Vol. III.] 



APPENDIX. 



511 



[Vol. I: p. 436.] la. Trillium viride 

 Beck. Green Wake-robiu. (Fig. 1043a.) 



Trillium z'iride Beck, Am. Joiini. Sci. ii: 178. 1S26. 

 Perennial by a short corm-like rootstock, light 

 green. Stems solitary, or several together, 4'-i5' 

 tall, rough-pubescent near the top, or glabrous in 

 age; leaves oblong to ovate, 2'-4' long, obtuse or 

 acutish, 3-5-uerved, iisiiiil/y blotchcti, more or less 

 pubescent on the nerves beneath; flo-vcrs sasile ; 

 sepals linear or linear-lanceolate, V~i' long, bright 

 green, acute or obtuse; pittth claivt-d^ the blades lin^ 

 ear or nearly so, siirfassiiiff the se/'iils, light green 

 or fiirfilish green, the claws sometimes brown or 

 purple; stamens about ^j' as long as the petals; fila- 



ments flattened, 



shorter than the anthers. 



In woods and glades, Missouri and Tennessee to 

 Mississippi and Arkansas. Spring. 



[Vol. I: p. 473.] la. Listera reni- 



formis Small. Kidney-leaf Twayblade. 



(Fig. 1128a.) 



L. reni/ormis Small, Bull. Terr. Club, 24: 334. 1897 

 Perennial, deep green. Stems erect, 4'-i2' 

 tall, slender, glabrous below, densely glandular- 

 pubescent above; leaves 2, opposite, about the 

 middle of the stem, reniform, or ovatc-reiii- 

 form^ ^'^-\d/^ broad, apieitlate or shori-acunii- 

 nate, more or less pubescent beneath, coj-date or 

 subeorda/e at the base, sessile; racemes ^^'-4' 

 long; bracts lanceolate to ovate-lanceolate, 

 lYi" -'^Yz" long, acute; pedicels 2"-4" long, less 

 densely pubescent than the adjacent stem, or 

 glabrate; sepals oblong or linear-oblong, about 

 i|^" long, reflexed; corolla greenish, the Up 

 ivedge-shaped, 'i"-'}j%." long, iviih 2 prominent 

 teeth near the base, sharply cleft, the segments 

 obtuse; capsules oval, 2"-2>^" long. 

 In damp thickets in the mountains, Maryland, Virgini,i and North Carolina. Spring and summer. 



[Vol. 1: p. 485.] 4a. Hicoria Carolinae-septentrionalis Ashe. Southern 



Shag-bark. (Fig. 1154a.) 



Hicoria Carolinae-seplenlrionalis Ashe, Notes 



on Hickories. 1896. 



A small tree attaining a maximum height 

 of about So°, and diameter of 2j^°, with 

 gray bark hanging in long loose strips. 

 Bud-scales S-io, imbricate, the inner greatly 

 enlarging in leafing, and tardily deciduous; 

 terminal bud ovate-lanceolate, truncate, the 

 scales spreading, barely )A,' long; lateral 

 buds oblong; t-.vigs very slender, Ys' thick, 

 glancous, smooth, purplish-broivn ; staminate 

 aments in threes, glabrous on short peduncles, 

 at base of shoots of the season; stamens gla- 

 brons; ovary glabrous ; young foliage black- 

 ening in drying, glabrous, ciliate, with few 

 resinous globules; lea/lets 3-5, the 1 upper 

 %'-\\i' 'vide, 4'-5' long, lanceolate ; lower 

 pair often smaller; yV«;V subglobose, %'-i%' 

 long; husk soon falling into 4 pieces; nut 

 white or bro-vnish, much compressed, angled, 

 cordate or subeordate at top, thin-shelled; 

 seed large and sweet. 



Sandy or rocky woods, rarely entering "bot- 

 toms," Delaware to Georgia and Tennessee. 



