88 VITACEAE. 



1. C. reclinata (L'Her.) Brongn. Tree becoming 20 m. tall, with puberulent 

 twigs: leaf -blades ovate-oblong or rarely oval or obovate 3-8 cm. long: sepals 

 about 2 mm. long: petals about 1.5 mm. long: drupe slender-pedicelled, seated 

 on the shallow hypanthium. Hammocks, U. keys. [E. K.] (Bah., Cuba, 

 Ant.) NAKEDWOOD. 



2. 0. Colubrina (Jacq.) Millsp. Shrub or small tree, with rusty-tomentose 

 twigs: leaf -blades ovate, oblong, elliptic, or rarely oblanceolate, 5-15 cm. long: 

 sepals about 2.5 mm. long: petals somewhat longer than those of C. reclinata: 

 drupe stout-pedicelled, partly immersed in the deep hypanthium. Hammocks. 

 U. keys, L. keys. [E. K.] (Bah., Cuba, Ant.) WILD-COFFEE. 



4. GOUANIA Jacq. Shrubs or vines. Leaves alternate: blades broad. 

 Flowers polygamous, the inflorescence-branches often tendril-bearing. Sepals 

 5, spreading. Petals 5, clawed, the blades scoop-like. Stamens 5, each sur- 

 rounded by a petal. Drupe capsule-like, 3-winged, separating into 3-carpels. 



1. G. lupuloides (L.) Urban. Climber: leaf -blades oval or elliptic, varying 

 to ovate, 3-9 cm. long: spikes 6-15 cm. long: petals 1 mm. long, short-clawed: 

 drupes depressed, about 10 mm. broad. [G. domingensis L.] Hammocks, U. 

 keys, L. keys. [E. K.] (Baft., Cuba, Ant.) 



FAMILY 2. VITACEAE. GRAPE FAMILY. 



Vines, sometimes bushy or tree-like, usually with tendrils. Leaves 

 alternate, or the lower ones opposite : blades simple or compound. Flowers 

 perfect, polygamous, or dioecious, in flat-topped or elongate clusters. 

 Calyx of 4 or 5 sepals, or obsolete. Corolla of 4 or 5, often caducous, 

 petals, or wanting. Androecium of 4 or 5 stamens opposite the petals. 

 Gynoecium of usually 2 united carpels. Fruit a berry. 



Hypogynous disk present, either annular, cup-shaped or glandular : leaf-blades simple 



or ternately compound. 



Petals cohering into a cap, caducous, never separating. 1. MUSCADIXIA. 



Petals distinct, spreading. 2. Cissus. 



Hypogynous disk wanting or obsolete: leaf -blades digltately 



5-7-foliolate. 3. PABTHENOCISSUS. 



1. MUSCADINIA Small. Vines. Leaf -blades angled or coarsely toothed. 

 Flowers in racemes or panicles. Calyx minute. Petals cohering. Berries 

 rather juicy, ultimately edible. 



1. M. Munsoniana (Simpson) Small. Leaf -blades thinnish, but rather firm, 

 suborbicular or reniform, 4-8 cm. broad, coarsely toothed, glabrous, except the 

 axils of the vein beneath, persistent, cordate at the base : berries globose, 1-1.5 

 cm. in diameter, nearly black under a slight bloom or shining, the skin and 

 pulp tender, acid: seeds 3-5 mm. long. Hammocks, U. keys. [E. K.] (Bah.) 



BtJLLACE-GRAPE. 



2. CISSUS L. Fleshy vines. Leaf-blades simple or 3-foliolate. Flowers 

 in small cymes. Petals spreading. Berries inedible. 



Leaf-blades simple, distantly serrate. 1. C. sicyoidea. 



Leaf-blades 3-foliolate, the leaflets coarsely toothed. 2. G. trifoliata. 



1. C. sicyoides L. Plants pubescent: leaf -blades ovate or oblong-ovate, 2-8 

 cm. long, acute or often acuminate: berries subglobose, about 1 cm. in diam- 

 eter, black. Hammocks, U. keys, L. keys. [E. K.] (Ber., Bah., Cuba, Ant.) 



2. C. trifoliata L. Plants glabrous: leaf-blades 3-foliolate; leaflets 1-3 cm. 

 long, suborbicular varying to ovate or obovate, often flabellate : berries globose- 



