MALVACEiE. (mALLOW FAMILY.) 55 



long; leaves i'-l'long; tlie limb scarcely longer than tlie petiole. Flowers 

 yellow, not half as large as in the preceding. 



* * Leaves not cordate : carpels 7 -12. 



3. S. Stipulata, Cav. Nearly siAooth ; stem erect or curving ; leaves and 

 branches distichous ; leaves lanceolate and oblong, acute, unequally serrate, on 

 short petioles ; stipules linear-subulate, longer than the petioles, smootli, per- 

 sistent ; flowers single or clustered, on peduncles 3-4 times as long as tlie pe- 

 tioles ; carpels 10, strongly reticulated, pointed with two short and incurved 

 spines. (S. glabra, Nult.) — Waste places and around dwellings, Florida. 

 June - November, (i; or y. — Stems 1°- 3° high. Leaves 2' - 3' long. Flow- 

 ers 1' wide, yellow, expanding at mid-day. Petals obliquely obcordatc. 



4. S. rhombifolia, L. Downy ; stems erect, much branched ; leaves 

 rhombic-oblong, olituse at each end, serrate, short-pctioled, pale beneath ; stip- 

 ules setaceous, longer than the petioles, caducous ; peduncles solitary, more tli.in 

 half as long lus the leaves ; carpels 10-12, even, pointed with a single subulate 

 spine, indehiscent. — Around dwellings, Florida to North Carolina and westward. 

 July- October. ® — Stems 2^-3° high. Leaves 2' - 3' long. Flowers yel- 

 low, smaller than in No. 3. 



5. S. ciliai'is, Cav. Eough with appressed rigid hairs ; stems prostrate ; 

 leaves elliptical, obtuse at both ends, serrate above the middle, smooth above, 

 the uppermost approximate ; stipules setaceous, and like the calyx fringed with 

 long hairs ; flowers nearly sessile in the axils of the upper leaves ; carpels 7, 

 strongly reticulated, pointed with two minute barbed spines. — Key West. y. — 

 Stems 6' long. Leaves ^'-1' long. Flowers small, red. 



6. S. Elliottii, Torr. & Gray. Perennial ; stems slender, rougliish, erect, 

 with long and straight branches ; leaves smoothish, lanceolate or linear, acute, 

 serrate, on short petioles ; stipules setaceous ; flowers large, single ; peduncles 

 longer than the petioles ; carpels 10-12, strongly reticulated, truncate or slightly 

 2-pointed. (S. gracilis, Ell., not of Rich.) — Open woods, Florida to North Car- 

 olina and westward. July- October. — Stems 1° - 3° high. Leaves 1' -2' long. 

 Flowers I'wide, yellow. 



7. S. Lindheimeri, Engel. & Gray. Stem shrubby, smooth, slender, much 

 branched ; leaves rigid, naiTow-Iincar, obtuse, serrate, paler and downy beneath, 

 the short petioles spineless at the base ; stipules subulate, persistent, as long as 

 the petioles ; peduncles about as long as the leaves ; carpels 10, faintly reticu- 

 lated, pointed with two short and broad spines. — Key West. — Stems 1° high. 

 Leaves 1' long. Petals barely exceeding the calyx in length. 



5. ABUTILON, Toum. Indian Mallow. 



Involucel none. Stigma capitate. Ovaries 5 or more, 1-celled, 2-9-ovuled. 

 Carpels 1 - 6-seeded, partly 2-valved, tardily separating from each other or from 

 the central axis. Eadicle ascending. — Leaves cordate. Flowers yellow, white, 

 or purplish. 



1. A. Avicennae, Gaertn. Tomentose ; leaves round-cordate, acuminate, 

 ci-enate ; peduncles axillary, 1-3 flowered, shorter than the long petioles ; car- 



