COMMELYNACE^. (sPIDERWORT FAMILY.) 497 



1. S. graminea, Willd. Stem submerged, forking, leaves thin, pellucid ; 

 flowers expanding at the surface of the water; spatlie convolute; lobes of the 

 perianth linear, spreading. (Leptanthus, Michx.) — la flowing water, North Caro- 

 lina, and northward. July and Aug. — Stems 1° - 2° long. Leaves 3' - 6' long. 

 Tube of the perianth Ij' long. 



Order 155. COMxTIELYNACE^. (Spideravort Family.) 



Herbs, with cliiefly fibrous roots, jointed and leafy stems, and perfect 

 or somewhat polygamous often irregular flowers. — Perianth of three her- 

 baceous or colored persistent sepals, and three fugacious petals. Stamens 

 6, hypogj'uous, perfect, or a part of them sterile : anthers 2-celled, often 

 of two forms. Styles single : stigma entire. Ovary free from the peri- 

 anth, 2-3-celled, with 1- several orthotropous ovules in each cell. Cap- 

 sule loeulicidally 2-3-valved, 1 - several-seeded. Embryo pulley-shaped, 

 placed in a cavity of the albumen opposite the hilum. — Plants somewhat 

 succulent. Stems often branching. Sheaths of the leaves entire or open. 



1. COMMELYNA, Dill. Day-flower. 



Flowers irregular. Sepals mostly colored. Petals fugacious, two of them 

 kidney-shaped and long-clawed, the other smaller. Stamens unequal, three of 

 them fertile, the others with 4-lobcd sterile anthers : filaments beardless. Cap- 

 sule 1 - S-celled, the cells 1 - 2-seeded, or one of them frequently empty. — Stems 

 branching. Leaves flat, oblong, or lanceolate, on sheathing petioles ; the floral 

 ones cordate and spathe-like, folded, and enclosing the few-flowered peduncle. 

 Flowers blue. 



1. C. communis, L. "* Stem smooth, filiform, and creeping; leaves short 

 (I' -2' long), ovate-lanceolate, obtuse; sheaths fringed at the throat; spathes 

 nearly crescent-shaped, obtuse at the base, lateral and terminal ; peduncles by 

 pairs; one of them bearing 3-4 small fertile flowers, which are included in the 

 spathe; the other long-exserted, filiform, 1 -flowered; odd petal lanceolate, sessile ; 

 seeds reticulated — Low grounds, Georgia to North Carolina. July - Sept. (J) ? 

 — Stem l°-2° long. 



2 C. Virginiea, L. Pubescent ; stem erect ; sheaths hairy ; leaves (4' - 

 6' long) oblouglanceolate, acuminate, thin, rough above ; spathe (when opened) 

 round ovate, contracted at the base ; sterile peduncle included ; petals large, the 

 odd one lanceolate ; capsule 2 - 3-seeded. (C. erecta, Ell.) — Varies (C. angus- 

 tifolia, Michx.) with the stems smooth, ascending ; leaves narrowly lanceolate, 

 rather rigid, and like the sheath, nearly smooth ; flowers smaller, seeds pulveru- 

 lent. — Light or sandy soil, Florida, and northward. May - Sept. y. — Stem 

 1°- 2° high The spathes contain a viscid secretion until the seeds mature. 



3. C. erecta, L, Stem stout, erect; leaves (3' -5' long) lanceolate or ob- 

 long, acute, very rough above, the sheaths fringed with brown hairs ; spathes 

 42* 



