linn. Gen. 270 (escl. spec). Gaertn. Fr. t. 95. Schkulir, Handb. t. 47 (fig. dextr.). Kunth in H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 7. p. 64. Wight, 111. Ind. Bot. t. 72. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 257. Endl. Gen. 5679. StafF-tree. IrVaxwork. Slirubby Bitters\i'eet. Flowers dioecious, or dioBcio-polygamous from the abor- tion of the stamens in one set of individuals and of the pistil in another. Calyx herbaceous, with a short urceolate or cup-shaped tube, five-cleft ; the lobes quincuncially imbri- cated in aestivation, persistent. Disk perigynous, fleshy, cup-shaped, filling the tube of the calyx to which it adheres, and with a more or less free crenulate-lobed border. Petals 5, inserted by a broad base just under the edge of the disk, alternate with the lobes of the calyx, much larger than they, oblong-obovate, spreading, deciduous, imbricated in aestiva- tion, either quincuncially or with only one exterior and one interior. Stamens 5, inserted into the edge of the disk al- ternate with the petals, shorter than they (in the fertile plant usually mere abortive rudiments) : filaments subulate : an- thers oblong-sagittate or cordate, often mucronate-apiculate, fixed near the base, introrse, two-celled, the cells opening longitudinally. Ovary in the sterile flowers rudimentary in the bottom of the open disk ; in the fertile flowers with the base closely surrounded by the disk, two -four- (usually three-) celled : style thick : stigma two - four-lobed. Ovules two in each cell, erect from its base, collateral, anatropous, on short and fleshy ciipnlatc fanicnli ; the raphes face to face. 13 186 CELASTRACEiE. Fruit a globular and orange-colored two -four- (usually three-) celled capsule, loculicidally dehiscent by as many valves ; the valves coriaceous, bearing the thin dissepiments on their middle. Seeds two or solitary in each cell, erect, inclosed in a fleshy scarlet arillus, which is pervious only at the apex ; the chartaceous testa marked by a slender raphe. EarBRYO straight in the axis of copious fleshy albumen, nearly of its length and breadth : cotyledons foliaceous, oval, plane, parallel with the raphe : radicle short, inferior. Shrubs climbing, sometimes twining, unarmed; with alternate leaves, and rather small greenish-white flowers in axillary or terminal racemes or panicles, which are drooping in fruit. Stipules minute, setaceous, caducous. Pedicels articulated above the middle, minutely bracteate. Etymology. An ancient Greek name, of uncertain meaning. Geographical Distribution. Tliis genus, as now restricted, consists of our C. scandens, which is common throughout the United States proper, apparently of one or more Mexican species, of one East Indian, and perhaps of an African species. C. Europseus, Boiss., is doubtless to be excluded. Properties. Our Waxwork is sometimes planted as an ornamental climber, on account of the fruit, which is showy in autumn, when the orange-colored pods burst, so as to display the pulpy scarlet arillus that incloses the seeds. These are said to possess narcotic and stimulating prop- erties. The seeds of the East Indian C. paniculata {Malhingnee of the na- tives) yield by destructive distillation a peculiar empyreumatic oil, of a bitter and acrid taste, which is highly valued by the native practitioners. PLATE 170. Celastrus scandens, Linn. ; — branch of the staminate plant. 1. Diagram of the flower. 2. A staminate flower, with the articulated pedicel, magnified. 3. A vertical section of the same. 4. A magnified stamen, outside view ; 5. an inside view. 6. A pistillate flower, magnified. 7. Magnified pistil, with the disk and the base of the calyx. 8. Vertical section of the same, showing the ovules, &c. 9. An ovule, and the forming arillus, more magnified. 10. Dehiscent fruits, of the natural size. 11. A seed in its pulpy arillus, magnified. 12. Vertical section of the same, through the raphe and cotyledons. 13. A seed extracted from the arillus, magnified. 14. Embryo magnified. CELASTRACE^. 187 Plate 171. EUONYMUS, Tourn. Flores hermaphroditi, 4 - 5-meri. Petala sub disco magno piano ovarium cingenti inserta. Stamina disco imposita ; filamentis brevissimis. Ovula in loculis 2, adscendentia vel resupinata. Semina arillo colorato inclusa. — Frutices oppo- sitifolii, floribus axillaribus cymosis. EuoNYMus, Tourn. Inst. p. 617. t. 388. Linn. Gen. 271. Lam. III. 1. 131. Gsertn. Fr. t. 113. DC. Prodr. 2. p. 3. Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 257. Endl. Gen. 5676. Bennett, PI. Jav. Rar. p. 130. t. 28. Spiiidle-tree. Stra^vlberry-tree. Buruing-busli. Flowers perfect. Calyx flat, four - five-cleft, persistent ; the lobes rounded, imbricated in aestivation. Disk large, thick and fl.eshy, perigynous, flat, quadrangular or somewhat five-angled, closely surrounding the ovary and more or less adherent to it. Petals as many as the lobes of the calyx and inserted in their sinuses under the free border of the disk, much larger than the calyx, widely spreading, sessile by a broad base, imbricated in aestivation, deciduous. Sta- mens as many as the petals and alternate with them, inserted on the upper surface of the flat disk : filaments very short, subulate, erect : anthers introrse, didymous, two-celled ; the cells nearly parallel, or oftener with their bases diverging so as to become transverse, opening lengthwise. Ovary im- mersed in the disk, three - five-celled : style very short: stigma terminal, depressed, or three - five-lobed. Ovules anatropous, two in the inner angle of each cell, either next the base, when they are ascending, or nearer the summit, when they become pendulous by resupination, and the raphe therefore dorsal or external, at first collateral, and with the raphes contiguous (at least in E. Americanus, &c.), but at length more or less superposed. 188 CELASTRACE^. Fruit a three - five-lobed and three - five-celled fleshy and colored capsule, either smooth or verrucose, loculici- dally three - five-valved ; the valves at length coriaceous, bearing the dissepiments on their middle. Seeds two, or commonly solitary in each cell by the abortion of one ovule, ascending or resupinate-suspended, inclosed in a pulpy red arillus which is pervious at the apex, the testa smooth and chartaceous. Embryo straight, in the axis of fleshy albumen, of nearly its length : cotyledons broad and flat, foliaceous, parallel with the raphe : radicle short, next the hilum. Shrubs or small trees, sometimes trailing ; with mostly square branchlets, opposite and usually serrulate pinnately- veined leaves, minute and caducous stipules, and cymose (or rarely solitary) flowers on axillary peduncles. Petals green- ish or dark purple. Capsules and arillus usually red. Etymology and Properties. From ev, good, and ovofia, food ; a name ironically given, according to Tournefort, because the herbage or fruit of these plants was thought to be noxious to cattle. Geographical Distribution, &c. This genus belongs almost entirely to the temperate regions of the northern hemisphere. Of our three or four species, one only extends westward to Oregon. E. atropurpureus, a highly ornamental shrub in autumn, when the bright red pods are ripe, is one of that section of the genus in which the ovules and seeds maintain their origi- nal position, and are ascending, with the raphe internal. PLATE 171. EuoNYMUs Americanus, var. obovatus, Torr. 4" Cr>'- (E. obovatus, Nutt.) ; — a branch in flower, of the natural size. 1. Section of the flower-bud, enlarged, showing the aestivation, &c. 2. A magnified flower, seen from above. 