LV. ONAGRACEX. . 261 
5. L. vircatum. Austrian Lythrwm.—St. erect, branched, virgate ; dvs. lan- 
ceolate, acute at each end, floral ones small; fls. about 3 in each axil of the vir- 
gate raceme; sta. 12.—A fine species for the garden, native of Austria. Stem 
3—4f high. Flowers purple. Jn.—Sept. + ; 
3. DECODON. Gmel. 
Gr. dexa, ten, odovs, a tooth; from the horn-like teeth of the calyx. 
Calyx short, broadly campanulate, with 5 erect teeth, and 5 elon- 
gated, spreading, horn-like processes; stamens 10, alternate ones very 
long ; style filiform ; capsule globose, included, many-seeded.—% Lws. 
opposite or verticillate, entire. Fils. axillary, purple. 
D. verticiLLatum. Ell. (Lythrum. Linn. Nesea. Kunth.) 
Swamps throughout the U.S. and Can. Stem woody at base, often pros- 
trate, and rooting at the summit, 3—8f in length, or erect and 2—3f high, 4—6 
angled. Leaves opposite or im whorls of 3, lanceolate, on short petioles, acute 
at base, 3—5’ long, gradually acuminate and acute at apex. Flowers in axil- 
lary, subsessile umbels of 3 or more, apparently whorled, constituting a long, 
leafy, terminal and showy panicle. Petals 5 or 6, large, and of a fine purple. 
Jl. Aug. 
a. aie ie and Jvs. beneath pubescent. R. Island. 
8. levigatum.—Glabrous and bright green. Most common in N. Eng, 
4. CUPHEA. 
Gr. xvgos, curved or gibbous ; in reference to the capsule. 
Calyx tubular, ventricose, with 6 erect teeth, and often as many 
intermediate processes; petals 6—7, unequal; stamens 11—14, 
rarely 6—7, unequal; style filiform; capsule membranaceous, 1—2- 
celled, few-seeded— Herbaceous or suffruticose. Lvs. opposite, entire. 
Fs. axillary and terminal. 
C. viscosissima. Jacq. (Lythrum petiolatum. Linn.) 
Herbaceous, viscid-pubescent; lvs. ovate-lanceolate, petiolate, scabrous; 
jis. on short peduncles; cal. gibbous at base on the upper side, 12-veined, 
6-toothed, very viscid.—@ Wet grounds, Pittsfield, Mass., Hitchcock, Cam- 
bridge, N. Y., Stevenson, toGa. and Ark. Stem 9—18! high, with alternate 
branches. Leaves somewhat repand, 1—2’ long, 4 as wide, on petioles } as 
long. Flowers solitary, one in each axil, irregular. Calyx often purple, ven- 
tricose. Petals violet, obovate. Stamens included. Capsule bursting length- 
wise before the seeds are ripe. Aug. ; 
56. HYPOBRICHIA. Curtis. 
Calyx 4-lobed, without accessory teeth ; petals 0; stamens 2—4; 
ovary 2-celled ; stigma 2-lobed, subsessile ; capsule globose, bursting 
irregularly, many-seeded— A submersed aquatic herb. Lws. opposite, 
crowded, linear. Els. axillary, sessile, minute. 
H. Nourratiu. Curt. (Peplis diandra. Nutt.) 
A little inhabitant of ponds and sluggish streams, Ill., Mead, Buckley, to 
Mo. and La. Its habit is similar toa Callitriche. Stem mostly submersed, 
10—20' long. Leaves 10—15” by 1—2”, very numerous. Jn.—Aug. 
Orver LV. ONAGRACEA.—Onacraps. 
Plants herbaceous, sometimes shrubby, with alternate or opposite leaves. 
Fils. axillary, or in terminal spikes or racemes. 
Cal.—Sepals 4, (2—6) united below into a tube, the lobes valvate in estivation. 
Cor.— } Petals 4, (2—6) inserted with the 4 or 8 (I—2~-3—8) stamens into the throat of the calyx. Pollen 
Sta.— (triangular, often cohering by threads. 
Ova. coherent with the tube of the calyx; placenta in the axis. 
Fr. baccate or capsular, 2—4 celled, many-seeded. Albwmen none. 
Genera 36, species 520, particularly abundant throughout America, more rare in the Old World They 
