GEMJS 39. 



PEA FAMILY. 



407 



Hairy Bush-clover. Fig. 2608. 



12. Lespedeza hirta (L.) Hornem. 



Hedysarum hirtum L. Sp. PI. 748. 1753. 

 Lespedeza hirta Hornem. Hort. Havn. 699. 1807. 



Erect or ascending, rather stout, generally branch- 

 ing above, villous or silky-pubescent, 2-4 high. 

 Stipules subulate, i"-2i" long; petioles shorter 

 than the leaves; leaflets oval, or suborbicular, ob- 

 tuse at each end, sometimes emarginate at the 

 apex, 6"-2 long ; peduncles mostly elongated, often 

 much exceeding the leaves ; heads oblong-cylin- 

 dric, rather dense, i'-ii' long; flowers all com- 

 plete ; corolla yellowish-white or the standard 

 purple spotted, about 3" long; pod oval, acute, 

 very pubescent, about equalling the calyx-lobes. 



Dry soil, Maine and Ontario to Florida, Minnesota, 

 Arkansas. Louisiana and Texas. Aug.-Oct. 



A plant known as Lespedeza hirta oblongifdlia 

 Britton, with leaves oblong, obtuse, g"-i 5" long, 

 2"-4" wide, glabrate above, appressed-pubescent 

 below; peduncles slender; spikes looser, i'-ij' long; 

 calyx very pubescent ; in pine-barrens, Egg Harbor, 

 N. J., and in the Southern States, may be a hybrid 

 with L. angustifolia (Pursh) Ell. We do not know 

 its fruit. 



13. Lespedeza capitata Michx. Round- 

 headed Bush-clover. Fig. 2609. 



L. capitata Michx. Fl. Bor. Am. 2: 71. 1803. 

 Lespedeza capitata var sericea H. & A. Comp. Bot. 



Mag. i : 23. 1835. 



Lespedeza frutescens Ell. Bot S. C. 2 : 206. 1824. 

 L. Bicknellii House, Torreya 5 : 167. 1905. 

 L. velutlna Bicknell, Torreya i : 102. 1901. 



Stiff, erect or ascending, mainly simple and 

 wand-like, silky, silvery pubescent, or some- 

 what villous, 2-5i high. Stipules subulate; 

 leaves nearly sessile ; leaflets oblong, linear- 

 oblong or narrowly elliptic, obtuse or acute at 

 each end, i'-ii' long, 3"-s" wide; peduncles 

 much shorter than the leaves, or the dense 

 globose-oblong heads sessile in the upper axils ; 

 flowers all complete ; corolla yellowish-white, 

 with a purple spot on the standard, 3',' long; 

 pod ovate-oblong, pubescent, about half as 

 long as the calyx-lobes. 



Dry fields, Ontario and Maine to Florida, Min- 

 nesota, Nebraska, Arkansas and Louisiana. Races 

 differ in pubescence and in -width of leaflets. 

 Aug.-Sept. Dusty-clover. 



Lespedeza longifolia DC. (L. capitata longifolia T. & G.) of prairies, from Iowa to Missouri, 

 Illinois and Kentucky, has linear to linear-lanceolate acute leaflets, and is a well marked race of 

 L. capitata or a distinct species. 



14. Lespedeza angustifolia (Pursh) 



Ell. Narrow-leaved Bush-clover. 



Fig. 2610. 



Lespedeza capitata var. angustifolia Pursh, Fl. 



Am. Sept. 480. 1814. 

 L. angustifolia Ell. Bot. S. C. & Ga. 2 : 206. 



1824. 



Erect, simple, or branched above, slender, 

 appressed-pubescent, or nearly glabrous, 

 2-3 high. Stipules subulate ; leaves nearly 

 sessile ; leaflets linear or oblong-linear, 

 rarely some of the lower ones lance-linear, 

 i'-ii' long, i"-2" wide, obtuse, truncate or 

 acutish at the apex ; peduncles mostly elon- 

 gated, usually exceeding the leaves ; flow- 

 ers nearly as in the preceding; pod ovate- 

 orbicular, shorter than the calyx-lobes. 



Dry sandy soil, eastern Massachusetts, Long 

 Island, south to Florida, west to Louisiana. 

 Records of this species in Iowa and Michigan 

 appear to be erroneous. Aug.-Sept. 



