786 KANUNCULUS. LCLASS XIII. ORDER in. 



English Botany, t. 308. English Flora, vol. iii. p. 43. Hooker, 

 British Flora, ed. 4. vol. i. p. 218. Lindley, Synopsis, p. 9. 



Soot tapering, with branched fibres. Stem erect, from one to two 

 feet high, smooth, furrowed, branched and leafy, sometimes rather 

 downy. Leaves alternate, pinnalifid, very numerously divided into 

 linear acute smooth segments, of a dark green, the lower on channeled 

 footstalks, the upper sessile. Flowers solitary, terminating the branches, 

 about half an inch across, of a fine dark shining crimson. Calyx of 

 five spreading sub-membranous ovate obtuse smooth pieces. Petals 

 from six to eight or ten, ovate, heart-shaped, concave, connivancing 

 into a globe-shaped flower, claw short, and usually with a dark spot 

 above it. Stamens numerous, with rather stout white filaments, curved 

 upwards. Anthers ovate, dark purple, of two cells. Styles short, 

 "spreading, with a simple spreading stigma. Capsules small, nume- 

 rous, roundish, smooth, reticulated, with a short beak formed by the 

 persistent style, collected into an ovate head. 



Habitat. Cora fields in various parts of England, but not common ; 

 about Glasgow, Scotland ; and Dublin, in Ireland. 



Animal ; flowering from May to October. 



The Pheasant's Eye is very frequent in corn fields on the Continent, 

 where also other species are found ; but with us this seems rather a 

 naturalized than an aboriginal plant. It flowers freely during the 

 summer months, but is not a very showy plant. By cultivation the 

 stamens are sometimes expanded into petals, but from its spreading 

 much branched stems and many leaves it is not a very favourite border 

 flower. 



GENUS XXII. RANUN'CULUS LINN. Crowfoot. 



Nat. Ord. RANCNCULA'CB^:. DE CAND. 



GEN. CHAR. Calyx of three to five pieces. Petals five to many, the 

 claw with a nectariferous gland, naked, or furnished with a scale. 

 Carpels numerous, ovate, sub-compressed, with a mucronated 

 apex, smooth, striated, tuberculated, or spinous, and collected into 

 a head. Named from Rana, a frog ; on account of many of the 

 species delighting to grow in wet or damp places where frogs 

 abound. 



* Pericarps transversely wrinkled ; petals white, the claw marked with 



a yellow nectariferous spot. 



1. R. hedera'cevs, Linn. (Fig. 893.) Ivy-leaved Crowfoot. Stem 

 creeping; leaves all roundish, kidney-shaped, three to five lobed ; 

 petals small, scarcely longer than the calyx; stamens five to twelve > 

 carpels smooth. 



