4G4 ORCniDACE.E. (orchis family.) 



pals; column manifest. — Damp mossy woods, on the mountains of Nortb 

 ( larolina, July. — Stem 4' - 8' high. Leaves \ ' - 1 ' long. 



18. PONTHIEVA, 11. Brown. 

 Sepals and petals nearly alike, the two outer sepals spreading, the upper one 

 connivent with the petals. Petals, like the lip, adnate to the middle of the col- 

 umn. Lip posterior, clawed, ovate, concave, spreading. Column 2-lobed, 

 beaked. Anther dorsal, linear, stalked, 4-celled. Pollen-masses 4, linear, pow- 

 dery. — Low herbs, with clustered roots, chiefly broad radical leaves, and green- 

 ish flowers on a pubescent scape. 



1. P. glandulosa, R. Brown. Leaves many-nerved, oblong, spreading, 

 narrowed into a short petiole ; scape slender, many-flowered ; bracts lanceolate ; 

 lateral sepals flat. (Cranichis multiflora, Nutt. Ophrys pubera, Michx.) — Low 

 shady woods, Florida to North Carolina. Sept. and Oct. — Scape 1°- li° high. 



19. CYPRIPEDIUM, L. Lady's Slipper. 



Sepals 3, the two lower ones mostly united into one under the lip, spreading. 

 Petals narrower. Lip large, inflated, and sac-like. Column short, 3-lobed, the 

 two lateral lobes each bearing a 2-celled anther on the under side, the middle one 

 (sterile stamen) petal-like. Pollen granular. Stigma thick, triangular. — Root 

 fibrous. Leaves large, plaited, sheathing. Flowers large, mostly solitary, lcafy- 

 bracted, nodding. 

 * Stem /< afu : sijials and petals longer than the yellow lip, the latU r Urn ar and turisti <1. 



1. C. pubescens, Willd. Pubescent; stem sheathed at the base; leaves 

 4 -G, ovate-oblong, acute or acuminate; flowers 1-3; sepals greenish, striped 



^*\ with deeper lines, lanceolate, acuminate, the lower sometimes 2-cleft at the apex ; 

 petals linear, spirally twisted; lip large (l'-l£' long), laterally flattened, Bpotted 

 within; stigma triangular, obtuse. — Rich woods in the upper districts, and 

 northward. May and June. — Stem 1°- U° high. Leaves 4' - 6' long. .Flow- 

 ers inodorous. 



2. C. parviflorum, Salisb. Very near the preceding, but every way 

 s~\ smaller; lip half as large, depressed above; stigma triangular, acute; flowers 



fragrant. — Rich woods in the upper districts. May and .June. 



* * Stem leafy : sepals and petals whiti } flat, obtusi , not long* r than the lip. 

 8. C. spectabile, Swartz. Pubescent; leaves 6-7, oval, acute; sepals 



oval or oblong, rather longer than the lanceolate petals; lip (U'long) much 



inflated, white tinged with purple, about as long as the sepals. — Mountains of 



North Carolina, ami northward. May and June. — Stem 2° high, commonly 

 2-flowered. Leave, P-G' long. Flowers very showy. 



*#* Scape naked, l-Jlowered, 24eavedat thi base. 

 4. C. acaule, Ait. Pubescent; leaves oblong, obtuse; sepals greenish, 

 oblong-lanceolate, acute, nearly as long as the linear petals, much shorter than 

 the large (2' long) obovate purple and veiny lip. — Dry woods in the upper dis- 

 tricts, and northward. May and June. — Scape 8' - 12' high. Leaves £° long. 



