4% CXXIV. CUPULIFERiE. Cohylls. 



abortive rudiments ; sty. 6 ; nut mostly ] -seeded, invested with the 

 enlarged, ecbinate involucre or cupule. — Trees and shrubs. Lvs. mostly 

 deciduous, alternate, acuminate. Sterile aments axillary, pendulous. 

 Fruit enclosed in very -prickly A-lobed burrs. 



1. C. Vesca. Gffiit. /?. Americana. Michx. (Pagus Castanea. Linn.) 

 Chestnut. — Lvs. oblong-lanceolate, acuminate, mucronately serrate, smooth 



both sides. — Abundant in particular districts throughout the U. S. It is a lofty- 

 tree, with a large, straight trunk. Leaves quite large (6 — 9' long and i as 

 wide), with large, uniform teeth, mucronate with the prolonged, straight veins. 

 Aments as long as the leaves and so numerous as to impart their yellowish hue 

 to the whole tree when in blossom. The nuts are about 3 together, of a pecu- 

 liar brown, villous above, enclosed in the enlarged cupule or burr Avhich is beset 

 on all sides with strong, compound, aciUe spines. Timber coarse-grained, 

 strong, elastic, light and very durable, hence much used for posts, &c. July. — 

 The nuts are smaller, but sweeter than those of the European variety (the Span- 

 ish, chestnut.) 



2. C. PUMiLA. Michx. Dwarf Chestnut. Chinquapin. 



Lvs. oblong, ovate or obovate, mucronate-serrate, hoary-tomentose be- 

 neath ; nut solitary. — Sterile places, N. J., Penn. to Ga. and Tenn.! Shrub 

 6 — I2f high, much branched. Leaves 3 — 5' by 1^ — 2', smooth above, generally 

 obtuse at base, acute at apex, margins mucronate with the projecting, straight 

 veinlets; petioles 6" long; under surface nearly white. Aments axillary, the 

 lower staminate, 6 — 10' long, upper fertile with remote, pistillate flowers. In- 

 volucre of fruit bristly and prickly, 4-lobed. Nut (by abortion) solitary, small, 

 ovoid, sweet. Ft. Jn. JF^r. Oct. 



3. PAGUS. 



Gt. ipiyoi, the beech ; it also signifies something eatable. 



cJ* in a globose anient; cal. 6-cleft, campanulate ; sta. 5 — 12. 9 

 2, within a 4-lobed, prickly involucre ; cal. single, with 4 — 5 minute 

 lobes ; sty. 3 ; nut 1 -seeded, enclosed within the enlarged, spiny 

 involucre or capsule. — Lofty trees, with smooth, ash-colored bark. Lvs. 

 alternate, plicate iii vernation. (T aments on long, pendulous peduncles. 



P. sYLVATiCA. Linn. 0. Americana. Nutt. (P. sylvestris. Michx. F. 



ferruginia. Ait.) Beech. — Lvs. broadly ovate-lanceolate, briefly petiolate, 

 obtuse at base, ciliate with soft white hairs when young, at length nearly gla- 

 brous, margin with small, remote teeth, apex acuminate ; Inuls lanceolate- 

 cylindric, imbricated with brown scales, developing both leaves and flowers ; 

 nvts ovoid-triangular, obtuse-mucronate. — A common forest tree, abundant in 

 N. Eng., frequent in the Western States and British provinces. The trunk is 

 tall and straight in forests, 50 — 80f high, but lower and with an expansive 

 head in open situations, always known by the light gray, unbroken bark. 

 Leaves with very regular and straight veinlets, 4 — 6' long, J as wide, often 

 persistent through the winter, i^ aments pubescent, peduncles 2' long. Nut 

 small, 2 together in the 4-lobed burr, oily, sweet and nutritious. Timber fine- 

 grained, with reddish duramen and white alburnum. May. 



Obs. — The Red Beech is now regarded only as a variety; with the wood softer, and of more easy 

 cleavage, and peih ips a sliirht difference in foliage. There are several beautiful varieties in cultivation, 

 with i>urple foliage, silver foliage, &c. (See garden catiilogues.) 



4. CORtLUS. 



Gr. Kopvi, a bonnet ; to which the cupule enwrapping the nut may well be compared. 



(^ in a cylindric ament ; cal. scale 3-cleft ; sta. 8; anth. 1-celled. 

 9 Calyx obsolete ; ova. several ; stig. 2 ; nut ovoid, surrounded with 

 the enlarged, coriaceous, lacerated involucre (capsule). — Shrubs. 

 Aments and capitate fertile clusters subtermmal. 



1. C. Americana. Hazel. 



Lvs. roundish, cordate, acuminate ; invoi. roundish-campanulate, much 



