ORDER 63, UMBELLIFER.E. 383 



/3. ATROPURPUREUM. Fls. dark purple. K Y. to Tenn. (Thapsia trifoliata L.) 

 y. APTERUM Gray. Fr. with prominent sharp ribs, scarcely winged (Zizia 

 cordata Koch). 



3 T. barbinode Nutt. St. pubescent at the nodes; lower Ivs. triternate, upper 

 biternate, segm. cuueate-ovate, acute or acuminate, unequally and incisely ser- 

 rate, entire towards the base ; umbels terminal and opposite the leaves ; fr. ellip- 

 tical, large (3" long), 6- winged. River banks, Can. and U. S. St. 2 to 3f high, 

 angular and grooved, branching above. Lvs. smooth, upper ones sub-opposite ; 

 segm. 1 to 2' by to 1^'. Rays about 2' long, each about 20 flowered. Petals 

 deep yellow. Jn. 



4 T. pinnatifidum Gray. Si. rough puberulent above; Ivs. thrice ternate, the 

 upper biternate and ternate, Ifts. pinnatijid with linear or oblong segm.; fr. oblong, 

 narrowly 8-winged, small (2" long). Barrens, Ky. to E. Tenn. and W. Car. (Zizia 

 pinnatilida Buckley). 



16. ZIZ'IA, Koch. GOLDEN ALEXANDERS. (Dedicated to /. B. Ziz, 

 a Rhenish botanist.) Calyx margin obsolete; petals carinate, apex 

 acuminate, inflexed ; fr. oval, contracted at the commissure and didy- 

 mous ; carpels with 5 slightly prominent ribs ; intervals with 3 vittae, 

 commissure with 4 ; carpophore 2-partcd ; seeds terete or 5-angled. 

 It Smooth, erect, glaucous. Lvs. bi or tri-ternate, Ifts. entire. Umbels 

 perfect, with no involucre or involucels. Us. yellow. 



Z integerrima DC. Rocky woods, etc. Mich., N. T., to Ga. Plant 1 to 2f or more 

 high, readily recognized by its entire leaflets, which are oblong and ovate, 1' or 

 more in length, petiolate. Rays of the umbel very slender, 2 to 3' long, about 

 13 in number, with minute involucels or none. May JL 



17. SCAN'DIX, L. VENUS' COMB. (Gr. OKKU, to prick; on account 

 of, its sharp seeds :) Calyx limb obsolete ; petals obovate and oblong, 

 undivided, more or less unequal ; fruit laterally compressed or nearly 

 terete, attenuated into a beak which is longer than the seed ; carpels 

 with 5 obtuse, equal ribs, vittae 0, or scarcely any. (T) or (D Lvs. finely 

 dissected. Invol. 0. Involuccl 5 to 7-lcaved. Fls. white. 



S. apiculata "Willd. Slender, with slender branches and long petioles on inflated 

 sheaths ; the pinnas 3 or 4 remote pairs dichotomously decompound ; ultimate 

 segri(. acute ; umbels about 3-rayed ; bracts of the involucel lance-ovate, 2 or 3- 

 cuspidate ; pet. oblong ; fr. beak long, slender, forked at apex with the sty. A 

 curious plant found near Savannah (Feay), much resembling the S. pecten of 

 Europe. Sts. 12 to 18' high. Fr. 9" long. 



18. OSMORHPZA, Raf. SWEET CICELY. (Gr. oop), perfume, pifr, 

 root; from the anisate, aromatic root.) Calyx margin obsolete; petals 

 oblong, r.early entire, the cuspidate point inflexed ; styles conical at 

 base; fruit linear, very long, clavatc, attenuate at baso; carpels with 5 

 equal, acute, bristly ribs ; intervals without vitta) ; commissure with a 

 deep, bristly channel. If Lvs. biternately divided, with the umbels 

 opposite. Invol. few-leaved ; involucels 4 to 7-leaved. Fls. white. 



J. O. longistylis DC. Sty. filiform, nearly as long as the ovary ; fr. clavate. 

 Woods, Can. to Va., 1 to 3f high, with inconspicuous umbels of white flowers. 

 Rt. branching, fleshy, of an agreeable, spicy flavor. St. erect, branching above, 

 nearly smooth. Lvs. many, decompound, the ultimate divisions often pinnate ; 

 Ifts. irregularly divided, the lobes broadly ovate, slightly pubescent. Involucres 

 of linear bracts longer than the rays. Fr. blackish, an inch in length, crowned 

 with the slender persistent styles. May, Jn. (Fig. 207.) 



2 O. brevfstylis DC. Sty. conical, scarcely as long as the breadth of the ovary ; 

 fr. somewhat tapering at the summit. Common in woods, Can. to Penn. W. to 

 Or. Aspect similar to that of the preceding, but the root is destitute of the anise- 

 like flavor of that species, being disagreeable to the taste. The plant is more 



