S8 



RANUNCULACEAE. 



Vol. II. 



I. Eranthis hyemalis (L.) Sali.sb. Winter 

 Aconite or Ilellcbore. Fig. 1858. 



Hcllcborus hyemalis L. Sp. PI. 557. 175.3. 



EraiilJiis hyemalis Salisb. Trans. Linn. Soc. 8 : 304. 1803. 



Cammarum hyemale Greene, Pittonia 3: 152. 1897. 



Erect, simple, 5'-8' high from a tuberous-thick- 

 ened rootstock; roots fibrous. Basal leaves long- 

 pctioled, iV broad, divided and cleft into numerous 

 linear or oblong lobes ; cauline leaf similar, mvo- 

 hicrate, sessile, clasping; flower solitary, iV wide, 

 sessile; sepals 5-9, membranous, obovate, obtuse, 

 occasionally lobed ; petals several, clawed, 2-lipped ; 

 stamens numerous; filaments filiform; anthers ob- 

 long, obtuse ; carpels several, stipitate ; follicles com- 

 pressed, 5" long, tipped with a sharp beak. 



Naturalized from Europe at Bartram's Garden. Phila- 

 delphia, and at Media, Pa. Wolf's-bane. Christmas- 

 flower, February. 



6. COPTIS Salisb. Trans. Linn. Soc. 8; 305. 1803. 



Low herbs, with slender perennial rootstocks, basal compound or divided leaves, and 

 scapose white flowers. Sepals 5-7, petaloid, deciduous; petals 5-7, small, linear, cucullate. 

 Stamens numerous. Carpels stipitate, few, in fruit forming an umbel of follicles. [Naitie 

 from the Greek, referring to the cut or divided leaves.] 



A genus of about 9 species, inhabiting the cooler portions of the north temperate zone. In 

 addition to the following, three others are found on the Pacific Coast of North America. Type 

 species: Coptis trifolia (L.) SaHsb. 



I. Coptis trifolia (L.) Salisb. Gold-thread. Fig. 1859. 



Hcllebonis Irif alius L. Sp. PI. Ed. 2. 784. 1762. 

 Coptis trifolia Salisb. Trans. Linn. Soc. 8 ; 305. 



1803. 

 Isopyrum trifolium Britton, Bull. Torr. Club 18: 265. 



1891. 



Tufted, glabrous, 3'-6' high from a slender 

 or filiform yellow bitter rootstock. Leaves all 

 basal, evergreen, long-petioled, the blade reni- 

 form. 1-2' broad, 3-divided; petioles very slen- 

 der ; segments broadly obovate, cuneate, obtuse, 

 prominently veined, crenate or slightly lobed, 

 dark green and shining above, paler beneath, the 

 teeth mucronate; scape i-flowered, occasionally 

 2-flowered, slender; sepals oblong, obtuse; petals 

 small, club-shaped ; follicles 3-7, about 3" long, 

 borne on stipes of about their own length, spread- 

 ing, tipped with a beak i"-ii" long. 



In damp mossy woods, and bogs, Newfoundland to 

 Maryland and eastern Tennessee, Iowa. Minnesota. 

 British Columbia and Alaska. Ascends to 3500 ft. 

 in the Adirondacks. Called also canker-root, mouth- 

 root, yellow-root. May-.Aug. 



7. ISOPYRUM L. Sp. PL 557. 1753. 



Slender glabrous herbs, with ternately decompound leaves, and solitary or panicled 

 white flowers. Sepals 5 or 6, petaloid, deciduous. Petals 5. nectariform or none. Stamens 

 numerous. Carpels 2-20, sessile (stalked in a western species), several-ovuled, forming a 

 head of follicles in fruit. [Old Greek name for some Fumaria.] 



A genus of about 15 species, natives of the north temperate zone. Besides the following, there 

 Are 3 other North American species, natives of the Pacific Coast. Type species : Isopyrum 

 thalictroides L. 



