1<»1 Lr.<;UMINOSyE. (I'LLSK FAMll.V.) 



IT. D. Mai'ilandicum, Uoott Stem erect, smooth, mostly simple; 

 leiifli'ts .siiiiill, ovate or romidisli, olituse, smootli, pule heiietuli, conmionly short- 

 er than the petiole; panicle rough; legume mostly 2 jointed. — (II. ohtusum, 

 A7/.) — Dry open woods, Florida and northward. August. — Stem 2° - 3° high. 

 Leaflets rarely more than 1' long, sonietinies oblong. 



18. D. Ciliare, T>C. Very much like No. 17, but the stem and leaves 

 rough-hairy, and the (sometimes acute) IcaHets longer than the short petiole. — 

 With the preceding. 



19. D. rigidum, T>C. Stem erect, branched, rongh-pnbcscent ; leaflets 

 (pale) oval or oblong, obtuse, rough above, hairy beneath, strongly reticulated 

 on both sides; panicle ample, leafy below; legume mostly ;J-jointcd. — Dry 

 •woods, Florida to North Carolina, and northward. August. — Stems 2° - S** 

 high. Leaflets l'-3' long. Joints of the legume largest of this section. 



20. D. lineatum, DC. Stem prostrate, slender, smooth ; leaflets oval or 

 roundisii, smootii ; racemes elongated, axillary and terminal, simple or panicu- 

 late, rough ; legnine 2 -3-jointed. — Open grassy pine barrens, Florida to North 

 Carolina, and westward. August. — Stem l°-2° long. Leaflets seldom more 

 than 1' long. Kacenies l°-2° long. 



26. RHYNCHOSIA, DC. 



Calyx 2-lipppd, with the npper lip 2-clcft and the lower 3-parted, or nearly 

 equally 4-partcd. Stamens diadelphous (9 & 1). Style smooth, subulate. Leg- 

 ume ol)Iong or scymitar-shaped, mostly 1 -2-seeded. Seeds carunculate. — Erect 

 or twining herbs or shrubs, with 1 or 3-foliolate, mostly softly-pubcseent and resi- 

 nous-dotted leaves, and axillary yellow flowers. 



* Stems ticinivij, or low and erect : flowers in axillaiij racemes. 



•t- Calijx somew/i(U 2-liijped, 4-c!e/t ; the teeth subulate, shorter than the corolla, the 



lowest one longest : stems twinimi. 



1. R. minima, DC. Tomentose ; leaflets small, roundish or broadly 

 rhombic, barely acute, dotted beneath ; stipules subulate ; racemes filiform, much 

 longer than the leaves, loosely 6 - 12-flowcred ; flowers minute, reflexed ; legume 

 scymitar-shaped. (Glycine rcflexa, ZJ//.)— Damp soil along the coast, Key 

 West to South Carolina, and westward. July. — Leaflets ^'-1' long. 



2. R. parvifolia, DC. Velvety throughout ; leaflets ovate, oblong, or 

 obovate-oblong, obtuse, or the upper ones acute, hoary and strongly reticulate 

 beneath, longer than the petiole ; stipules small, lanceolate ; racemes equalling 

 or longer than the leaves, slender, loosely 3 - ,5-flowcrcd ; lowest tooth of the 

 calyx nearly twice the length of the others ; legume oblong, obtuse, clothed with 

 soft down and longer hairs intermixed, 2-3-seedcd. — South Florida. — Stem 

 l°-2° long. Leaflets 1' long. 



3. R, Caribsea, DC. Velvety throughout ; stem prostrate or twining ; 

 leaflets thin, ovate, acute or slightly acuminate ; stipules ovate ; racemes slender, 

 shorter than the leaves, loosely 3 - 5-flowcrcd ; teeth of the calyx short, nearly 



