APPENDIX 1525 
shallowly erenate: flowers fragrant, short-pedicelled : calyx 2-2.5 mm. high, the lobes 
acute : petals linear or oblong-linear, 9-12 mm. long, white: berries oblong or globular- 
oblong, about 15 mm. long. 
In fields and thickets, Florida to Texas. Introduced from the tropics. 
Page 759, for the second **a"' in the fourth from the last line of the description of 
TILIACEAE, read ''or."' 
m ak 760, in fourth line of the description of Triumfetta semitriloba, for ‘“‘leaves’’ read 
ades." 
Page 766, in first line under Callirrhoe after ** Perennial " insert ‘or annual.” 
Page 772, before Malachra, insert : 
8a. ANODA Cav. 
Annual or perhaps rarely perennial herbs, similar to Sida in habit. Leaves alter- 
nate: blades commonly deltoid or hastate, toothed or rarely cleft. Flowers perfect, 
solitary at the ends of relatively long pedicels. Calyx persistent, enlarged and spreading 
under the fruit. Corolla showy. Carpels 5-20, radiately spreading and forming a capsule- 
like fruit whose partitions and sides break down, the firmer top and back bearing a spread- 
ing cusp. Ovule and seed mostly resupinate-horizontal, the latter partially exposed at 
maturity. 
1. Anoda pentachísta A. Gray. Stem 3-7 dm. tall, slender, paniculately branched, 
puberulent-pubescent, when copiously so usually cinereous : leaf-blades thickish, those on 
the lower part of the stem ovate, angulate at the base or somewhat hastate, 1-4 cm. long, 
subcordate or truncate at the base, those of the upper cauline leaves narrower, hastate-lan- 
ceolate or hastate-linear, or sometimes without basal lobes, short-petioled, more pubescent 
than the stem : calyx stellate-pubescent, 4—5 mm. high during anthesis and with lanceolate 
lobes, 8-9 mm. wide at maturity, with the lobes very broad and partially involute : petals 
bright yellow, cuneate, about 5 mm. long: carpels 5, or rarely 6-9, the top of each one 3- 
3.5 mm. long, finely stellate-pubescent : seed 3 mm. high. 
On plains and prairies, Texas to Arizona and northern Mexico. Spring to fall. 
Page 818, in the description of THYMELEALES, instead of ‘‘Ovary inferior," read 
‘‘ Ovary superior." 
Page 836 extend range of Ludwigia simulata to Florida. 
Page 857, in twelfth line from bottom of page add or “ rarely purple.’ 
Page 957, in the ordinal key, for character of VERBENACEAE instead of ‘‘ Ovary 2- 
celled’’ read, ‘‘ Ovary 2--several-celled.”’ 
Page 980, after Gilia rubra add : 
4. Gilia longifldra (Torr.) G. Don. Annual, glabrous. Stem 2-7 dm. tall, panicu- 
lately branched, firm : leaves alternate ; blades pinnately parted into slenderly linear seg- 
ments 1-4 cm. long: flowers in corymbs: calyx about 6 mm. long; lobes lanceolate-subu- 
late, shorter than the tube: corolla white ; tube slender, 3-3.5 cm. long; lobes oval to 
orbicular-oval, fully 1 cm. long: capsule oblong, 11-13 mm. long. 
On plains and prairies, often in pine woods, Nebraska and Colorado to Texas and Arizona. 
Spring and summer. 
Page 1034, after ‘‘ Perennial ” in first line under Salvia lanceolata, add “‘ or annual,” 
Page 1108, after Houstonia purpurea, insert : 
10a. Houstonia montana (Chickering) Small. Similar to Houstonia purpurea in 
habit, typically smaller: leaf-blades ovate, 0.5-1.5 cm. long, acute, sessile: hypanthium 
becoming larger than that of H. purpurea: sepals lanceolate or oblong-lanceolate : corolla 
purple, sometimes deeply so, 9-11 mm. long: capsules fully 2 mm. thick. [H. purpurea 
var. montana Chickering. ] 
On and about cliffs, summit of Roan Mountain and adjacent peaks, North Carolina and Tennessee. 
Summer. 