3. The same, seen from beneath. 4. Vertical section of a flower, more magnified, showing' the ovules, &c. 5. A detached stamen, more magnified, seen from within. 6. An ovule much magnified, from a left-hand cell (resupinate). 7. Section of a half-grown fruit, showing the fertilized and abortive seeds, 8. A young seed more magnified, showing the growing arillus. 9. Dehiscent capsule, of the natural size. 10. A seed inclosed in its pulpy arillus, magnified. 11. The same, with the arillus longitudinally divided. 12. Vertical section of the seed and embryo across the cotyledons, magnified. 13. The embryo detached entire, magnified. Ord. STAPHYLEACEiE. Frutices erecti, foliis oppositis pmnato-3 - 9-foliolatis stipu- latis, foliolis sermlatis ssepe stipellatis ; — a Celastraceis di- versi foliis compositis, carpellis subdiscretis, et seminibus osseis ssepissime exarillatis ; a Sapindaceis staminibus cum petalis sepalisque isomeris, embryone recto in albumine car- noso. Staphyleace^, Bartl. Ord. Nat. p. 381. Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. ed. 2. p. 121, &. Veg. Kingd. p. 381. Endl. Gen. p. 1084. Celastkinearum Trib., DC. Prodr. 2. p. 2. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Airier. 1. p. 256. The Bladder-nut Family, first admitted as a distinct order by Bartling, was arranged as a tribe of Celastraceae by De CandoUe. It is thought to be about equally related to the latter family and to the Sapindaceee, in which Reichenbach places Staphylea. From the Celastraceas these plants are distinguished by the pinnate or pinnately trifoliolate leaves, with the leaflets usually stipellate, the colored calyx, the completely or partially distinct carpels, and the bony seeds which (except in Euscaphis) are destitute of an arillus. From SapindaceaB, with which they accord in habit, they are distinguished by their opposite leaves (which are of very rare occurrence in Sapindaceas), their regular and symmetrical pentandrous flowers, and their straight embryo in fleshy albumen. The family comprises only three admitted genera, of a small number of species, namely, Turpinia, Ve?it., of the West and East Indies, with baccate fruit ; Euscaphis, Sieb. 4" Zucc, of Japan, witli triple fleshy-coriaceous pods; and Staphylea, L., with its inflated bladdery fruit. One species of the lat- ter genus is given to Japan, one to Europe, and one to the Eastern United States. A species is also mentioned from Java. A Peruvian and two West Indian species, assigned to Staphylea, require confirmation. In tlie little that is known of their sensible properties, they agree with the nearly related families. The oily seeds of the Bladder-nut are slightly pur- gative ; and the fresh bark has a strong and rather unpleasant odor. The bark of the root of Euscaphis staphyleoidcs is bitter and astringent ; and its infusion is used by the Japanese as a remedy for dysentery, chronic diarrhoea, &c. The fruit of Turpinia is edible. 190 STAPIIYLEACEiE. The plants of the family are all upright shrubs or small trees, with neat foliage and rather handsome white or whitish blossoms. In the Bladder- nuts these are succeeded by the large and membranaceous strikingly inflated pods. STAPllYLEACE/E. 191 Plate 172. STAPHYLEA, L, Flores hermaphroditi. Calyx coloratus, 5-partitns. Peta- la et stamina 5, erecta, margini disci perigyni 5-lobi inserta. Capsula 3-loba, membranacea, inflata, oligosperma. Semina ossea, exarillata. — Frutices ; foliis trifoliolatis v. impari- pinnatis, stipulatis et stipellatis ; floribiis cymuloso-racemosis. Staphvlea, Linn. Gen. 374. Lam. 111. t. 210. Sclikulir, Handb. t. 84. Gsertn. Fr. t. 69. DC. Prodr. 2. p. 2. Torr, & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 256. Deless. Ic. 3. t. 51. Sitb. & Zucc. Fl. Jap. p. 180. t. 95. Endl. Gen. 5673. Staphylodendron, Tourn. Inst. p. 616. t. 386. BuMALDA, Tliunb. Fl. Jap. p. 8. Bladder-nut. Calyx five-parted, colored ; the segments flat, quinciin- cially imbricated in aestivation, erect, marcescent or persistent. Disk perigynoiis, fleshy, filling the short tube of the calyx, urceolate or depressed, five-lobed ; the lobes before the petals. Petals 5, spatulate or obovate, inserted on the margin of the disk alternate with the sepals, unguiculate, quincuncially imbricated in aestivation, erect, deciduous. Stamens 5, in- serted on the edge of the disk alternate with the petals : FILAMENTS filiform-subulatc, pubescent towards the base : ANTHERS introrse, fixed near the middle, two-celled, the ob- long cells parallel, opening longitudinally. Pistils 3, or rarely 2, united by their inner angles at the base only, or for nearly their whole length : styles filiform, distinct and con- nivent, or more or less coherent : stigmas somewhat capitate or clavate. Ovules 6 or 8 in each ovary or cell, borne on its inner angle in two series, horizontal, collateral, anatro- pous; the raphes contiguous. Fruit a membranaceous and usually vesicular-inflated CAPSULE, three- (or two-) celled, three-lobed, or sometimes two- 192 STAPHYLEACE^. lobed, the carpels united at the axis or sometimes only at the base, the lobes tardily dehiscent at the summit along the ventral suture. Seeds by abortion few or solitary in each cell or carpel, horizontal or ascending, subglobose or lenticu- lar-obovoid, truncate at the base, sessile ; the testa thick and bony, polished ; the raphe forming a ridge on one side. Embryo straight, in the axis of fleshy albumen, of nearly its length and width : cotyledons oval or orbicular, flat and thin : radicle very short, next the hilum. Shrubs, with opposite and stipulate trifoliolate or pinnate leaves, with five to seven ovate or oblong serrulate leaflets, which are involute in vernation and setaceously stipellate. Stipules and stipels deciduous. Flowers white or cream- colored, rather showy, in terminal racemose or cymose droop- ing panicles. Pedicels bracteate, articulated above the middle. Etymology. The original name, Staphylodendron, of Tournefort, from ara(jjv\rj, a raceme or cluster, and bivbpov, a tree, was abbreviated by Lin- naeus into Staphylea. Properties. The Bladder-nuts are neat shrubs, with drooping and pret- ty, though not showy, white, vernal blossoms, which are replaced in summer by the large and bladdery pods. PLATE 172. Staphylea trifolia, Linn.; — a flowering branchlet of the natural size. (Cambridge Botanic Garden.) 