390 LXXXVI. LENTIBULACEiE. Pinguicum. 



Proper lies. —Ths root of Statice Limonium is one of the best and most powerful of all astringents. 

 The species of Plumbago sue acrid and escharolic, so much so, that the roots of P. Iiuropa;us are said by 

 Lindley to be employed in Europe by beggais, to raise blisters on the face, in order to excite compassion. 



Genera. 



Inflorescence an nuolucrate head. Amieria. 1 



Inflorescence a pamci* of racemes Statice. 2 



1. ARMERIA. Willd. 

 Flowers collected in a dense head ; invol. 3 — many-leaved ; cal. 

 tubular-campanulate, 5-angled, with 5 shallow lobes, carious and 

 plaited ; petals 5, almost distinct ; sta. 5, inserted on the base of the 

 petals ; styles 5, distinct ; fr. indehiscent, invested with the calyx. — 

 "^ ZiVS. radicalj 7noslly liiicar. Scape simjde, apfendaged above. 



A. VULGARIS. Willd. (Statice Armeria. Linn.') Tlirifi. 



Scape terete, smooth, Irs. linear, fiat, obtuse; outer bracts of tJie invol. ovate, 

 acute, shorter than the sheathing appendage at their ba.se. — A neat and elegant 

 plant, native near the sea-coast, Brit. Am. Hook, N. Eng. 1 Middle and South- 

 ern States. Often cultivated. Leaves 3 — 4' by 2 — 3", numerous, crowded. 

 Scape about 1 f high, bearing a singular sheath at top ; formed, according to 

 Lindley, by the adherent bases of the involucral leaves. Involucre about 3- 

 leaved. Flowers showy, rose-colored. Jn. — Aug. ■}• 



2. STATICE. 



Gr. oran^oj, to stop ; for, used medicinally, it stops the diarrhoea, says Pliny. 



Flowers scattered in a paniculate or spicate inflorescence, otherwise 

 essentially the same as in Armeria. — %■ Lvs. radical or caulinc. dilated, 

 tnoSlly entire. Invol. 0. 



1. S. Limonium. (S. Carolinianum. Walt.) Marsh Roscnary. 



Scape terete, paniculate; lvs. all radical, ovate-lanceolate, undulate, 

 smooth, obtuse, mucronate below the tip. — Salt marshes, R. I. Olncy ! to Md. ! 

 and Car. Scape about a foot high, with several lanceolate, clasping bracts, 

 and supporting at top a broad, branching panicle composed of close, secund 

 spikes of sessile, blue flowers. Petals obovate, imguiculate, bearing the sta- 

 mens on their claws. Leaves narrow, lanceolate, broader in the upper half, 

 smooth, veinless, on long petioles. The root is large, ligneous, strongly astrin- 

 gent, much valued in medicine. Aug. — Oct. 



Order LXXXVI. LENTIBULACE^.— Butterworts. 



Plants herbaceous, aquatic. Lvs. radical, undivided, or compound, root-like and bearing vesicles ol air. 



dcapes generally simple, naked or with bracts, with few or many showy flowera. 



Cal. inferior, of 2 or 5 sepals united or distinct at base. 



Cor. inegular, bilabiate, personate, spujTed. 



Sta. 2, included within the corolla and inserted on its upper lip. Anth. 1-celled. 



Ova. l-celled, with a free, central placenta. Style 1. Stigma cleft. 



iy. — Capsule many-seeded. Sds. minute ; embi-jo none. 



Genera 4, species 175, natives ofswamps, pools and rivulets, difTused throughout nearly all countries. 

 Properties unimportant. 



Gene7-a. 



Calyx 4 — 5-cIeft, capsule 5-celled FingidcuJa 1 . 



Caly.\ 2-parted, subequal. Capsule 1-celled. Utricuiaria 2. 



1. PINGUICULA. 



Lat. pinguis, fat ; from the greasy appearance of the leaves. 



Calyx bilabiate, upper lip trifid, lower bifid ; cor. bilabiate or rare- 

 ly subregular, upper lip bifid or 2-parted, lower trifid or 3-parted, spur- 

 red at base beneath ; sta. 2, very short ; stig. sessile, 2-lobed ; caps, 

 erect ; seeds 00. — % In wet ^;/ftces. Lvs. radical., rosulate, entire. 

 Scapes 1 -Jlowered, nodding. 



P. VULGARIS. Butterwort. 



Lvs. ovate or elliptic, obtuse, unctious-puberulent above ; scape and cal. 

 subpubescent ; co?'. lips very unequal, lobes obtuse; spur cylindrical, shorter 



