SUNDEW FAMILY - 373 



Petals as many, convolute. Stamens 5-8, mostly 5. Gynoecium of 2-5 

 united carpels; ovary 1-celled, with 2-5 parietal placentae, rarely 2-3-celled, 

 loculicidally 2-5-valved. 



1, DROSERA L. Sundew. 



F 



Perennials, in ours scapose, with basal leaves. Sepals, petals, and stamens 

 4-8, Petals white or pink, spatulate or oblanceolate. Filaments subulate or 

 fihform; anthers extrorse, . Ovary 1-celled, superior; styles 2-5, distinct. Cap- 

 sule 2-5-valved. 



■ 



Leaf-blades suborbicular or broader than long. 1. D. rotundifolia. 

 Leaf-blades elongate. 



Leaf-blades spatulate or oblanceolate; seeds smooth. 2. D. longifolia. 



Leaf-blades linear or linear-oblanceolate ; seeds muricate. 3. D. linearis. 



!• D. rotundifolia L. Hosulate perennial; leaf-blades 6-10 mm. wide; 

 scape glabrous, 1-3 dm. high; raceme secund; calyx about 3 mm. long; lobes 

 ovate-oblong; petals about 4 mm. long, white; capsule erect, about 5 mm. long; 

 seeds smooth. Sphagnmn bogs: Lab.— N.J. — Ida. — Calif. — Alaska; Eurasia. 

 Boreal — Mont Je-S. 



2. D, longifolia L. Rosulate perennial; leaf-blades spatulate or oblance- 

 olate, 1.5-3 cm. long, about 4-5 mm. wide; scape 1-3 dm. high; calyx about 4 

 mm. long; lobes oblong; petals white, 5 mm. long; pods 7-8 mm. long. D. anglica 

 Huds. Bogs: Newf.—Ont.— Ida.— Calif. — B.C.; Eurasia. Boreal— Mont, My-Au. 



3. D, linearis Goldie. Rosulate perennial; leaf-blades linear or narrowly 

 linear-oblanceolate, 1.5-i cm. long, 2-3 mm. wide; scape 3-10 cm. high, 1-4- 

 flowered; calyx 3-4 mm. long, lobes ovate; petals white, 5-6 mm. long; capsule 

 5-6 mm. long. Bogs: Que. — Mich. — Alta, Boreal, Jl-Au. 



Family 55. CRASSULACEAE. Stone-crop Family. 



Herbs or rarely shrubby plants, mostly fleshy or succulent, without 

 stipules. Flowers mostly cymose, perfect, regular. Calyx persistent; 

 sepals 4 or 5, usually free, rarely united. Petals 4 or 5, free or more or less 

 united, rarely, wanting. Stamens as many or twice as many as the petals. 

 Pistils as many as the sepals, distinct or united at the base. Fruit of folli- 

 cles, dehiscent on their ventral suture. 



Stamens twice as many as the sepals. 



Flowers axillary, arranged in elongate racemes or spikes; petals rose-colored, distinct. 



1. Clementsl^. 



Flowers terminal, in cymes or one-side racemes. 



Petals more or less imited, erect; corolla tubular. 2. Gormania. 



Petals distinct. 



Flowers polygamous or dioecious; carpels erect; petals in ours purplish. 



3. Rhodiol.\. 



Flowers perfect; carpels spreading; petals in ours yellow. 4. Sedum. 

 stamens as many as the sepals ; minute annual mud or water plants. 5. Tillaeastrum, 



1. CLEMENTSIA Rose. Red Orpine, 



^ Perennial herbs, with elongate rootstocks. Stem-leaves numerous. Flowers 

 m dense spikes or racemes. Sepals distinct, linear or linear-lanceolate. Petals 

 distinct, rose-colored. Stamens 10, the 5 opposite to the petals adnate to them 

 up to the middle. Carpels 5, erect. 



, 1. C. rhodantha (A, Gray) Rose. Stems several from the thick rootstock, 

 Bimple, 1.5-3.5 dm. high; leaves hnear-oblong or oblanceolate, sessile, 1.5-3 cm. 

 Jong, entire or few-toothed; raceme very dense, 2-6 cm. long; petals linear- 

 lanceolate, twice as long as the sepals. Sedum rhodanthiim A. Gray. Mountain 

 meadows: Mont.— N.M.— Ariz. MonL—Alp. Je-Au. 



2. GORMANIA Britton. 



Perennial herbs, with horizontal rootstocks. Leaves spatulate, obovate, or 

 orbicular, the basal ones niunerous, the cauline ones similar but smaller. Flow- 