1. Diagram of the flower (placed to the left of the axis, toward which the second sepal looks). 2. A flower, with its pedicel and bractlets, enlarged. 3. A petal, more enlarged. 4. Pistils, with the disk, &c., enlarged; the calyx-lobes cut away. 5. A stamen, enlarged, seen from the inside. 6. The same, seen from the outer side. 7. Magnified transverse section of the compound ovary, one of the cells also vertically divided, as is the disk and receptacle. 8. An ovule, more magnified. 9. The bladdery fruit, of the natural size. 10. The same, the upper part cut away, showing the cells and seeds. 11. A seed, enlarged. 12. A transverse section of the same. 13. A magnified vertical section of a seed, enlarged, showing the embryo. Ord. MALPIGHIACEiE. Arbores vel fmtices, ssepe scandentes, foliis oppositis inte- gris penninerviis stipulatis, pilis dum adsunt medio afRxis : dicotyledoneas, hypogynas, S-merse, plerumque lO-andras tri- gynm ; petalis unguiculatis penninerviis sepalisque persisteii- tibus aestivatione imbricatis ; disco nullo ; carpellis discretis aut plerumque in ovario 3-loculari connatis ; ovulis in loculis solitariis e funiculo pendente adscendentihus saepius unci- formibus, micropyle supera ; embryone exalbuminoso, cotyle- donibus ssepissime conduplicatis vel homotrope convolutis. MALPiGHiiE, Juss. Gen. p. 252. Malpighiace^;, Juss. in Ann. Mus. 18. p. 479. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 577. Bartl. Ord. Nat. p. 385. Adr. Juss. in St. Ilil. Fl. Bras. 3. p. 3, «& Monogr. (in Archiv. Mus. 3.) 1843. Endl. Gen. p. 1057. Lindl. Veg. Kingd. p. 388. The Malpighia Family, which has recently been the subject of a most elaborate and able monograph by Professor Adrien de Jussieu, barely makes its appearance on the southern border of the United States. When the first volume of the Flora of North America, by Dr. Torrey and myself, was completed, no plant of the order was known to be indigenous within its lim- its. Recently, however, an undescribed species of Galphimia, which is remarkable for being nearly herbaceous, has been detected in the central parts of Texas, and the genus is accordingly here illustrated. Some other Mexican genera doubtless extend into the newly acquired territory between the Nueces and the Rio Grande. Indeed, I possess an imperfect specimen, gathered at Corpus Christi, of what appears to be Malpighia glabra, Linn. ; and a West Indian species of Byrsonima also grows on Key West. The order now comprises about forty-two genera, and over five hundred and fifty species ; nearly all of them intertropical. A few are African, a somewhat larger number Asiatic and Polynesian ; but far the greater portion are natives of the West Indies, Mexico, and South America, especially Brazil, where more than half of the known species are found. The only extratropical family witb whicli this need be compared is Acera- cca?, with which llic earlier bolanista confounded liie species known to iheni 194 MALPIGHIACEiE. which have a winged, samaroid fruit. It is readily distinguished by the entire or barely serrulate leaves ; by the pubescence, when present, consisting of what have been termed Malpighiaceous hairs, namely, fixed by the middle and appressed (Plate 173, fig. 12) ; by the thick glands (wanting in Galphi- mia) which are ordinarily borne on the back of the sepals ; by the conspicu- ously unguiculate and pinnately-veined petals ; by the absence of any glandular disk ; by the usually raonadelphous stamens, and the trimerous gynscium ; and especially by the solitary and peculiar ovules, which hang on a manifest, often elongated funiculus, against which they are reclined (and to which they often partly adhere, so as to exhibit various gradations between the orthotro- pous, campylotropous, and anatropous forms) ; the micropyle, and con- sequently the radicle, always superior. M. de Jussieu also remarks that when the embryo is coiled it is simply spiral ; the cotyledons not folded to- gether in the middle, as in Maples, so as to make a double turn. The pedi- cels are articulated, which is not the case in the Maple Family. In flowers of our Galphimia which were examined for delineation, the regular quincuncial arrangement extends from the calyx to the corolla in a simple spiral order ; the first petal being placed where it should be (making allowance for the change which occurs to bring the petals alternate with the sepals) , namely between the first and fourth sepals ; but this, as Jussieu has remarked, is not the common case in the order. M. de Jussieu has shown that the stamens which are opposed to the petals belong to an exterior series, and probably arise from a deduplication of the petals. Of the sensible qualities of Malpighiacese little is recorded. The bark and the wood sometimes contain a red coloring matter. The bark abounds in tannin ; that of several species is used in Brazil by the tanners ; that of one species is employed in Cayenne as a febrifuge, and that of another as an astringent and as an antidote to the bite of snakes. The acidulated and somewhat astringent fruit of two or three species is eaten in the West Indies. MALPIGIIIACE^. 195 Plate 173, GALPHIMIA, Cav, Calyx 5-partitus saepissime eglandulosus. Petala 5, cari- nato-costata, denticulata. Stamina 10, omnia fertilia. Styli 3, filiformes, in stigma aciitum desinentes. Capsula 3-loba, 3-cocca ; coccis 2-valvibus. — Fmtices v. fruticuli integrifo- lii ; floribus racemosis flavis, deinde rubellis. Galphimia, Cav. Ic. 5. p. 61. t. 489, 563. H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 5. p. 172. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 582. Griseb. in Linnrea, 13. p. 26!). Bartl. in Linn®a, 13. p. 550. Adr. Juss. in St. Hil. Fl. Bras. 3. p. 70. 1. 