56 PEKTANDRIA— DIGYNIA. Slum. 



1. S. iafifolkmi. Broad-leaved Water-parsnep. 



Leaves pinnate; leaflets oblong-lanceolate, equally serrated. 



S. latifolium. Linn. Sp. PI. 36\. JViUd. v. I. \43] . Fl. Br. 312. 

 En^l. Bot. V. 3. t. 204. Hook. Lond. fuse. 2. ^.110. Scot. 90, 

 FCDan. t. 246. Jacq. Austr. t. 66. Bauli. Pin. 154. 



S. n. 777. Hall. Hist. r. 1. 34o. 



S. latifolium, foliis variis. Rcdi Syn. 211. 



S. majus latifolium. Ger. Em. 256./. ; also angustifolium. ibid.f. 



S. verum. Camer.Epit. 265./. 



S. maximum latifolium. Baiih. Hist. v. 3. p. 2. 175./ 



Slum. Riv. Pentap. Irr. t. 78. 



Coriandrum latifolium. Crantz Austr. fasc. 3. 101. Roth Germ. 

 V. 1. 131. 15.2. p. 1.349. 



In rivers, ditches and fens. 



Perennial. July, August. 



Root fleshy, with numerous long fibres, creeping. Stems from 3 

 to 6 feet high, erect, angular and deeply furrowed, leafy, hollow, 

 smooth, very little branched. Leaves from 6 to 1 2 inches in 

 length, oblong, smooth, for the most part simply pinnate, with 

 about 5 or 6 pair of large, opposite, lanceolate, acute leaflets, 

 with an odd one, all copiously, sharply and regularly serrated j 

 those leaflets only which grovv under water being often doubly 

 pinnatifid, with 'very narrow segments. Footstalks of the 

 lower leaves long, cylindrical, hollow, and striated j the rest 

 very short -, all clasping the stem with a dilated membranous 

 margin. Umbels terminal or axillary, stalked, solitary, erect, 

 large, nearly flat, of numerous, smooth, general and partial 

 rays. Bracteas several general as well as partial, lanceolate, 

 taper-pointed, ribbed, with v/hite membranous edges. Fl. nu- 

 merous, snow-white, small, the outermost a little irregular. 

 Cal. of 5 acute, rather unequal leaves. Fruit elliptic-ovate, small. 

 Stijles permanent, reflexed, slightly tumid at the base. Each 

 seed is semi-elliptical, with 5 pale, stout, rounded, prominent 

 ribs 5 the deep intermediate spaces striated. One of the seeds 

 is often abortive, and the other is then much incurved. Their 

 flavour is aromatic, and less acrid than the rest of the plant j 

 which like all the tribe, when in growing water, partakes of a 

 poisonous quality. 

 Surely the habit and characters of this plant are very remote from 

 Coriandrum. 



2. S. angustifolimn. Narrow-leaved Water-parsnep. 



Leaves pinnate; leaflets unequally lobed and serrated. Um- 

 bels stalked, opposite to the leaves. Stem erect. 



S. angustifolium. Linn.Sp.Pl.\^72. IVilld. v. ]. 143 \. Fl.Br.3l3. 

 Engl. Bot. V. 2. t. 139. Hook. Lond fasc. 2. ^.111. Scot. 90, 

 Jacq. Austr. i. ^7. Ehrh. PI Off. 413. 



