2^S 



VALERIANACEAJE. 



III. 



5. Valerianella Woodsiana ( T. & G.) Walp. 

 Woods' Corn Salad. Fig. 4004. 



I 8 G II. \. A. 2 : 52. 1841. 

 I 1 eriqnella Woodsiana Walp. Rep. 2: 527. 1843. 

 F. umbilicata Sulliv. Am. Journ Sci. 42: 50. 1842. 

 Fedia patallaria Sulliv.; A. Gray, Mm. 183. 184s. 



Usually larger than any of the preceding spe- 

 cie*, sometimes 3 high, glabrous or very nearly 

 so throughout. Basal and lower leaves spatulate, 

 obtuse, entire; upper leaves lanceolate or linear- 

 oblong, usually dentate ; cymes 3" -6" broad, few- 

 flowered; bracts comparatively large, lanceolate; 

 corolla white, about i" long; fruit glabrous, 

 nearly globular to saucer-shaped, about 1" in 

 diameter, the empty cavities inflated, introrse with 

 a depression or concavity between them, as broad 

 as the fertile one. 



In moist soil. New York. Pennsylvania and Ohio 

 to Tennessee and Texas. May-July. 



6. Valerianella longiflora ( T. & G.) 



Walp. Long-flowered Corn Salad. 



Fig. 4005. 



Fedia longiflora T. & G. Fl. N. A. 2: 51. 1841. 

 Valerianella longiflora Walp. Rep. 2: 527. 1843. 



Glabrous ; stem usually several times forked. 

 6'-l2' high. Leaves very obtuse, the basal ones 

 spatulate, i'-2i' long, 4"-8" wide, those of the 

 stem oblong or spatulate-oblong, smaller, some- 

 what clasping ; cymes dense, corymbed, com- 

 monly numerous, several-many-flowered ; co- 

 rolla salverform, pink or purplish, about 6" 

 long, the almost filiform tube 3-4 times as long 

 as the somewhat irregular 5-parted limb, the 

 lobes linear-oblong; bracts with small gland- 

 tipped teeth ; fruit broadly ovate or nearly 

 orbicular in outline, the empty cavities diver- 

 gent, larger than the oblong seed-bearing one. 



In moist rocky situations, Missouri and Arkan- 

 sas. April-May. 



Family 40. DIPSACACEAE Lindl. Veg. Kingd. 699. 1847. 



Teasel Family. 

 Perennial biennial or annual herbs, with opposite or rarely verticillate leaves, 

 and perfect gamopetalous flowers in dense involucrate heads. Stipules none. 

 Flowers borne on an elongated or globose receptacle, bracted and involucellate. 

 Calyx-tube adnate to the ovary, its limb cup-shaped, disk-shaped, or divided into 

 spreading bristles. Corolla epigynous, the tube usually enlarged at the throat, the 

 limb 2-5-lobed. Stamens 2-4, inserted on the tube of the corolla and alternate 

 with its lobes ; filaments distinct ; anthers versatile, longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary 

 inferior, i-celled, style filiform ; stigma undivided, terminal, or oblique and lateral : 

 ovule 1, anatropous. Fruit an achene, its apex crowned with the persistent calyx- 

 lobes. Seed-coat membranous ; endosperm fleshy ; embryo straight. 



About 7 genera and 140 species, natives of the Old World. 

 Scales of the elongated receptacle prickly pointed. 1. Dipsacits. 



Scales of the receptacle not prickly, herbaceous, capillary, or none. 



No receptacular scales. 2. Scabiosa. 



Scales of the receptacle about as long as the flowers. 3. Snccisa. 



i. DIPSACUS [Tourn.l L. Sp. PI. 97. 1753. 



Rough-hairy or prickly tall erect biennial or perennial herbs, with opposite dentate entire 

 or pinnatifid, usually large leaves, and blue or lilac flowers in dense terminal peduncled oblong 

 heads in our species. Bracts of the involucre and scales of the receptacle rigid or spiny 

 pointed. Involucels 4-8-ribbed with a somewhat spreading border. Limb of the calyx cup- 