178, & Monogr. Malpigh. p. 67. t. 7. Endl. Gen. 5500. Thryallis, Linn. Gen. 533, fide Ad. Juss., non 3Iart. Calyx five-parted, herbaceous, persistent ; the segments equal, erect, usually destitute of glands, quincuncially im- bricated in aestivation. Petals 5, longer than the sepals, alternate with them, hypogynous, quincuncially imbricated in asstivation, at length widely spreading or reflexed, unguic- ulate, oblong-ovate or obovate, concave, commonly carinatc with a thickish midrib, which is canaliculate above, pinnate- ly veined, the margins denticulate, deciduous. Stamens 10, hypogynous, five opposite the petals and five alternate with them, all fertile : filaments filiform-subulate from a dilated base, distinct or a little monadelphous, persistent : anthers oval or cordate, pointless, introrse, fixed below the middle, glabrous, two-celled, the cells opening longitudinally. Pistil of three combined carpels : ovary globular, three-lobed, three- celled : styles 3, filiform, distinct, their tips incurved in the bud : stigmas terminal, minute. Ovule solitary in each cell, pendulous from the inner angle near its summit on a slender funiculus, against which it reclines and to a portion of which it commonly adheres, forming a short (internal) raphe, and so becoming semi-anatropous ; the micropylc superior. Fruit capsular, thrcc-lobed, tricoccous ; the coriaceous 196 ftlALPIGIIIACEiE. cocci separating from each other, dehiscent down the cari- nate dorsal suture, at length two-valved. Seed solitary in each carpel, suspended, uncinate-rostellate at the micropyle ; the smooth testa crustaceous, lined with a rather fleshy inner integument. Albumen none. Embryo conduplicate ; the RADICLE straight, superior, the curvature at the lower part of the nearly terete cotyledons, which are incumbent on the radicle. Shrubs, or barely suffruticose plants, usually glaucescent. Leaves opposite, entire, or obscurely glandular-denticulate, biglandular near the base or at the apex of the short petioles, bistipulate. Stipules subulate, sometimes united at the base. Flowers smooth, disposed in a terminal raceme. Pedicels subtended by a small bract, articulated, bibracteolate. Co- rolla yellow or orange, turning reddish with age. Etymology. The name is an anagram of Malpighia. Geographical Distribution. The genus comprises about a dozen known species, of which one is a native of Brazil, but all the others are Mexi- can. One nearly herbaceous species, collected in the neighbourhood of M,on- terey, New Leon, by Major Eaton and Dr. Edwards (communicated by Dr. Torrey), had already been detected in Texas by Mr. Lindheimer and Mr. Wright. PLATE 173. Galphimia linifolia, n. 5;). ,• — summit of a flowering stem of the natural size, from Texas, Wright. 1. Diagram of the flower. 2. A magnified flower, with the pedicel, bractlets (at the base), and bract. 3. A stamen (from a bud), more magnified, inside view. 4. Magnified pistil, with one stamen on the receptacle, the calyx cut away. 5. Vertical section through the ovary, receptacle, and calyx ; the petals and two stamens in place, magnified. 6. An ovule detached, more magnified. 7. The tricoccous fruit and persistent calyx and stamens, magnified. 8. A seed, magnified. 9. One of the cocci seen from the ventral side, more magnified. 10. Dorsal view of the same in dehiscence. 11. A magnified seed vertically divided, shovting the two thick integu- ments and the embryo. 12. One of the centrally affixed hairs (like the pubescence of the whole order) from the summit of the stem, much magnified. Ord. ACERACEiE. Arbores, foliis oppositis palmatinerviis et palmatilobis seu 3 - 5-foliolatis, vernatione plicatis, stipiilis nullis : dicotyledo- neee, regulares, digynm ; asstivatione imbricativa ; petalis calycis 4-9-lobi decidui lobis niimero seqnalibiis, vel abortu nullis, cum staminibus 4 - 12 disco glanduloso hypogyno seu perigyno insertis ; ovario bilobo e carpellis 2 columellse cen- trali adnatis composito ; ovulis geminis facie ventrali amphi- trope adnatis, micropyle infera ; fructu e coccis samaroideis 2 monospermis ; embryone exalbuminoso conduplicato, nunc spiraliter convoluto, cotyledonibus germinatione foliaceis. AcERA, Juss. Gen. p. 50, & Ann. Mus. IS. p. 477. AcERiNEiE, DC. Theor. Elem. ed. 2. p. 244, & Prodr. 1. p. 593. Endl. Gen. p. 1055. AcERACEiE, Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. ed. 2. p. 81, «& Veg. Kingd. p. 387. The Maple Family comprises on]}^ the typical genus Acer, with Ne- gundo, which is scarcely distinct from it. Dobinea, a shrub of Nepaul, is also appended to the order, but probably it does not truly belong to it. While the two orders to which it is related, namely, the Malpighiaceae and tlie Sapindacese, are principally tropical, the Maple Family, on the other hand, is found in temperate regions alone. It is also restricted to the north- ern hemisphere. The Maples, of which there are sixty or seventy known species, are characteristic forest-trees of the northern temperate zone, both in the Old World and the New. They affect the eastern and interior parts of continents, with extreme climate, ratlier than the western ; being most numerous in the United States and in Japan and Nortlicrn China ; more nu- merous in the Atlantic United States and in tlie Kooky Mountains than in Oregon and California; and far more numerous in .Ta])an and the Himalayan region than in Europe. The second genus, Negundo, is not represented in Europe, and has been deemed to be peculiar to North America, where it occurs across the whole breadth of the continent, in three by no means well distinguislied species, one of them belonging to the Middh; and Sfnitlinrn United States (extending 198 aceraceyE. eastward and northward to Pennsylvania and Michigan, and westward to the southern part of the Rocky Mountains), a second to CaUfornia, and the third to the interior of Mexico. Recently the lamented Zuccarini has brought to light a fourth species indigenous to Japan, furnishing an additional illustra- tion of the close analogy which exists between the vegetation of that country and that of the United States. The larger Maples are fine timber-trees in their native forests, especially A. saccharinum, and are planted as favorite shade-trees. The limpid ascend- ing vernal sap, perhaps of all the species, contains sugar, which is largely obtained by boiling from our well-known Sugar Maple, and to some extent from our White Maple. The Negundo also yields sugar. The proper elaborated juices of these trees become somewhat bitter and acrid as the veg- etation advances, and in a few European species they are lactescent. The bark possesses some astringency ; that of some European species is said to furnish the dyer reddish-brown and yellow colors. The development of the ovules, and the mode in which they are attached to the placenta by nearly their whole inner face, is admirably illustrated by Adrien de Jussieu, in his Monographie des Malpighiacees, p. 137, plate 1, fig. 12 - 14. By the growth of the upper part of the ovule after fertilization, the seed becomes anatropous. The mode in which the embryo of the Maples is folded or enrolled varies in diflferent species, and will probably coincide with the marked dif- ferences in the inflorescence and flowers, so as to give characters to the sections of the genus. The cotyledons are more commonly incumbent than accumbent. ACERACEyE. 199 Plate 174. ACER, Tourn. Flores polygami. Petala 5-8 (rarissime 4 s. 9-12), seu nulla. Stamina 8, rarius 4-7, v. 9-12. Samara dicocca ; coccis dorso in alam margine inferiore incrassatam productis. — Folia simplicia, palmatiloba, rarissime palmatisecta. Acer, Tourn. Inst. p. 615. t. 386. Linn. Gen. 11.55 (excl. spec). Gaertn. Fr. 2. 