372 AMARANTHACEAE (AMARANTH FAMILY) 



distinguished from the following species chiefly by its smoother character, thicker 

 spikes, and longer-awned bracts. 



4. A. PANICUL\TUS L. (PURPLE A.) Stem mostly pubescent; leaves 

 oblong-ovate or ovate-lanceolate ; spikes long, numerous and slender, panicled, 

 spreading; bracts merely awn-pointed; flowers small, green tinged with red, or 

 sometimes crimson ; fruit Z-S-toothed at the apex, longer than the calyx. (A. 

 hybridns, var. Uline & Bray.) Roadsides, etc. (Adv. from Trop. Am.) 



* * Flowers crowded in close and small axillary clusters ; stems low, spreading 

 or ascending; stamens and sepals 3, or the former only 2. 



5. A. graecizans L. (TUMBLE WEED.) Smooth, pale 

 green ; stems whitish, erect or ascending, diffusely branched ; 

 leaves small, obovate and spatulate-oblong, very obtuse or 

 retuse ; flowers greenish ; sepals 



acuminate, half the length of the 

 rugose fruit, much shorter than 

 the subulate rigid pungently pointed 

 bracts; seed small, 0.8mm. broad. 

 (A. albus L.) Waste grounds, 

 common. FIG. 720. 



6. A. blitoides Wats. Like the 

 last, but prostrate or decumbent; 



graec s 8pikelets usually contracted ; bracts 



orate-oblong, shortly acuminate; 

 sepals obtuse or acute ; fruit not rugose ; seed about 

 1.5 mm. broad. From Minn, to Mo., Tex., and 

 westw. ; also introduced eastw. , chiefly on railroad 

 ballast. FIG. 721. Tip of branch x Vs Seed x 4. 



2. Utricle thinnish, bursting or imperfectly circumscissile ; flowers monoecious. 



I. A. spiN6sus L. (THORNY A.) Smooth, bushy-branched ; stem reddish ; 

 leaves rhombic-ovate or ovate-lanceolate, dull green, a pair of spines in their 

 axils ; upper clusters sterile, forming long and slender spikes ; the fertile globular 

 and mostly in the axils ; flowers yellowish-green, small. Waste grounds, Me. 

 to Minn., and southw. (Nat. from Trop. Am.) 



3. EtlXOLUS (Raf.) Gray. Utricle remaining closed or bursting irregu- 

 larly ; no spines ; bracts inconspicuous. 



* Leaves relatively large (2-3 cm. in breadth). 



8. A. LfviDus L. Stem fleshy, red ; leaves emarginate, ovate 

 or obovate, 2-4 cm. long, on petioles two thirds as long ; bracts 

 very short ; utricle thin, smooth. About Atlantic ports, not very 

 common. FIG. 722. (Adv. from Trop. Am.) 



9. A. vfRims L. Similar, but with a warty 

 722. A. lividus. utricle. About Atlantic ports; also reported in 



Calyx and utricle Q. FIG. 723. (Adv. from Trop. Am.) 723 A viridis 



x 3. 



* * Leaves smaller. Calyx and utricle 



x 3 



10. A. pumilus Raf. Low or prostrate ; leaves fleshy and 

 obovate, emarginate, strongly nerved ; flower-clusters small and axillary ; 

 stamens and sepals 5, the latter half the length of the obscurely 5-ribbed fruit. 

 Sandy beaches, R. I. to N. C. 



II. A. DEFLEXUS L. Low, spreading; leaves ovate, thin, flat; spikes chiefly 

 terminal, thickish, bluntly cordate ; utricle ovoid, smooth, 6-nerved, much 

 longer than the sepals. Waste land near the larger Atlantic ports. (Adv. 

 from Eu.) 



12. A. CRfspus (Leap. & The>.) A. Br. Very slender, procumbent, pubes- 

 cent ; leaves small, light green, rhombic-ovate to -lanceolate, acute, the margin 

 crisped and undulate ; flowers in small axillary clusters ; bracts and sepals 

 scarious, oblanceolate, acute or obtuse ; utricle about as long, roughened, neither 



