OAK FAMILY. ^ 301 



J. nigra. Black W. Large tree, commoner W. & S. : stalks and shoots 

 not clammy, minutely downy ; leaflets smoothish, ovate-lanceolate, serrate ; 

 fruit spherical. 



* * Planted from the Old World : hush friable, separating whm dry from the 



roundish and smoothish thin-shelled nut. 

 J. r^gia, English Walnut, so called, but native of Asia : leaflets oval, 

 entire, smoothish; fruit ripens sparingly in Middle States. 



2. CARYA, HICKORY. (Greek name of the Walnut, applied to these 



North American trees.) Fl. in rather late spring : nuts fall in autumn. 



§ 1. Sterile catkins in a sessde cluster : leaflets 13 - 15, short-stalked : nut edible. 



C. Olivseformis, Pecan-nut. Along rivers, from lUmois S. : leaflets 

 oblong-lanceolate, taper-pointed ; nut cylindrical-oblong, olive-shaped, the seed 

 delicious. 



§ 2. Sterile catkins 3 or more together on a common peduncle : leaflets sessile or 

 nearly so, of 5 - 9 or rarely 11-13 leaflets : nut globuhrr or short oval. 



» Nuts sweet-tasted and edible (the lackorij-nuts of the market) ; tJiC husk splitting 

 into 4 thick and hard valves : bads large, of about 10 scales. 



C. &.lba, Shell-bakk or Shag-Bark H. Commonest E. : bark of old 

 trunks very shaggy, separating in rough strips ; inner bud-scales becoming very 

 large and conspicuous on the young shoot ; leaflets 5, the 3 upper much larger 

 and lancc-obovate ; nut white. 



C. sulcata, Western Shell-bark H. From Penn. W. & S. : differs 

 from the foregoing in lighter-colored heart-wood, 7-9 leaflets more downy be- 

 neath, fruit with very thick husk 4-ribbcd above the middle, and larger yellow- 

 ish or dull- white nut (sometimes 2' long) mostly with a point at both ends. 



C. tomentdsa, Mocker-nut or White-heart H. Common E. & S. : 

 bark rough, but not splitting off in strips ; shoots and lower surface of the 

 leaves woolly-downy when young ; leaflets 7-9, lance-obovate, or the lower 

 lance-oblong ; fruit with very thick hard husk, and globular nut (not flattish on 

 the sides) brownish, very thick-shelled, hardly fit to eat. 



* * Nuts bitter, in a rather thin and friable husk, which splits only at the top, or 



tardily to near the base : bark on the trunk close : bud-scales falling early. 



C. porclna. Brown H. or Pig-nut. Common N. : bark of trunk 

 rough ; bud-scales about 10, small ; shoots and leaves nearly smooth ; leaflets 

 5-7, obovate-lanceolate ; fruit pear-shaped; nut oblong or oval, hard-shelled, 

 seed at first sweet, then bitterish. 



C. am^ra, Bitter-nut. Moist or low grounds : bark of trunk smooth and 

 very close ; yellowish bud-scales about 6 ; shoots and leaves pubescent when 

 young ; leaflets 7-11, lanceolate or lance-oblong ; fruit and white thin-shelled 

 and tender nut globular ; seed at first sweet, then very bitter. 



C. aqu^tica, Water H. River-swamps S. Small tree, with rough 

 bark ; bud-scales as in the last ; leaflets 9 - 13, lanceolate, smooth ; nut thin- 

 shelled, 4-angular, flitttish ; seed very bitter. 



106. CUPULIPER^, OAK FAMILY. 



Trees or shrubs, with alternate and simple sti-aight-veined leaves, 

 very deciduous stipules, and monoecious flowers ; the sterile in 

 slender catkins (except in the Beech) ; tlie fertile solitary, clustered, 

 or sometimes spiked, and furnished with an involucre which forms 

 a cup or covering to the 1-celied 1 -seeded nut. This nut comes 

 from an ovary with 2 or more cells having one or two ovules hang- 

 ing from the summit of each ; but all except one cell and one 

 ovule are abortive. Tliere is a calyx adhering to the ovary, as is 

 iliown by the minute teeth crowning its summit. Seed filled by 

 the embryo, which has thick and fleshy cotyledons. 



