Empetrum. CXXII. EMPETRACEtE. 489 



spikelets ; sty. 6, twice bifid ; staminate fls. capitate, crowded. — (I) Grows in 

 sandy prairies, 111. to the sources of the Missouri, 



2. C. ELLTPTicuM. Nutt. (CrotoHopsis elliptica. Willd.) 



Plant clothed' with a stellate pubescence ; Ivs. elliptical-ovate, the older 

 ones obtuse at apex, smoothish and green on the upper surface; jis. glomerate; 

 sty. 3, bifid ; caps, angular, 2-seeded. — 111. Mead, and Mo. 



3. C. GLANDULOSUM. 



St. trichotomous ; Ivs. oblong, serrate, hairy beneath, nearly entire, and 

 bearing 2 glands at the base ; spikes of flowers situated in the division of the 

 stem. — 111. {Mead), river bottoms. 



6. PHYLLANTHUS. 



Gr. (pvWov, av^oi ; the leaves of the original species bear flowers at the edges. 



Flowers ^ . — d^ Calyx persistent, with 6 spreading, colored seg- 

 ments ; stamens 3, very short, filaments united at base, anthers didy- 

 mous. 9 Calyx as in the J* ; styles 3, bifid ; capsule 3-celled ; 

 cells 2-valved, 1 — 2-seeded. — Herbs or shrubs with alternate, stipulate 

 leaves and minute, axillary flowers. 



P. Carolixen-sis. Walt. (P. obovatus. Willd.) 



St. erect, herbaceous, with alternate branches; Ivs. simple, entire, gla- 

 brous, oval and obovate, obtuse, slightly petioled ; _^5. few, subsolitary, axillary. 

 —0 A small-leaved, delicate plant, Perm. ! to 111. ! Stem fi — 10' high, slender, 

 the branches filiform. Leaves of the stem 6 — 8" by 4 — 5", of the branches 

 twice, and of the branchlcts four times smaller. Flowers 1 — 3 in each axil, 

 the (^with the 9, 2 — 1" diam., whitish. July, Aug. 



7. BUXUS. 



The Greek name of this plant was 0v|oj. 



Flowers c?. — S^ Calyx 3-leaved ; petals 2 ; sta. 4, with the rudiment 

 of an ovary. 9 Cal. 4-sepaled : pet. 3 ; sty. 3 ; caps, with 3 beaks 

 and 3 cells ; seeds 2. — Shrubs. Lvs. evergreen .^ opposite. 



B, sEMPERvlRF.Ns. B'^x. — Lvs. ovatc ; petioles hairy at edge; anth. ovate, 

 saggittate. — Var. an^ruUifMa has narrow, lanceolate leaves. Var. svffrnticosa, 

 the dwarf box has obovate leaves and a stem scarcely woody, highly esteemed 

 for edgings in gardens. — The box with its varieties is native of Europe. 



Order CXXII. EMPETRACE^.— Crowberries. 



Shrubs small, ever£rrecn, heath-like, with exsfipnlnte leaves and minute, axillary flowera. 



Fls. dia-riotis. Cni. ron.sistinir of hyposynoiis. imhnVatcH sc;iles. 



iSta e'lual in number to the inner ."scpai-: and alternate with them. 



Ova. 3— 9 celled, with a .sincle erect ovide in each cell. 



Styles short or 0. Sliirmas loberl and ollen lacerated. 



fV.— Drupe seated in the persistent calyx, containinp 3—9 bony nucules. 



Sds. solitary, ascendinp, ailiuminous. Rculictf inferior. 



Genera 4. species 4. natives of Europe, North America and the Straits of Magellan. They ore acrid. 

 The berries are used for food in Greenland. 



Genera. 



<G -9 seeded. Empetrum. 1 

 Drupe \ 3-seedcd. (Jakettia. 2 



1. EMPETRUM. 



Gr. ev, upon, verpoi, a stone ; from the places of its natural growth. 



Flowers 9 (^- Perianth consisting of 2 scries of sepaloid scales, 

 c^ Stamens 3, anthers pendulous on long filaments. 9 Styles 6 — 9, 

 very short, erect, or U ; stigmas oblong, radiate-spreading ; drupe 

 globose, I -celled ; seeds 6 — 9. — Low., alpine shrubs. 



E. NIGRUM. Crnu'berry. 



Procumbent; bra nrhrs s^xnooXh : Ivr. imbricated, linear-oblong, obtusa ai 