1. 116. Schk. Handb. t. 351-353. Michx. f. Sylv. 1. t. 40-45. Spach in Ann. Sci. Nat. (ser. 2.) 2. p. 160. Torr. &, Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 246. Endl. Gen. 5558. Maple. Flowers by abortion dioeciously, or rarely monoeciously, polygamous, occasionally truly perfect. Calyx colored, five- (rarely 4- 12-) parted, sometimes only five-lobed, rarely cup-shaped and obscurely toothed, deciduous, the lobes im- bricated in sestivation. Disk thick, glandular, annular and hypogynous, or cup-shaped and more or less perigynous, with the margins free, and usually lobed ; the lobes (or glands) alternate with the stamens. Petals wanting, or as many as the lobes of the calyx, and of the same color, alternate with them, inserted into the margin or base of the disk, equal, erect, slightly unguiculate, imbricated in asstivation, decidu- ous. Stamens 8, or from 4 to 9 or 12, seldom agreeing in number with the petals or sepals, inserted on the summit or inside of the disk : filaments distinct, filiform, commonly shorter than the calyx in the fertile flowers and longer in the sterile : anthers introrse, two-celled, the cells opening lon- gitudinally ; they are abortive or imperfect in the pistillate flowers. Pistil of two carpels : their ovaries united in the axis, compressed contrary to the dissepiment, wing-margined on the back: styles 2, linear-filiform, the whole inner face stigmatose. Ovules two in each coll, collateral, rarely su- 200 ACERACE^. pcrposed, sessile, attached to the inner angle of the cell by nearly the whole length of one side, at length amphitropous by a very broad insertion, the micropyle inferior. Fruit a donble samara ; the two carpels nut-like, coria- ceous, flattish, at length separating from the small persistent axis, indehiscent, the back produced into a large membrana- ceous and reticulated wing, the lower margin of which is thickened. Seed solitary, or rarely two, in each cell, as- cending or nearly horizontal, destitute of a funiculus, com- monly anatropous. Albumen none (the inner integument of the seed often fleshy). Embryo conduplicate, sometimes spirally convolute ; the cotyledons variously plicate or fold- ed, sometimes rugose-complicate, foliaceous, or often fleshy but foliaceous in germination, incumbent, oblique, or ac- cumbent on the descending radicle. Trees, sometimes shrubs, with limpid or seldom rather milky sap, terete branchlets, and scaly buds. Leaves oppo- site, exstipulate, simple, or in one species palmately trisected, palmately veined and usually lobed, deciduous. Flowers small, greenish, yellowish, or red ; either in a terminal raceme or panicle, appearing with or later than the leaves, or in fas- cicles from separate lateral buds and preceding the leaves. Pedicels not articulated. Bracts usually minute and caducous. Etymology. The classical Latin name of the Maple. PLATE 174. Acer saccharinum, Wangh.; — branch of a staminate plant in flower, of the natural size ; with 1-3. Some details from Acer Pennsylvanicum, Linn., viz. : — 1. Diagram of a perfect flower. 2. A sterile flower, enlarged. 3. A vertical section of the same, magnified, showing the perigynous disk. 4. Sterile flower of A. saccharinum, enlarged. 5. A stamen, more magnified. 6. A fertile flower of the same species, magnified. 7. Same, with the calyx laid open, showing the short stamens, disk, &c. 8. The pistil of the same, the other organs removed. 9. Vertical section of its ovary, more magnified. (Ovules advanced.) 10. Fruit, of the natural size ; one carpel cut open to show the seed. 11. A magnified seed vertically divided through the coiled cotyledons. 12. Emhryo detached entire, a little imrollcd, magnified. ACERACEiE. 201 Plate 175. NEGUNDO, Mcench. Flores dioici. Calyx minimus, 4 - 5-fidus. Petala nulla. Stamina 4-5, rarius 6. Discus obsoletus. — Folia impari- pinnata, 3 - 5-foliolata. Flores laterales ; masculi fasciculati e gemmis aggregatis aphyllis, pedicellis capillaribus ; foeminei racemosi. — Csetera Aceris. Negcndo, Mcench. Meth. p. 334. Nutt. Gen. 1. p. 253. DC. Prodr. 1. p. 596. Torr. &, Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 249. Hook. & Arn. Bot. Beech, t. 77. Endl. Gen. 5559. NEGUNDI0M, Raf. in N. Y. Med. Repos. (hex. 2.) 5. p. 350. Acer Negundo, Linn. Slichx. f. Sylv. 1. t. 46. Asli-Ieaved Maple. Box-EMcr. Flowers strictly dicBcious ; the fertile without sterile sta- mens ; the sterile destitute of a vestige of a pistil. Calyx very small, somewhat colored, deciduous, four - five-cleft, or in the fertile flowers four - five-parted ; the lobes lightly im- bricated in aestivation. Petals none. Disk obsolete or none. Stamens 4 or 5, rarely 6, hypogynous, exserted long before anthesis : filaments at length capillary : anthers linear, fixed by the base, apiculate, innate or scarcely in- trorse, two-celled, the cells opening longitudinally. Pistil of two carpels united at the axis : ovary compressed contra- ry to the partition, two-lobed by the early growth of the wing on the back of each carpel : styles 2, filiform, united only at the base, stigmatose along the whole length of the inner face. Ovules two in each cell, collateral, attached by nearly the whole length of the inner face to the middle of the inner angle of the cell, becoming amphitropous or at length anatropous, the micropyle inferior. Fruit a double samara, as in Acer ; the carpels oblong, with a very large semi-obcordatc wing. Skeo by abortion of one of the ovules solitary, oblong, anatroi)Ous, ascending, 11 202 ACERACE^. destitute of albumen. E>rBRyo conduplicate ; the oblong and flat foliaceous cotyledons applied face to face, bent down near the middle, and obliquely incumbent upon the descending slender radicle. Trees, with a light green bark on the young shoots, and scaly buds. Leaves opposite, exstipulate, petioled, pinnate- ly tri - quinquefoliolate ; the leaflets induplicate in verna- tion, ovate or oblong, petiolulate, pinnately veined, incisely toothed or lobed, membranaceous. Flowers small, greenish, pendulous, appearing with or a little before the leaves, from separate (and in the sterile plant usually aggregated) lateral buds ; the staminate cymose-fascicled, on long and capillary pedicels ; the pistillate racemose (the rachis more prolonged), on shorter (opposite) pedicels: the lowest bracts membrana- ceous, the upper minute, deciduous. Etymology. The name, so far as I know, first appears in the phrase, " Arbor exot., foliis fraxini instar pinnatis et serratis, Negundo perperam credita," of Ray's Hist. Plant. I do not find that it is used as a popular name of the tree in any part of the United States. Geographical Distribution, Properties, &c. These are mentioned under the order. PLATE 175. Negundo aceroides, AfoncA. ; — a staminate branchlet, in flower. 