534 MAGNOLIACEAE 
as oe sepals, — iis about 2 cm. wide. 
oods and swamps, 
Cosstal Pain m a a 
num Ellis. Shrub 2-3 m. 
lcs blades “elliptic, 6-15 em. long, i 
scen pals over 10 m |] g: petal 
linear or nearly so, 15-20 mm. long, dark 
d mm. wide — (PURPLE- 
ANISE. STINK-BUSH. ram 
hammocks, Coastal Plain, N Fla. to La. and 
N Ala.—The flowers have the odor of de- 
eaying fish. 
2. SCHIZANDRA Michx. Vines. Leaves - 
deciduous: blades sometimes toothed. Flo 
ers monoecious, i ng. Sepals 5 or 6. Des 5 or 6, each thickened at the 
base. Stamen : filaments dilated, united into a disk: anther-sacs separated. 
2.—Six 
Carpels l ee 
species, iis fallosi ing M 5 others Asiatic. 
ea Michx. Woody vine: leaf- 
in “thiekish, oval, elliptic or ovate, 5-15 
em. long, slender -petioled: sepals oval to 
ovate, 3-6 mm. long: petals obovate-cuneate, 
mostly pret Lee of ae 4—7 em. long, 
ee b cu E —(W 
PAY E) — — Rich 
woods, Coastal Plain, Fla. ue Da. and S. C.— 
Spr.- 
3. TULIPASTRUM Spach. Tree 
Leaves deciduo blades entire. Flow l 
perfect, Ta pro or yellow, me "Proit a torulose cone.—The follow- 
ing are the only known species.—Spr.—CUCUMBER-TREES. 
Leaf-blades more or less acuminate: corolla greenish. 1. T. acuminatum. 
Leaf-blades obtuse or abruptly po vind corolla canary-yellow. 9. T. cordatum. 
- 
1. T. acuminatum (L.) Small Tree becoming EA m. tall: leaf-blades elliptie 
to bee or rarely obovate, 1.5—3 ng, m or pem acuminate, usually 
membranous: sepals mostly lanceolate or 
elliptic: y^ 7 o to oblanceolate, 5-7 
em. long, greenish yellowi sh-green, (or 
vum): it- 
LINN. YELLOW-LINN. )—Rieh i various 
provinees, S Ga. to Ark. and Ont 
T. cordatum (Miehx.) Small. Shrub or 
small tree: leaf-blades oval or orbicular-oval, 
to broadly pies a d te, 1-1.5 dm. long, 
ons sepals ovate: petals obovate, 4—5 
m. long, light- a : fruit. -cone 2-5 em. si 
W with d | [Magnolia Cia Mic x.] 
oods, Piedmont and Blue Ridge, "Ga. 
0 N. M la. 
