KANUNCULACEAE 431 



mostly 5, thin, ovate or oblong, 2.5-7.5 cm. long, incisely toothed, cleft or divided, acute, 

 euneate, shining, sessile : branches of the raceme or panicle slender, drooping, 5-7.5 cm. 

 long : flowers about 4 mm. broad, pedicelled, solitary or 2 or 3 together, brownish purple : 

 sepals ovate, acute : follicles 4-8, inflated, light yellow, 1-seeded, diverging, curved at the 

 apex, minutely beaked. 



In woods and on rocky ledges, southwestern New York to western Florida and Alabama. Spring. 

 SHRUB YELLOW-ROOT. BROOK-FEATHER. 



5. COPTIS Salisb. 



Low perennial scapose herbs, with slender rootstocks. Leaves basal : blades compound 

 or divided, petioled. Scape slender. Sepals 5-7, petal-like, deciduous. Petals 5-6, white, 

 small, linear, cucullate. Stamens numerous. Carpels stipitate, few, in fruit forming an 

 umbel of follicles. 



1. Coptis trifolia (L.) Salisb. Foliage glabrous. Plants tufted, 7-15 cm. high from 

 slender or filiform yellow bitter rootstocks : leaves all basal, evergreen, with long, very 

 slender petioles; blades reniform in outline, 2.5-5 cm. broad, 3-divided, the segments broadly 

 obovate-cuneate, obtuse, prominently nerved, crenate, or slightly lobed, dark green or 

 shining above, paler beneath, the teeth mucronate : scape 1-flowered, slender : sepals 

 oblong, obtuse : petals small, club-shaped : follicles 3-7, about 6 mm. long, borne on 

 stipes of about their own length, spreading, each tipped with a beak 2-3 mm. long. 



In damp mossy woods and bogs, Newfoundland to Minnesota, British Columbia and Alaska, and 

 in the Alleghenies to North Carolina. Spring and summer. GOLD-THREAD. 



6. ISOPYRUM L. 



Slender perennial caulescent herbs, with glabrous foliage. Leaves basal and cauline : 

 blades ternately decompound. Flowers solitary or panicled, white. Sepals 5-9, petal-like, 

 deciduous. Petals 5, nectariform, or wanting. Stamens numerous. Carpels 2-20, sessile 

 (stalked in a western species), forming a head of follicles in fruit, each with several ovules. 



1. Isopymm biternatum (Kaf. ) T. & G. Eoots fibrous and sometimes tuberiferous. 

 Stems slender, erect, paniculately branching above : basal leaves with long petioles ; 

 blades biternate, thin, the ultimate segments broadly obovate, obtuse, lobed or divided : 

 upper leaves similar to the basal but sessile or with short petioles : flowers several, terminal 

 or axillary, white, 1-2 cm. broad : sepals 5, oblong or somewhat obovate, obtuse : petals 

 wanting : stamens many : filaments slender, thickened above : carpels few : follicles widely 

 spreading, ovate, 4 mm. long, several-seeded, each tipped with a beak nearly one-half 

 the length of tl\p body. 



In moist woods and thickets, Ontario to Minnesota, Florida and Texas. Spring. FALSE RUE 

 ANEMONE. 



7. CIMICIFUGA L. 



Perennial herbs, with stout poisonous rootstocks and tall erect sterns. Leaves large, 

 with decompound blades. Flowers white, in racemes. Sepals 2-5, petal-like, deciduous. 

 Petals 1-8, small, clawed, 2-lobed, or wanting. Carpels 1-8, many-ovuled, sessile or stipi- 

 tate. Stigma broad or minute. Follicles dry, dehiscent at maturity. 



Carpels 1 or 2, sessile : seeds wholly or partially in 2 rows. 



Filaments about 4 mm. long : follicles 8-10 mm. long : seeds chaffy. 1. C. rubi/olia. 



Filaments about 8 mm. long : follicles 5-7 mm. long : seeds smooth. 2. C. racemosa. 



Carpels 3 or 8, stalked : seeds in 1 row. 3. C. Americana. 



1. Cimicifuga rubifolia Kearney. Stems erect, 6-14 dm. tall, slender above the 

 stout 4-angled base, terete above, with 1 or 2 leaves near the base. Leaves ample, the blades 

 biternate, the lateral divisions 2-foliolate, the terminal divisions mostly simple : leaflets 

 broadly ovate or suborbicular, or broader than long, with irregular acute or acuminate lobes, 

 sharply toothed, 12-20 cm. broad, light green beneath, cordate at the base : panicle of 2-4 

 slender racemes, the terminal one 15-30 cm. long : pedicels 4-5 mm. long at maturity, sub- 

 tended by lanceolate-subulate bracts: sepals 4.5-5 mm. long, fugacious, obtuse: petals 

 wanting : filaments about 4 mm. long, flattened : pistil sessile : follicles 8-10 mm. long, be- 

 coming parchment-like, prominently nerved, each with a short blunt lateral beak : seeds 

 usually 6, lenticular, 3 mm. long. 



On wooded bluffs of the Tennessee River, near Knoxville, Tennessee. Fall. 



2. Cimicifuga racemosa (L. ) Nutt. Stems slender, 1-2.5 m. high, leafy above. 

 Leaf -blades ternate, the divisions pinnate and the secondary divisions often again compound : 



