Genus 5. 



CARROT FAMILY, 



I. Scandix Pecten-Veneris L. \enus'- or 



Lady's-comb. Shepherd's-needle. 



Fig. 3107. 



Scandix Pecten-l'cneris L. Sp. PI. 256. 1753. 



Pubescent, stem 6'-i8' high, branched, the 

 branches ascending. Leaves 2-3-pinnately dis- 

 sected, the lobes acute, less than ' wide; lower 

 leaves long-petioled; involucre none; involucels 

 of several lanceolate bracts sometimes 2-3-lobed 

 at the apex; flowers very nearly sessile; fruiting 

 carpels 4"-6" long, strongly ribbed, terminated by 

 a straight flat beak i4'-2i' long, about l" wide, 

 its edges with stiff ascending hairs. 



In waste places, northern New Jersey to the Dis- 

 trict of Columbia and in ballast about the sea-ports. 

 Fugitive from Europe or Asia. May-July. Uld 

 English names, pink or Adam's-needle. beggar's-, 

 crake- or crow-needles, devil's-darning-needles, 

 hedge-hog, needle-chervil, poukenel. 



6. WASHINGTONIA Raf. Am. IMonth. :\Iag. 2 : 176. 1818. 



[OsMORRHizA Raf. loc. cit. 1818.] 



Perennial herbs with fleshy clustered thickish aromatic roots, decompound leaves, and 

 loose few-rayed umbels of white flowers. Involucre and involucels of few narrow bracts, 

 or none. Calyx-teeth obsolete. Petals incurved at the apex. Stylopodium small, conic. 

 Fruit narrow, linear or oblong-linear, short-beaked, compressed, more or less bristly along 

 the ribs, attenuated at the base. Carpels S-angular, slightly flattened dorsally, the ribs acute 

 and nearly equal; oil-tubes obsolete or none. [In honor of George Washington.] 



About 15 species, natives of North America, eastern Asia and western South America. Besides 

 the following about 8 others occur on the west coast and in the Rocky Mountains. Type species : 

 Myrrhis Claytoni Michx. 



Involucels of several persistent bracts. 



Style and stylopodium Jj" long or less. i. W. Claytoni. 



Style and stylopodium i"-2" long. 2. IV. loitgistylis. 

 Involucels none. 



Fruit beaked : stylopodium conic. 3. W/ divaricata. 



Fruit blunt ; stylopodium depressed. 4' ^V.obtusa. 



Washingtonia Claytoni (Michx.) Britten. Woolly or Hairy Sweet-Cicely. 



Sweet Javril. Fig. 3108. 



Myrrhis Claytoni Michx. Fl. Eor. Am. I ; 170. 1803. 

 Osmorrhiaa brevislylis DC. Prodr. 4: 232. 1830. 

 0. Claytoni Clarke in Hook. f. Fl, Brit. Ind. 2 : 690. ] 

 W. Claytoni Britton in Britt. & Brown, 111. Fl. 2 ; 530. 



879. 

 1897. 



high. 



Erect, at length widely branched above, il's" 

 villous-pubescent throughout, especially when young. 

 Lower leaves long-petioled, large, soiuetimes 1 wide, 

 ternately decompound, the segments ovate or oval, 

 incised-dentate; upper leaves nearly sessile, less com- 

 pound ; umbels long-peduncled, 2-6-rayed ; rays divari- 

 cate, i'-2' long in fruit; involucels of several subulate 

 bracts; pedicels 3"-8" long: fruit about 6" long, about 

 i" wide; style and stylopodium i" long, the stylopodium 

 slender-conic. 



In woods, Nova Scotia to South Dakota, North Carolina, 

 Alabama, Illinois, Nebraska and Kansas. Ascends to 4000 

 ft. in Virginia. May-June. 



