POLYGONACEiE. (BUCKWHEAT FAMILY.) 373 



* * SJieatlts ciliate or fringed ivith bristles. 

 ■*- Root annual: stamens 6-8 : styles most commonly 2 : achenium mostly flat. 



6. P. Careyi, Olney. Stem much branched, upright (3° -5° high), glan- 

 dular-bristly ; leaves lanceolate, bristly on the midrib and margins ; spikes elon- 

 gated, cylindrical, drooping, on long bristly -glandular peduncles, rather dense (l'-4' 

 long); stamens 6-S; style 2-parted; fruit lenticular, tumid, very smooth and 

 shining. — Shaded swamps, Vermont and Maine to Rhode Island, and doubtless 

 westward. Aug., Sept. — Leaves 4' -10' long, roughish. Flowers rose-purple, 

 somewhat tinged with green. 



7. P. Persicaria, L. (Lady's Thumb.) Stem smooth (12' -18' high) ; 

 leaves lanceolate, pointed, roughish, usually marked with a dark triangular or lunar 

 spot near the middle ; spikes ovoid or oblong, dense, erect, on smooth (or at least not 

 glandular) peduncles (V long); stamens mostly 6; styles half 2 - 3-cleft ; fruit 

 gibbous-flattened or rarely triangular, smooth and shining. (5) — Waste and 

 damp places; very common. July, Aug. — Flowers greenish-purple. Plant 

 not acrid. (Nat. from Eu.) 



8. P. Htdropxper, L. (Smart-weed.) Smooth (l°-2° high), very 

 acrid; leaves lanceolate, pellucid-dotted; spikes slender, but short, loosely flowered, 

 greenish, drooping; calyx dotted with pellucid glands; stamens mostly 6 ; styles 

 2 - 3-partcd ; fruit minutely striate, dull or little shining, flat or flattish, or ob- 

 tusely triangular. — Moist or wet grounds, mostly in waste places. Aug., Sept. 

 (Nat. from Eu.) 



-•- +- Root perennial (or mostly so) : stamens 8 : styles 3 : achenium sharply triangu- 

 lar, smooth and shining. (Stems often decumbent or creeping at the base and rooting 

 from the joints: spikes few or single.) 



9. P. sicre, H. B. K. (Wild Smart-weed.) Smooth, or nearly so (1° 

 -3° high) ; leaves lanceolate, pellucid-dotted ; spikes very slender, erect, interrupted 

 below, whitish or flesh-color ; calyx dotted with pellucid glands ; style 3-parted. 

 (P. punctatum, EU. P. hydropipcroides, Pursh.) — Wet places; common, es- 

 pecially southward. 



10. P. hydropiperoides, Michx. (Mild Water-Pepper.) Stem 

 smooth (l°-3° high), the narrow sheaths hairy, fringed with rather long bris- 

 tles ; leaves roughish or appressed-pubescent, not acrid, narrowly lanceolate, tapering 

 to both ends; spikes rather slender, erect (l'-2^' long), rose-color; calyx not glan- 

 dular-dotted; style half 3-cleft. (P. mite, Pers., not of Schrank.) — Wet places, 

 and in shallow water ; common, especially southward. Aug. 



§ 4. AVICULARIA, Meisn. — Calyx more or less petal-like , 5-parted: stamens 8, 

 sometimes 3 - 6 ; the filaments awl-shaped, 3 of them broader at the base : stigmas 

 3, globose, nearly sessile : achenium 3-sided (cotyledons incumbent : albumen horny) : 

 commonly annuals, smooth and axillary, with small leaves : flowers sometimes crowd- 

 ed in interrupted spikes along the leafless summit of the branches. 



# Flowers truly axillary, 2-3 together, or rarely solitary : sheaths usually 2 - 3-parted 



and cut-fringed or torn. 



11. P. iaviculare, L. (Knotgrass. Goose-grass. Door-weed.) 



Prostrate or spreading ; leaves sessile, lanceolate or oblong, pale ; flowers apparently 