1. Raceme of a pistillate plant, in flower; of the natural size. 2. A staminate flower, magnified. 3. A stamen, more magnified. 4. A pistillate flower, magnified. 5. A transverse section of its ovary, showing the collateral ovules. 6. Magnified ovary, with the cells cut open, showing the ovules. 7. An ovule, more magnified. 8. The fruit, with one carpel cut open to show the seed ; natural size. 9. A magnified seed, divided vertically, showing the embryo. 10. The embryo of the same, partly spread out. Ord. SAPINDACEiE. Arbores, frutices, rarius lierba? scandentes, altcrnifolia^, rarissime oppositifolias, exstipulatse : dicotyledoneas, saspius unsymmetricse, 4-5-mera3 plerumque 7-9-andraB; sestiva- tione imbricativa; petalis et stamiuibus disco hypogyno v. subperigyno carnoso insertis, antheris longitndiiialiter dchis- centibus; ovario 3-loculari, loculis 1-2-oviilatis ; seminibus nunc arillatis exalbuminosis ; embryone sa^pissime curvatis convolutisve, cotyledonibus incumbentibus carnosis. Sapindi, Juss. Gen. p. 246. Sapindace^:, Juss. in Ann. Mus. 18. p. 476. Cambess. in Mem. Mus. 18. p. 1. Endl. Gen. p. 1066. Lindl. Veg. Kingd. p. 382. Sapindace^ & HippocASTANEiE, DC. Tlieor. ed. 2. p. 244, &- Prodr. 1. p. 597, 601. The Soapberry Family is principally tropical and altogether e.xtra-Euro- pean. In the southern portion of the United States, however, we have sin- gle representatives of three genera of true Sapindaceae, which order, as usually restricted, has the leaves (with one exception) alternate, and the petals commonly appendaged by an internal deduplication. The Horse- chestnuts and Buckeyes, which belong to the northern temperate zone in Asia and North America, have long been received as a distinct family, char- acterized by their opposite and digitate leaves, inappendiculate petals, and the geminate ovules, of which the upper one in each cell is ascending, the lower pendulous. But the distinction is completely destroyed by the recent- ly di.scovercd Texan genus, Ungnadia, Endl., which, with the fruit, the conferruminate cotyledons, and the general aspect and floral structure of Ilippocastaneae, has alternate and pinnate leaves, cristate-appendaged petals, and both ovules ascending. Besides, the geminate ovules of Dodonaea (Plate 182) are turned in the same way as those of the Horsechestnut. I cannot doubt, therefore, that the Hippocastanea; should form a tribe merely of Sapindaceae, as suggested by Endlicher, and recently adopted by Lindley. Active or poisonous qualities prevail, especially in the root, bark, foliage, and the bitter seeds of this family ; while llie I'riiit, allliougli in many cases 204 SAPINDACE^. noxious, in others furnishes valued articles of the dessert. Among the lat- ter are the delicious Litchi, Longan, and Rambutan of the Indian Archipel- ago, the baccate fruits of as many species of Nephelium ; and the succulent arillus of the Akee-tree (Cupania or Blighia sapida) is a well-known article of food on the western coast of Africa. Even the seeds of Dodonaea and of a i&w other plants of the order are eatable. On the other hand, some yield a narcotic poison of such virulence that the South American Indians use them to envenom their arrows. Several are employed for stupefying fish. The Soapberries, and to some extent the seeds and roots of the North American Buckeyes, abound in a detergent, saponaceous matter, which lathers freely in water ; whence they are used as a substitute for soap. The plants of the order are nearly all trees or shrubs, or are shrubby, rare- ly herbaceous vines, climbing by tendrils, which belong to the inflorescence. The fourth sepal (in the order of succession in the quincuncial aestivation) is directed to the axis of inflorescence in this family. Three tribes are represented in the United States ; which, commencing with the Hippocastaneae, that they may stand next to the Maples, are defined in the following Synopsis of the United States Genera. Tribe I. HIPPOCAST ANE^. — Ovules 2 in each cell. Cotyledons very thick and fleshy, partly soldered together. — Leaves (except in Ungna- dia) opposite and digitate. yEscuLus. (Plates 176, 177.) Calyx 5-lobed. Petals not appendaged. Ovary sessile : the upper ovules ascending, the lower pendulous. — Leaves opposite, digitate. Ungnadia. (Plates 178, 179.) Calyx 5-parted. Petals fimbriate-crested. Ovary stipitate : both ovules ascending. — Leaves alternate, pinnate. Tribe II. SAPINDE^. — Ovules usually solitary. Embryo curved or biplicate, rarely straight. — Leaves (with one exception) alternate. Sapindus. (Plate 180.) Calyx 5-parted. Petals 5, regular. Pistil central. Fruit baccate. Seed not arillate. — Leaves abruptly pinnate. Cardiospermum. (Plate 181.) Calyx 4-parted. Petals 4, irregular; the appendage of two forms. Pistil eccentric in the flower. Cap- sule vesicular-inflated. Seeds marked with a heart-shaped arillus. — Leaves 1 -3-ternate. Tribe III. DODONE^. — Ovules 2 or 3 in each cell. Embryo spi- rally convolute. — Leaves alternate. DoDON^A. (Plate 182.) Calyx 4 -5-parted. Petals none. Capsule 2-4-winged, septicidal. SAPINDACE^. 205 Plate 176, 177. iESCULUS, L. Calyx 5-lobus, pi. m. ingequalis. Petala 4-5, ina^qiialia, inappendiculata. Stamina 5-8, saspissime 7, disco annulari subunilaterali inserta. Ovarium sessile, 3-loculare ; loculis 2-ovulatis ; ovulis heterotropis. Capsula coriacea, 2 - 3-val- vis, sajpius abortii 1 - 2-locularis, 1 - 2-sperma. Cotyledones crassissimae, conferruminatas. — Arbores, foliis oppositis pal- matim 5-9-foliolatis, floribus monoico-polygamis in thyrsos terminales dispositis. iEscuLus, Linn. Gen. 462. Juss. Gen. p. 251. Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 2.50. Endl. Gen. 5641. HippocASTANUM, Toum. Inst. t. 612. Gfertn. Fr. 2. p. 135. t. 111. Pavia, Boerh. Hort. Lugd.-Bat. t. 260. iEsccLus & Pavia, DC. Prodr. 1. p. 597. Michx. f. Sylv. Amer. iEscuLus, Pavia, Macrothyrscs, «& Calothyrsus, Spacli in Ann. Sci. Nat. (ser. 2.) 