166 



Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. 



S. ulniifolia and chamaedrifolia the scent is aminoid 

 (Kernel"). 



In the case of S. opulifolia, Ludwig (13, 14) observes that 

 the reddish color of the ovary in old flovvers, which becomes 

 more evident in the fruit, serves to increase the conspicuous- 

 ness of the plants and to draw unbidden guests away from the 

 younger flowers. He saw the flowers visited by bees and 

 Syrphidae. 



The principal visitors of Spiraea are flies, especially Syr- 

 phidae, beetles, and bees, especially Andrenidae. Other flies 

 and the lower Hymenoptera are less abundant. The follow- 

 ing table gives the results of observations in this line: — 



f salicif olia ] . . 

 Spiraea \ ulmif olia \ ™i^e^u 

 ( sorbifolia J "^^ 



ulmaria 



(( 



a 

 <( 



it ^ 



<( 



fllipendula 



(I 



digitata 



aruncus 



(( 



Low Germany, 



Flanders 



Scotland 



Pyrenees 



Netherlands . . 

 North Frisian 

 Islands 



Alps..' 



Low Germany. 

 Berlin Garden. 



Alps 



Low Germany. 

 Illinois 



Miiller (i, 8) . . 



<( 



MacLeod (24) 

 Willis (26)... 

 MacLeod (20) 

 Heinsius (21). 



Knuth (25)... 



Muller (10)... 



" (4,8). 



Loew (12) 



Miiller (10).. 

 - (4, S). 



o 

 H 



110 



35 



19 



11 



3 



2 



1 



10 



2 



5 



1 



15 



51 



Spiraea aruncus L. — Aruncus ancncus (L.) Karst. — I 

 find nectar to be secreted by a perigynous disc, as observed by 

 Delpino (5). On the other hand Miiller (4, 10) states that 

 the flowers are devoid of nectar, but he does not explain how 

 the pistillate flowers, which of course bear no pollen, are to 

 be visited. , 



According to Gray's Manual and Chapman's Flora, 

 the flowers are dioecious, and this is the only condition in 

 which I have found them. The stamiuate flowers have twenty 



