CMKXOPODIACKAK 



Vol. II. 



embryo nearly annular in tlu' mealy endosperm, its radicle pointing downward. [From llie 

 Greek for hoariness or mould.] 



Two known species, the following of western North America ; the other, of western Asia and 

 eastern Europe is^the generic type. 



I. Eurotia lanata (Pursh) ]\Ioq. American 

 Eurotia. White Sage. Fig. 1703. 



Diolis lanata Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept. 602. 1814. 

 Eurotia lanata Moq. Enum. Chenop. 8i. 1840. 



A stellate-pubescent erect rnuch-branched shrub 

 l-3 higb, tbe hairs long, white when young, becom- 

 ing reddish brown, the branches ascending, very leafy. 

 Leaves linear or linear-lanceolate, short-petioled or 

 the upper sessile, obtuse at the apex, narrowed at the 

 base, -2' long, 2"-4i" wide, their margins revolute, 

 the midvein prominent, the lateral veins few; flowers 

 monoecious, densely capitate in the upper axils, form- 

 ing terminal leafy spikes; bracts lancolate, 2"-4" 

 long in fruit, appendaged by 4 tufts of spreading hairs; 

 calyx-lobes acute, pubescent; utricle loose, the pericarp 

 readily separating from the large seed. 



In dry soil, Saskatchewan to western Nebraska, Texas, 

 California and Washington. \\'inter-fat. Romeria. June- 

 Sept. 



9. AXYRIS L. Sp. PI. 979. 1753. 



Annual herbs with alternate entire petioled leaves and small monoecious flowers, the 

 pistillate ones pilose or villous, the staminate ones uppermost, very small. Staminate calyx 

 3-S-parted ; stamens 2-5. Pistillate calyx 3-4-parted ; ovary snborbicular, somewhat flattened ; 

 stigmas 2, filiform, connate at the base. Utricle obovate to cuneate, winged or crested at 

 the apex, enclosed in the perianth. Seed erect; embryo horseshoe-shaped; endosperm 

 copious. [Greek, mild to the taste.] 



Five or six species, natives of northern Asia, 

 the following typical. 



I. Axyris amarantoides L. Upright 

 Axyris. F"ig. 1704. 



A.vyris atnaranloides L. Sp. PI. 979. 1753. 



Erect, often much branched, i-2 high, pubes- 

 cent, the slender branches ascending. Leaves 

 ovate, elliptic or lanceolate, entire, acute or 

 obtusish, narrowed at the base, thin, li'-3' long, 

 the slender petioles i"-?" long; staminate flow- 

 ers minute, glomerate-spicate; fruit oval or obo- 

 vate, more or less winged at the top, flattened. 



Waste and cultivated grounds, Manitoba and North 

 Dakota. Naturalized from Russia or Siberia, 



10. 



CORISPERMUM [A. Juss.] L. Sp. 



PI- 4- 1753- 



Annual herbs, with alternate narrow entire i-nerved leaves, and perfect bractless small 

 green flowers, solitary in the upper axils, forming terminal narrow leafy spikes, the upper 

 leaves shorter and broader than the lower. Calyx of a solitary thin broad sepal, or rarely 2. 

 Stamens 1-3, rarely more, and one of them longer. Ovary ovoid, styles 2. LUricle ellipsoid, 

 mostly plano-convex, the pericarp firmly adherent to the vertical seed, its margins acute or 

 winged. Embryo annular in the somewhat fleshy endosperm, its radicle pointing' downward. 

 [Greek, bug-seed.] 



About 10 species, natives of the north temperate and subarctic zones the following typical. 