2. p. 52. Horseclicstiiiit. Buckeye. Flowers monoecio-polygamous from the abortion of the pistil. Calyx campanulate or tubular, mostly oblique and gib- bous at the base posteriorly, five-lobed, deciduous ; the lobes more or less unequal, quincuncially imbricated in aestivation, the fourth posterior. Petals 5, alternate with the lobes of the calyx, or often only 4 from the abortion of the anterior one, hypogynous, unequal, often dissimilar, declined or erect, inappendiculate, unguiculate, the margins of the claw or base of tiie lamina commonly involute, imbricated in aostivation, deciduous. Disk hypogynous, depressed, annular, usually lobed, more or less gibbous, or produced posteriorly. Stamens from 6 to 8, very rarely 5, commonly 7, inserted on the disk, unequal : filaments subulate or filiform, more or less arcu- ate or declined, usually exserted : anthers cordate-oblong or 206 SAPINDACE^. elliptical, glandular-apiculate, fixed near the base, introrse, two-celled, the cells opening longitudinally. Oyary in the sterile flowers an abortive rudiment ; in the fertile sessile, ovoid, three-celled: style slender, more or less curved: STIGMA terminal, undivided, commonly acute. Ovules two in each cell, borne on the middle of its inner angle, amphit- ropous, superposed ; the upper ascending with the micropyle inferior, the lower pendulous with the micropyle superior. (Their direction is at first vague or various in diff"erent cells, but they assume these positions by the time the flower-bud is full-grown.) Fruit a large leathery capsule, either echinate, or rough- ened, or smooth and unarmed, three-celled, with the cells (by the abortion of one ovule in each) one-seeded, or by suppres- sion oftener one -two-celled and one -two-seeded (the ves- tiges of the abortive seeds and cells usually discernible at maturity), loculicidally two - three-valved. Seeds very large, globular when solitary, or when more than one flat- tened by mutual pressure, with a very smooth and shining coriaceous testa and a broad opaque hilum, not arillate. Al- bumen none. Embryo filling the seed : cotyledons very thick and fleshy, a little corrugate-complicate and more or less coherent by their contiguous faces (conferruminate), unequal, hypogoeous in germination, incumbent on the short conical radicle, which points to the hilum ; plumule conspicuous, two-leaved. Trees, or sometimes shrubs, with large scaly buds, and opposite palmately compound deciduous leaves, destitute of stipules ; the leaflets five to nine, lanceolate or ovate, serrate, pinnately veined, the primary veins straight and simple. Flowers showy, in an ample terminal thyrsus or panicle, appearing rather later than the leaves, racemose and near- ly unilateral on the branches of the panicle, polygamous ; those near the base of the branches of the inflorescence only perfect and fertile ; the others sterile by the abortion of the ovary, but otherwise similar ; the pedicels articulated. Bracts and bractlets minute, caducous. Corolla white, red, or yellow. SAPINDACE^. 207 Etymology. JEsculus is the ancient Latin name of some kind of Oak or other mast-bearing tree. It was transferred to this genns by Linna;ns (to the exclusion of the earlier and more appropriate name Hippocastanum, i. e. Horsechcstnui) , on account of the resemblance of the large seeds to chestnuts. Properties. They are handsome ornamental trees or shrubs, but their timber is of no value. The bark is bitter, astringent, and it is thought feb- rifugal : it has also been used for tanning. The roots contain a mucilagi- nous saponifying matter ; those of JEi. Pavia have been employed in Carolina as a substitute for soap. These, and the bruised branches and the seeds of this and the other Buckeyes exhale an unpleasant odor, and are imbued with a narcotic principle : when thrown into the water they intoxicate fish. The large farinaceous seeds contain a great deal of nourishment, which is ren- dered unavailable by the noxious, intensely bitter principle with which they are charged. Common horsechestnuts, nevertheless, with some precau- tions, are largely and advantageously used for fattening sheep in Switzer- land. The Turks give them to horses affected with cough or asthma. Dr. Griffith {Medical Botany, p. 214) remarks that paste made from these seeds is preferable to any other, not only as possessing great tenacity, but likewise because no moths or vermin will attack any thing cemented with it. It is also stated that the starch, which may be so readily and copi- ously prepared from them, and from those of the Buckeyes, is superior to that of wheat. Geographical Distribution and Division. The genus comprises about a dozen known species, all indigenous to the temperate parts of Asia and North America. It was founded on the common Horsechestnut, a native of the Caucasian region, long cultivated in the East, whence it was intro- duced into Western Europe nearly three centuries ago. The time and manner of its introduction are mentioned under the following genus.* A nearly allied species, with prickly fruit, is found in Northern China. Tlic smooth-fruited species, which have usually been distinguished as a separate genus (Pavia, of Boerhaave, &c.), belong, one to the Himalayan region, one to California, the others to the United States, principally along and near the Alleghany Mountains. JF,. glabra, the Ohio or Fetid Buckeye, here figured, has the ovary and young fruit echinate, like the Horsechestnut; but the ma- ture pods are nearly or quite unarmed, and the fiowers are those of Pavia. PLATE 176. ^.scuLus glabra, Willd. (also ^. pallida, Willd.); — B. small panicle, &c., of the natural size ; from the Cambridge Bo- tanic Garden. 1 . Diagram of a perfect flower. 2. Vertical section of a sterile flower, enlarged, showing the abortive pistil. « FitZe page 211. 208 SAPINDACE^. PLATE 177. ^scuLus glabra ; — details of the flower and fruit. 1. One of the upper petals, enlarged. 2. One of the lower petals, enlarged, seen from the inside. 3. Outside view of the upper part of a stamen, magnified. 4. A magnified stamen, seen from the inner side. 5. Pistil and receptacle (showing the unilateral disk), magnified. 6. Transverse section of the ovary, more magnified. 7. Vertical section of the same, displaying the position of the ovules. 8. An ovule (one of the upper), magnified. 9. Transverse section of a fertilized ovary, less magnified than fig. 6 ; the single fertilized ovule filling its cell and pressing upon the others, which remain sterile. 10. The pod of the natural size, dehiscent. 11. Seed of the natural size, showing the large hilum. 12. Section of the same in the same position, dividing the radicle as well as the large cotyledons. 13. The embryo detached entire. SAPINDACEiE. 209 Plate 178, 179. UNGNADIA, Endl. Calyx 5-partitns. Petala 4-5, subaequalia, unguibus apice comato-cristatis. Stamina 8 - 10, declinata, disco obliquo unilaterali cum stipite ovarii connato inserta. Ovula in lo- culis gemina, homotropa. Capsula 3-loba, 3-locularis ; locu- lis monospermis. Cotyledones crassissimse, conferruminatee. — Arbuscula ^sculoidea, foliis alternis imparipinnaiis, flo- ribus Eixillaribus polygamo-dioicis. Ungnadia, Endl. Atakt. t. 36, Nov. Stirp. Decad. 86, & Gen. 5640 (ex pi. ster.). Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 1. p. 253, & p. 684. Scheele in Linnsea, 21. p. 589. Flowers dioBcio-polygamous. Calyx of five nearly equal and herbaceous oblong-lanceolate sepals, somewhat irregu- larly united at the base only, quincuncially imbricated in a3stivation (rarely of only four sepals?), deciduous. Petals 4, the anterior one absent, or often 5, alternate with the se- pals and quincuncially imbricated in aestivation (rarely six), hypogynous on the edge of a thickened and truncate torus, or obscurely perigynous from its union with the very base of the calyx, deciduous, unequal when there are five, when four nearly equal, unguiculate ; the claws at length as long as the sepals, nearly erect, thickened, woolly, especially on the inner side, conspicuously appendaged at the summit with a fimbriate crest composed of short and fleshy tufted threads ; the lamina obovale, spreading, often irregularly erose-crenu- late. Disk an oblique fleshy lamina projecting on the poste- rior side of the flower and connate with the base of the stipe of the ovary, which it embraces. Stamens 7 to 10, usually 8 or 9, inserted on the oblique edge of the disk, more or less declined ; in the sterile flowers much exserted and unequal, the anterior shorter ; in the fertile flowers all usually shorter 210 SAPINDACE^. than the petals and nearly equal : filaments filiform : an- thers oblong, fixed near the base, introrse, two-celled, the cells openmg longitudinally. Ovary raised on a slender stipe longer than itself, ovoid, three-celled ; in the sterile flowers abortive and destitute of a style ; in the fertile with the STYLE subulate-filiform, elongated, a little curved : stig- ma minute, terminal. Ovules two in each cell, borne on its inner angle near the middle, at first apparently collateral, soon superposed, between amphitropous and anatropous, both ascending and with the micropyle inferior. Fruit a large coriaceous capsule, conspicuously stipitate, strongly three-lobed, smooth and unarmed, three-celled, lo- culicidally three-valved, the somewhat obcordate valves bear- ing the dissepiment on the middle. Seeds, by the abortion of one (commonly the upper) ovule, solitary in each cell, large, nearly spherical, inserted by a broad and somewhat carunculate hilum, with a dark chestnut-brown very smooth and shining crustaceous testa, and a thin tegmen, peritro- pous, destitute of albumen. Embryo filling the seed : coty- ledons very thick and fleshy, almost hemispherical, slightly complicate and their contiguous faces more or less coherent with each other (conferruminate). hypogsous in germina- tion, incumbent upon the very short and conical descending RADICLE, which points to the hilum. A shrub or small tree, with brittle wood, alternate impari- pinnate leaves, destitute of stipules, deciduous, or sometimes persistent ; the leaflets five or seven, or on the earlier leaves sometimes only three, ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, pinnately veined, reticulated, serrate, the terminal one conspicuously petiolulate. Flowers lateral, in small fascicles or simple corymbs, appearing with the leaves in early spring from the axils of the leaves of the preceding season, chiefly from sepa- rate buds, sometimes from the base of a leafy branch, rather large and showy. Corolla rose -colored. Pedicels articulated in the middle. Etymology. This remarkably interesting genus, which, with foliage not SAPINDACEiE. 211 unlike that of a Hickory, is in its flowers and fruit plainly allied to the Horscchestnut (from which it strikingly differs in its inflorescence, and its alternate, pinnate leaves), commemorates the Baron Ungnad, ambassador of the Emperor Rudolph II. to the Ottoman Porte, who, in the year 1576, sent the seeds of the common Horscchestnut to Clusius at Vienna, and thus first introduced that showy and now familiar tree into the West of Europe. Geographical Distribution. The single known species belongs to Texas, where it is common, and where specimens of the staminate plant only were first gathered by the late Mr. Drummond. The fertile flowers and fruit have only recently been made known by Messrs. Lindheimer, Wright, &c. ; from whose seeds I have raised young plants in the Cambridge Botanic Garden. Note. The lamented Endlicher (intelligence of whose untimely decease has reached me while writing this article) characterized this genus from a staminate specimen alone (from Drummond's collection), which is figured in a work that few botanists have ever seen, on account of the purposely small number of copies that were printed. The fertile flowers and the fruit, although for several years known to us, have not until now been illus- trated or described, except by Adolf Scheele, who has published a descrip- tion, from Lindheimer's specimens, in the Linnaa during the past year. The flowers which Endlicher happened to examine were pentapetalous, which is not the more usual case, and he erroneously states the plant to form a large tree, whereas it is commonly a slender shrub, of five or ten feet in height, or at most a small tree. Misled by these discrepancies and by the difl^erences of the two kinds of flowers, and, it would seem from his description, hap- pening to possess tetrasepalous as well as tetrapetalous flowers (although there are five sepals in all my Lindheimerian and other specimens), Mr. Scheele has wrongly introduced a second species, under the name of U. heterophylla. The leaflets vary from five, or even three on the earlier leaves, to seven. Properties. The seeds are sweet-tasted, not unlike those of Walnuts, but have emetic properties, according to Mr. Lindheimer. PLATE 178. Ungnadia speciosa, Endl. ; — the staminate plant ; a branch in flower, of the natural size, from Texas, Lindhciinrr. 1. Diagram of the flower. (The fourth sepal next the axis, the anterior petal wanting.) 2. An enlarged petal, inside view, to show the conspicuous fimbriate crest. 3. A magnified flower, with part of the calyx and petals cut away ; show- ing the unilateral disk, ' N 0 IJ A ABU TIL ON 126 ABUTIL ON (GAYOILES) SPH/t.KALCEA 128 Ml Die LA. 129 MA LA CHE, A. i'rw'>T'^f>'T\ ;»" V ' 'Sir*'? 130 PAVONIA 131. MALVAVISCUS. m \mMt ?i; 132 KOSTELETZ KYA Vi., '"^^a4 133 HIBISCUS t'"':;;..;i :-34 M E L 0 C H I A , HERMANNIA 13 6 T I L lA ■ik^A '■ -.'All 137. G 0 R C H (J R U S t«8«i 'n^^ji? T \1 A R T I A . S T UAR T I A (M A L AC H G D E NDK OIT.) :t i: l^ CtORDONIA. 141 GORDONIA &OKDONIA (FRANKLINIA.) B"M1^' 143 L I NUM. ..,. u-T^..^ ^^^A^'v 144 OXALI 8 tmv 14' T R I B T J L II S . rot? 1 ■.■,,t ■ ^*^y- ■•'■>* 1 r"""- K ALL STROMTA. 147 L ARREA. 148 GUAIACUK 14Q G U A I A C U M ( G U A I A C I D I U M,' •■»t» CIS GERANIUM 151 ER ODIUM "; ( r- : t 153. // / \\ IM PAT JENS 154 FLOEKEA. f ■ R U T 0 S M A. 15 6 Z ANTHuXYLLlM P TELE A V CAS TEL A. RHUS (SUMAC.') bhusclobadium: tHt ' 1 ;< -..■Ji . la V I TIS A M P E L 0 P S I 3 m ^^^:^^^^ 163, ZIZTPHUS IC- CO¥DALIA. "^^- *^r^u BEHCKEMIA. A J E r- E T I A 167 FRANGUL A RHAMNU::. ' I c '■ ih- :;E AN'" T HIJ :', : E L A ^. T F. U .^ 17] E IT C N Y U U , • ^TAPHYLE A. Li A LI' HI MI A :i li..,""'7 ACE H :nfe w^^'M Sl^ ^ii j,y.,-.--=.^V"« N E G IJ W D ^SCULIJS ;0? he . ^ S C U L U ^^ rjN GI-JAI'IA U N 1} N A L' I A S APIIU^U;^ CAKDJ^'.Ji F^ M'-'' 0? ^«" DODON.-EA L *'.L r C L. V i; A L A ■ F 'jL Y>-.- L a ■M n-^^;;.:i^ KRAMERIA w "^ c^ KRAMERIA. <