288 LENT1BULACEJB. (BLADDERWORT FAMILY.) 
mersed elongated leafy stems, on very short peduncles, with a minute 
corolla, fruit-bearing, deflexed; leaves several times forked, capillary, 
copiously bladder-bearing. —Pools, Tewksbury, Massachusetts, Mr. 
Greene , Seekonk, Mr. Olney , and Rhode Island, Mr. Hunt. Ju y. 
Leafy stemslong. Scapes 4' high. Bracts linear, half as long 
as the pedicels. Flower as large as in U. gibba, sterile; the immers¬ 
ed ones fertile, never expanding their minute corolla, their pods ripen¬ 
ing seeds copiously. 
* * * Leaves few and simple, fugacious, or none: scape solitary , 
rooting, the roots sometimes sparingly bladder-hearing. (Flowers 
yellow.) . 
10. U. SUlmlata, L. (Tint Bladderwort.) Stem very slen¬ 
der (3' - 5' high), 2-7-flowered; pedicels capillary ; lower lip of the co¬ 
rolla flat or with the margins recurved, equally 3 -lobed, much arger 
than the ovate upper one ; spur oblong, acute, straight, appresse to e 
lower lip which it nearly equals in length. — Sandy swamps, 
Jersey. June. — Pedicels 3 ,r -6" long. Corolla 3 ,; -4 1 broa 
11. U, corniita, Michx. (Horned Bladderwort.) k - tcIU 
strict (£°-l° high), 2-7-flowered ; pedicels not longer than the ca yx, 
lower lip of the corolla large and helmet-shaped , the centre \ ery c0 ^ 
vex and projecting while the sides are strongly reflexed, t ie upp 
obovate and much smaller; spur awl-shaped, turned downwar a 
outward, often as long as the corolla. — Peat-bogs, or sandy s !'J alD ’ 
New England and New York to Wisconsin. June - Aug. 
close together, large, deep yellow. 
2. PINGUICULA, L. Butterwort. 
Upper lip of the calyx 3-cleft, the lower 2-cleft. Corolla with 
an open hairy or spotted palate. — Small and stemless P eTe “ n ^ 
growing on damp rocks, with 1-flowered scapes, and broa 
entire leaves all clustered at the root, soft-fleshy and mostly g rea -* 
to the touch ; whence the name, from pinguis, fat. 
1. P* vulgaris, L. Leaves ovate or elliptical; scape 
lyx a little pubescent; lips of the corolla very unequal, the tu 
nel-form ; spur straightish.— Wet rocks, Rochester, New * or * ___ 
at Crooked Lake, Sartwell. L. Superior and northward. 
Scape 3^-5'high; the drooping flower violet; the palate ea 
with white hairs. 
Order 66. OROBANCH ACEiE. (Broom-bape FaM-) 
Herbs destitute of green foliage ( root-parasites ), mono 
petaJous, didynamous , the ovary one-celled with 2 or ^ V 0 * 
