500 ORCHID ACEiE. (ORCHIS FAMILY.) 



low with 3 greenish sheaths) as in Corallorhiza ; but, instead of a coral-like 

 root, a slender naked rootstock produces each year a thick, globular, solid bulb 

 or corm, often V in diameter (filled with exceedingly glutinous matter), which 

 sends up late in summer a large, oval, many-nerved and plaited, petioled, green 

 leaf, lasting through the winter, and early in the succeeding summer its scape 

 is terminated by a loose raceme of dingy rather large flowers. (The name 

 composed of a- privative and TrKriKrpou, a spur, from the total want of the 

 latter.) 



1. A. hiemale, Nutt. Stem 1° high or more; perianth greenish-brown. 

 or the lip whitish, and somewhat speckled with purple, 5 - 6" long. — Woods, 

 in rich mould ; rather rare or local, N. Eng. to Ga., west to Minn, and Mo. — 

 Each corm lasts 2 or 3 years before it shrivels, so that 3 or 4 are found hori- 

 zontally connected. 



6. CORALLORHIZA, Haller. Coral-root. 



Perianth somewhat ringent, oblique and gibbous or obscurely spurred at 

 base ; the oblong or lanceolate sepals and petals nearly alike, 1 - 3-nerved, the 

 upper arching ; the lateral sepals ascending, their bases with that of the lip 

 forming the gibbosity or short spur which is mostly aduate to the summit of 

 the ovary ; lip slightly adherent to the base of the 2-edged straightish column, 

 bearing a pair of projecting ridges on the face below, spreading or recurved 

 at the apex. Anther terminal, lid-like. Pollen-masses 4, obliquely incumbent, 

 soft-waxy, free. — Brownish or yellowish herbs, destitute of green foliage, with 

 much-branched and toothed coral-like root-stocks (probably root-parasitical), 

 sending up a simple scape, with sheaths in place of leaves and bearing a ra- 

 ceme of rather small dull-colored flowers ; fruit reflexed. (Name composed of 

 KopdWiov, coral, and pi^a, root.) 



§ 1. Small spur or sac adnate to the summit of the ovary ; flowers small ; lip 

 whitish or purplish, often mottled with crimson. 



1. C. innata, P. Brown. Plant slender, light brownish or yellowish (3 - 

 9' high), 5 - 12-flowered ; pedicels very short ; perianth 2 - 2|" long ; lip some- 

 what hastately 3-lobed above the base, the lamellae thick and rather short ; spur 

 a very small protuberance ; capsule oval or elliptical (3 - 4" long). — Swamps 

 and damp Avoods, N. Eng. to northern N. J., Ohio, Mich., Minn., and north- 

 ward, and south in the mountains to Ga. May, June. (Eu.) 



2. C. odontorhiza, Nutt. Plant light brown or purplish ; stem rather 

 slender, bulbous-thickened at base (6-16' high), 6 - 20-flowered ; pedicels 

 rather slender ; perianth about 3" long ; lip entire or merely denticulate, thin, 

 broadly ovate or obovate, abruptly contracted into a claw-like base, the lamellae 

 a pair of short projections ; the spur represented by a small cavity wholly ad- 

 nate to the summit of the ovary ; capsule at first very acute at base, at length 

 short-oval (4" long). — Rich woods, E. Mass. (Hitchings) and Vt. to N. J. and 

 Ela., west to Mich, and Mo. May -July. 



3. C. multifldra, Nutt. Plant purplish, rather stout (9-18' high), 10 

 30-flowered; perianth 2^-4" long; lip deeply S-lobed, with a short narrowed 

 base and with prominent lamellae ; spur manifest and protuberant ; capsule 

 oblong (6-9" long), short-pedicelled. — Dry woods, N. Eng. to Md., west to 

 Mo., Iowa, and Minn. July - Sept. 



