88 ASCLEPIADACE^E. Phlliberlia. 



1 to 2^ inches long : peduncle 15-25-flowered : pedicels filiform and much longer than the 

 flowers ; corolla white or whitish, scarcely half inch in diameter, smoothish ; the lobes 

 oblong-ovate, acutish, somewhat ciliate : crowns separated by a very short column. — Sar- 

 costemma cynanchoides, Decaisne in DC. Prodr. viii. 541. S. hilohum, Torr. 1. c, not Hook. & 

 Arn. ? Gonolobus viridiflorus, Torr. in Ann. Lye. N. Y. ii. 219, not Nutt., and probably not 

 from " St. Louis." — Along rivers, Texas to S. Utah and Arizona. (Adjacent Mex.) 



P. linearis, Gray, 1- c. Slender, low twining or \yhen young erect, puberulent or gla- 

 brate : leaves narrowly linear, acute or nearly so at both ends, short-petioled (an inch long) : 

 peduncle exceeding tlie leaves, 8-10-flowered : corolla 3'ellowish, purplish, or whitish, barely 

 puberulent, a third inch in diameter ; the lobes ovate : crowns contiguous. — Sarcostemma 

 Uneare, Decaisne, 1. c, & in PI. Hartw. 25. — S. Arizona. (Mex.) 



Var. hirtella. Cinereous-pubescent throughout with short spreading hairs, little 

 climbing: leaves as in the original species in form and size : sej^als more slender. — Sar- 

 costemma hetcrnp/iijlhon, var. hirtellatn, Gray, Bot. Calif, i. 478. — Fort Mohave, California, on 

 sandy river-banks. Cooper, &c. Hardyville, Arizona, Palmer. 



Var. heterophylla. More twining, glabrous, merely puberulent or above pubescent : 

 leaves 1 or 2 inches long, 1 or 2 lines wide, some tapering into the petiole, some with 

 rounded and more with somewhat dilated or auriculate-cordate or truncate base : corolla 

 smoother, half inch in diameter. — Sarcostemma heterojdu/llnm, Engelm. in Torr. Pacif. R. 

 Rep. V. 363, & Bot. Mex. Bound. I.e. (with var.'?); Gray, Bot. Calif. 1. c. — California, 

 from San Luis Rey, San Diego, &c. to Arizona. 



P. viminalis, Gray, 1. c. Glabrous or nearly so, freely twining : leaves thickish, from 

 ovate-oblong to lanceolate, cuspidate-acuminate, obtuse or rounded at base, short-petioled 

 (an inch or two long), shorter than the many-flowered peduncle: corolla liaif an inch or 

 more in diameter, white; the lobes ovate, puberulent outside. — Asclepias viininalis, Swartz, 

 Prodr. 53; Willd. Spec. i. 1270 (Sloane, Jam. t. 131, f. 1). Sat-costemma Brownii, G. F. 

 Meyer, Fl. Esseq. 130 ; Griseb. Fl. W. Ind. 419. *S'. cluusum, Decaisne, 1. c. S. crassifoUum, 

 Chapm. Fl. 3(38. — Keys of Florida. (W. Ind. to Guiana.) 



3. PODOSTf G-MA, Ell. {Tlovg, noSog, foot, and ariyfia, i. e. stalked 

 stigma.) — Sk. i. 326. Stylandra, Nutt. Gen. i. 170. — Single species. 



P. pubescens, Ell. 1. c. Perennial herb, a span to a foot high from a thickened root : 

 stem erect, simple or sparingly branched : leaves opposite, linear-lanceolate, nearly sessile : 

 peduncles terminal and axillary, short, umbellately several-flowered : flowers greenish- 

 yellow, fragrant, 4 lines long : follicles tomentulose. — Deless. Ic. v. t. 65 ; Chapm. Fl. 

 366. Asclepias pediceUata, Walt. Car. 106. Stylandra pumila, Kutt. 1. c. — Low pine barrens, 

 N. Carolina to Florida : fl. summer. 



4. ANANTHERIX, Nutt. (Composed of «, privative, and dvOi'ot^, awn, 

 *i.e. destitute of the horn of Asclepias.) — Single species, being Anantherix, 



Nutt. Gen. i. 169, not of Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. ser. 2, v. 201, except as to the 

 first species. 



A. connivens, Gray. Stem erect, 2 feet high from a perennial root, minutely pubes- 

 cent above: leaves opposite, sessile, oblong (H to 2| inclics long), or the uppermost small 

 and lanceolate, transversely veined, rather fleshy : umbels 2 to along the naked summit 

 of the stem, several-flowered : lobes of the greenish corolla ovate, 5 lines long : lioods 

 whitisli, incurved-conniving over the stigma ; a pair of small and narrow internal appen- 

 dages before the base of each : hyaline anther-tips elongated: follicles not seen. — Proc. 

 Am. Acad. xii. 66. Asclepias connii'ens, Baldw. in Ell. Sk. i. 320 (1817). Anantherix viridis, 

 Nutt. Gen. 1. c. (1818), but not Asclepias viridis, Walt. Acerates connivens, Decaisne in DC. 

 Prodr. viii. 521. — Wet pine barrens of Georgia and Florida : fl. summer. 



5. ASCLEPIODORA, Gray. (JfaxhjTTidg and dcoQOv or doiQed, the gift 

 of Asclepias.) — Perennial herbs (of Atlantic N. America), rather low and stout, 

 often decumbent; distinguished from Asclepias by the anther-wings and hood, the 

 latter with a crest answeriusj to the horn of that erenus, from the oriirinal Anan- 



