

272 



PENTANDMA. DIGYNIA. Atriplex. 



' 



peduncula'ta. A, Stem herbaceous; straddling: leaves spear-shaped; 



blunt; entire: female flowers on fruit-stalks. 



E. hot. 232-Pluk. 36. \-Pet. 7. S-Fl. dan. 304. 



Branches straddling. Bunches terminating, axillary. Frutf- 

 stalks lateral, simple, in pairs or incorporated. Calyx resembling 

 the fruit of Thlaspi Bursa Pastoris with 3 lobes, the middlemost 

 the smallest. Linn. Stem much branched. Leaves some in- 

 versely egg-shaped, sea green. Female-flowers on long fruit- 

 stalks. Valves of the fruit egg-shaped, the middlemost lobe 

 triangular and short. Mr. Woodward. 



Stalked Orache. Sea shores. Near Scirbeck, 1 mile from 



Boston, and in the Isle of Thanet, near the Ferry. R. Syn. Near 



Yarmouth, [in the salt marshes out of the North gates. Mr. 



Woodward. — At Lynn. Dr. J. E. Smith and Mr. Crowe.] 



A. July— Sept. 



Var. 2. Smaller ; leaves small. Near Lynn, Norf. R* Syn 





HU'MULUS. Male and female flowers on 



ferent plants : Moss. none. 



dif- 



Male. Calyx 5-leaved. 

 Female. Calyx 1 -leaved, with a slanting open- 

 ing, entire : seed J , within a leaf-like calyx. 



lu'pulus. H 



hot. 4<27~M;/l. ill-Kniph. 9-Gars. 355-Blacinv. 536. 

 a. b.-Clus. i. 126. 2-Dod. 409. l-Lob. obs. 3*7- 2 ; *• 

 i. 62}}. \~Ger. em. 88a-Pari. 177-Oer. 737. \-Cam. 



fern, and male 93±-Fueks. 164-^ 

 2-Matth. 1213-Ger. 737-J. B. ii. 



151- 



208. 3. 



1 



Stems climbing and winding to the right. Leaves lobed, 

 serrated. Flowers greenish yellow. 



Common Hops* In hedges. P. June.f 



* The July Arrach Moth, Phalatna Atnpltcls, Phalanx lubriapeda* 

 PhaUna exsoleta, Phalana Oxyacantitz ; and Aphis Atrittlcis are found upon 

 the* different species. 



t The English, according to the most credible accounts, learned the 

 use of Hops from some native of Artois, who, in the beginning of the 16th 

 century, introduced them into this country : but a long time after the ad- 

 dition of them to beer was held to be an adulteration of that liquor. 

 Month. Mao.— If the hop-vards were covered with stones, the plants 

 v-ould be less liable to suffer from the honey dew or from the Otter- 

 Moth : for the honey dew is the excrement of a species of 4$b** t but 



these insects seldom increase so as to endanger the plant, unless it be in * 



° r f weak 





