: 
NELUMBIUM. Vill. NELUMBIACE. 153 
beneath. Scape as long as the petioles. Flowers large, regular, white. The 
capsule opens only half round, and has therefore a persistent lid. Apr—This 
plant has in Ohio the reputation of a stimulant and antispasmodic, and is there 
significantly termed rheumatism root. 
4. LEONTICE. 
Gr. Xewyv, a lion; the leaf is likened to a lion’s foot-track. 
Ualyx free from the ovary, of 3—6 green sepals; corolla of 6 
petals, each bearing a scale attached to the claw at base within; sta- 
mens 6; cells of the anther dehiscent at edge; pericarp membrana- 
ceous (caducous), 2—4-seeded ; seeds erect, globose. 
L. Tuaticrroipes. (Caulophyllum. Michz.) Poppoose Root. 
Smooth ; dvs. biternate and triternate ; /fts. oval, petiolate, unequally lobed, 
the terminal one equally 3-lobed.—A smooth, handsome plant, in woods, Can. 
to Ky. Plant glaucous, purple when young. Stem 1—2if high, round, 
dividing above into 2 parts, one of which is a 3-ternate leaf-stalk, the other 
bears a 2-ternate leaf and a racemose panicle of greenish flowers. Leaflets 
paler beneath, 2—3’ long, lobed like those of the Thalictrum or Aquilegia. 
Seeds 2 (mostly 1 by abortion), naked after having burst the caducous, thin 
pericarp, resembling berries on thick stipes. May. 
Orver VII CABOMBACEA.—WateERsHIELDS. 
Herbs aquatic, with Settings, entire, centrally peltate leaves. 
Fis. , solitary, small. Sep. 3—4, colored inside. 
Cor.—Petals 3—4, alternate with the sepals. 
Sta. hypogynous, either 6, or more than 17. Anth. adnate. 
Ova, 2o0r more. Stig. simple. 
Fr. indehiscent, tipped with the hardened style. 
Sds. globular, pendulous. Embryo minute, 2-lobed, external to an abundant, fleshy albumen. 
Genera 2, species 3. American water-plants, extending from Cayenne, S. America, to N. England. 
Property—Slightly astringent. 
BRASENIA. Schreb. 
Calyx of 3—4 sepals, colored within, persistent; corolla of 3—4 
petals; stamens 18—36; ovaries 6—18; carpels oblong, 2-(or by 
abortion 1-)seeded.—2 Agwatic. The stem, peduncles, and under sur 
face of the leaves are covered with a viscid jelly. 
B. pevtara. Pursh. (Hydropeltis purpurea. Mz.) Water Target. 
It inhabits muddy shores and pools, often in company with the water-lily, 
Can. to Ga. and Ark. Leaves peltate, elliptical, entire, 2—3/’ by 1—1}’, witt 
the long, flexible petioles inserted exactly in the centre, floating on the surface 
of the water, smooth and shining above. Flowers arising to the surface, on 
long, slender, axillary peduncles. Petals purple, about 3” long. July. 
Orper VIIL—NELUMBIACE A#.—W ater-Beans. 
Herbs aquatic, with peltate, fleshy, radical lvs. Rhizoma prostrate. 
Fis. large, solitary, on long, erect scapes. Sep. 4—5. g 
Cor.—Petals 00, in many rows, arising from without the disk. 
Sta. 00, in several rows; filaments petaloid ; ath. adnate, introrse. 
Ova. 00, separate, each with a simple style and stigma. 
Fr.—Nuts generally 1-seeded, half sunk in hollows of the very large torus. 
Sds. destitute of albumen, and with a highly developed embryo. 
This order comprises but a single genus with 3 species, two of which inhabit the still waters of tropical 
regions, and the other, of the U. S. The nutsare eatable, and indeed all the other parts of the plant. 
NELUMBIUM. Juss. 
Characters of the genus the same as those of the order. 
N. LUTEUM. i 
Lvs. peltate, orbicular, entire; anth. with a linear appendage.—A magnifi- 
cent flowering plant, peculiar to the stagnant waters of the south and west! 
_,. 
