SOLANACEvE. (NIGHTSHADE FAMILY.) 375 



1. C. sordida, Gray. Much branched from root or base, somewhat cine- 

 reous with sliort viscid pubescence ; leaves obovate-spatulate or cuneate-obloug 

 to oblanceolate, repand to incisely pinuatifid ; calyx when young villous-viscid ; 

 corolla pale yellow or violet-purple (6" broad) ; berry as large as a pea. — Dry 

 or clayey soil, central and W. Kan. to Tex. and Arizona. 



3. PHYSALIS, L. Ground Cherry. 



Calyx 5-cleft, reticulated and enlarging after flowering, at length much in- 

 flated and enclosing the 2-celled globular (edible) berry. Corolla between 

 wheel-shaped ami funnel-form, the very short tube marked with 5 concave 

 spots at the base ; the plaited border somewhat 5-lobed or barely 5 - 10-toothed. 

 Stamens 5, erect ; anthers separate, opening lengthwise. — Herbs ( in this coun- 

 try), with the leaves often unequally in pairs, and the 1 -flowered nodding pe- 

 duncles extra-axillary; flowering through the summer. (Name (pvaaAis, a 

 bladder, from the inflated calyx.) 



* Corolla large, white or tinged with blue, without dark centre, with almost entire 



border; pubescence simple. 



1. P. grandiflora, Hook. Clammy-pubescent, erect ; leaves lance-ovate, 

 pointed, entire or nearly so; corolla 1-2' wide when expanded, and with a 

 woolly ring in the throat; fruiting calyx globular, apparently nearly filled by 

 the berry. — S. shore of L. Superior to Sask. ; Providence Island, L. Cham- 

 plain (Perkins). 



^ * Corolla lurid greenish-white or yellow, mostly with dark centre, 3 - 10" broad, 



•«- Annuals, glabrous or pubescence minute ; anthers violet. 



2. P. Philadelphica, Lam. Leaves ovate or oblong-ovate, oblique at 

 ])ase, entire, repand, or very sparingly angulate-toothed ; corolla brownish- oi 

 violet-spotted in the centre, 7-10" broad; calyx at maturity globose and com- 

 pletely filled by the large reddish or purple berry and open at the mouth. — 

 In fertile soil, Penn. to Minn, and Tex. 



3. P. angul^ta, L. Much branched; leaves ovate or ovate-oblong, 

 sharply and irregularly laciniate-toothed ; peduncles filiform ; corolla unspotted, 

 very small (3 - 6" broad when expanded) ; fruiting calyx conical-ovate with a 

 truncate or sunken base, 10-angled, loosely inflated, at length well filled by the 

 greenish-yellow berry. — Open rich grounds, Penn. to Minn., and southward. 



t- -»- Strong-scented, villous or pubescent ivith viscid or glandular simple hairs ; 

 fruiting calyx ovate-pyramidal, carinately 5-angled, closed, loosely envelop- 

 ing the green or yellow berry ; leaves ovate or cordate. 



4. P. pubescens, L. Annual, diffusely much branched or at length de- 

 cumbent ; leaves augulate- or repand-toothed or nearly entire ; corolla spotted 

 with brown purple in the centre, 5 - 6" broad when expanded, obscurely 5 - 10- 

 toothed ; anthers violet. — Low grounds, N. Y. to Minn., south to Fla. and 

 Tex., and westward. — A very doubtful form, found at Independence, Mo. 

 {B. F. Bush), has the small corolla (2" broad) yellow, without a brown centre, 

 the anthers yellow, the fruiting calyx smaller, and the berry viscid. 



5. p. Virgini^na, ^lill. Perennial, diffusely much branched and widely 

 spreading, or at first erect; leaves sometimes oblong, repand or obtusely toothed, 

 rarely entire; corolla 9-12" Ixroad, 5-angled or 5- 10-toothed; atithers yellow 



