MENISPERMACE^. ( MOONSEKD FAMILY.) 51 



Order 4. MENISPERMXCEiE. (Mooxseed Family.) 



Woody climbers, wUh palmate or peltate alternate leaves, no stipules, the 

 sepals and petals similar, in three or more rows, imbricated in the bud ; hy- 

 pogynous, dicecious, 3-6-gynous ; fruit a 1-seeded drupe, with a large or 

 long curved embryo in scanty albumen. — Flowers small. Stamens sev' 

 eral. Ovaries nearly straight, with the stigma at the apex, but often 

 incurved in fruiriui, so that the seed and embryo arc bent into a cres- 

 cent or ring. — Chiefly a tropical family. 



* Sepals and petals present. Anthers 4-celle(l. Seed incurved. 



1. Cocculns. Stamens, petals, and sepals each 6. 



2. Menisperiniiin. Stamens 12-24, slender. Petals 6-8. 



* * Petals none. Anthers 2-celled. Seed saucer-shaped. 



3. Calycocarpuiu. Stamens in the sterile flowers 12 ; in the fertile flowers 6, abortive. 



1. COCCULUS, DC. 



Sepals, petals, and stamens 6, alternating in threes, the two latter short. 

 Anthers 4-cened. Pistils 3-6 in the fertile flowers; style pointed. Drujte 

 and seed as in Menispermum. — Flowers in axillary racemes or panicles. (.An 

 old name, a diminutive of coccus, kokkos, a lierry.) 



1. C. Cai'Olinus, DC. Minutely pubescent; leaves downy beneath, 

 ovate or cordate, entire or sinuately or hastately lobed, variable in shape ; 

 flowers greenish, the petals iu the sterile ones auriculate-inflexed below around 

 the filaments; drupe red (as large as a small pea). — River-bauks, Va. to S. 

 111., Kan., and southward. July, Aug. 



2. MENISPERMUM, L. Mooxseed. 



Sepals 4-8. Petals 6-8, short. Stamens 12-24 iu the sterile flowers, as 

 long as the sepals; anthers 4-celled. Pistils 2-4 in the fertile flowers, raised 

 on a short common receptacle ; stigma broad and flat. Drupe globular, the 

 mark of the stigma near the base, the ovary in its growth after flowering being 

 strongly incurved, so that the (wrinkled and grooved) laterally flattened stone 

 takes the form of a large crescent or ring. The slender embrvo therefore 

 is horseshoe-shaped; cotyledons filiform. — Flowers wlute, in small and loose 

 axillary panicles. (Name from iJ.r}vr], moon, and (nrfp/xa, s>rd.) 



1. M. Canadense, L. Leaves peltate near the edge, .3-7-angled or 

 lobed. — iJanks of streams; common. June, July. — Drupes l)lack with a 

 bloom, ripe iu September, looking like frost grapes. 



3. CALYCOCARPUM, Xutt. Clpseed. 



Sepals 6, petaloid. Petals none. Stamens 12 in the sterile flowers, short ; 

 anthers 2-celled. Pistils 3, spindle-shaped, tipped with a rach'ate many-cleft 

 stigma. Drupe globular ; tlie thin crustaceous putamen hollowed out like a 

 cup on one side. End)ryo fuliaceous, heart-shaped. — Flowers greenish-wliite, 

 in long racemose panicles. (Xame from kuKv^, a cup, and napiros, fruit.) 



1. C. Ly6ni, Nutt. Leaves large, thin, deeply 3- o-lobed, cordate at the 

 base; the lobes acuminate; drupe an iuch long, black when ripe; the shell 



