1342 APPENDIX 



Page 620, after Xylophacos Missouriensis, insert: 



26a. OXYTROPIS DC. 



Herbs or shrubby plants, similar to species of Astragalus in habit; but keel 

 petals acuminate, abruptly pointed or appendaged at the apex. 



1. Oxytropis Lamb6rtil Pursh. Stems very short, usually several from a 



branched caudex, (Jothed with the persistent leaf -bases: leaves erect or ascending, 



0.5-1.5 dm. tall; leaflets several, the blades linear or nearly so, 1.5-2.5 cm. long, acute 



or slightly acuminate, silky on both sides: scapes 1.5-3 dm. tall, silky strigose: bracts 



narrowly linear-lanceolate: calyx densely pubescent, 10-11 mm. long; lobes nearly 



subulate, the lower one markedly longer than the others: corolla violet, purple or 



white, 16-19 mm. long; standard rounded at the ajaex, cuneately narrowed at the base; 



blades of the keel and wing-petals longer than the claws, about thrice as long as 



broad: pods narrowly conic, 18-20 mni. long, subulate-tipped. 



On plains, the Northwest Territories to Minnesota, British Columbia, Texas and New 

 Mexico. Spring and summer. 



26b. GLYCYRRHIZA L. 



Perennial herbs with stout sweet roots. Leaves alternate, the stipules free : 

 leaflets several to many, the blades entire. Flowers in spike-like panicles. Calyx 

 campanulate: lobes narrow, about as long as the tube. Corolla white, yellowish or 

 bluish: standard narrow, acute or acutish: wings and keel-petals nearly equal, much 

 smaller than the standard. Stamens 10, mainly diadelphous. Anthers alternately 

 larger and smaller. Ovary sessile. Pods stout, gland- or prickle-armed. — Differs from 

 Astragalus and related genera in the prickly or glandular pod. Liquorice. 



1. Glycyrrhiza lepidota Pursh. Plants 1 m. tall or less, the young foliage 

 scaly or dotted: leaflets 13-19; blades oblong to lanceolate, 1.5-3.5 cm. long: 

 panicles exceeded by the leaves, dense: calyx 7-8 mm. long; lobes slender: standard 

 elliptic, 13-15 mm. long: wings and keel-petals 9-11 mm. long: pods oblong, bur- 

 like, 12-15 mm. long. 



In dry soil, Ontario to Manitoba, Washington and Mexico. Spring and summer. Wild 



LiQUOEICE. 



Page 620, after Dalbergia Brownei, insert: 



2. Dalbergia Ain6rimnuin Benth. A shrub with reclining or trailing branches. 

 Leaves 1-foliolate; leaflets thickish, the blades 6-12 em. long, ovate to oblong-ovate, 

 obtuse or acutish, glabrous in age : racemes short : calyx 4-5 mm. long ; upper lip with 

 2 broad lobes ; lateral lobes of the lower lip ovate, the middle lobe lanceolate : 

 corolla white or pink; standard 8-10 mm. long, the blade obovate or cuneate: pods 

 oval, oblong or linear-oblong, 1-3.5 cm. long. — Differs from Z>. Brownei in the 

 prominently 2-lipped calyx and the pubescent short-stalked ovary. 



In hammocks, Florida Keys. Also in tropical America. 

 Page 626, after Amorpha glaira, add: 



13. Amorpha densiilora F. E. Boynton. A much-branched shrub with densely 

 fine-pubescent branches. Leaves mostly about 1 dm. long or less; leaflets 11-23, the 

 blades oblong to ovate-oblong, 8-30 mm. long, rounded or notched at both ends, 

 copiously soft-pubescent beneath: racemes solitary or two together, 4-6 cm. long, 

 copiously pubescent: calyx 4.5-5.5 mm. long; lobes pubescent, subulate, longer than 

 the tube: standard obovate, 4 mm. long: pods 5-5.5 mm. long, the dorsal edge 

 straight. — Differs from A. glabra in the densely pubescent foliage, the short racemes 

 and the longer calyx with subulate lobes. 



In rocky soil, Crowder's Mountain, North Carolina. Spring. 



Page 632, in third line of description of Kuhnistera pinnata, transpose "cm." 

 and "mm." 



Page 632, in key to Aeschynomene, transpose the two lines, except the last three 

 words of each line. 



Page 633, after Aeschynomene Virginica, insert: 



3. Aeschynomene prat^nsis Small. Annual, or perhaps perennial, woody 

 below: stems 1-2 m. tall, widely and irregularly branched: leaves few and scattered, 



