106 SAPINDACE^E. % Msculus. 



CARDIOSPERMUM is represented in Lower California by a single species (C. tortuosum, Benth. 

 Bot. Sulph. 9, t. 6), and in cultivation by the Balloon Vine (C. Halicacabum, Linn.), which is 

 native from Texas through Tropical America. The species are climbers, with biternate leaves, 

 and bladdery inflated 3-lobed and 3-celled capsules. 



1. .ZEsculus. Leaves opposite, palmately 5 - 9-foliolate. Calyx tubular. Petals 4 or 5, with 



claws. Ovules 6, a pair in each cell of the ovary, only one or two maturing into the large 

 chestnut-like seed. 



SUBORDER II. ACERINE^E. 



Flowers polygamous or direcious, regular, ofteii without petals. Ovary 2-lobed 

 and 2-celled ; the cells 2-ovuled but only 1 -seeded, each producing a wing and be- 

 coming a samara. Seed without albumen ; the embryo coiled or folded. Leaves 

 opposite, without stipules. 



2. Acer. Leaves palmately lobed or rarely divided. Flowers polygamous. 



3. Negundo. Leaves pinnate. Flowers dioecious, apetalous. 



SUBORDER III. STAPHYLEACE^E. 



Flowers perfect, regular, and symmetrical except the pistil. Fruit capsular, 

 mostly several-seeded. Seeds with a bony coat, and a straight embryo with broad 

 flat cotyledons, in fleshy albumen. 



4. Staphylea. Erect and unguiculate petals and stamens 5. Styles and lobes of the bladdery 



several-seeded capsule 3. Leaves opposite and compound, stipulate and stipellate. 



ANOMALOUS GENUS. 



5. Glossopetalon. Lobes of the calyx and the slender spreading petals 5. Stamens 10. Pistil 



a single 2-ovuled carpel, in fruit a cartilaginous follicle : style hardly any. Leaves alter- 

 nate, simple and entire, with small adnate stipules. 



1. JESCULUS, Linn. HOUSE-CHESTNUT. BUCKEYE. 



Flowers polygamous. Calyx tubular, unequally 5-toothed. Petals 4 or 5, un- 

 equal, with claws. Stamens 5 to 8, exserted and often unequal. Ovary 3-celled : 

 ovules 2 in each cell, one or both abortive : style elongated. Fruit a large leathery 

 loculicidally 3-valved pod. Seed without albumen ; its coat thick and shining, 

 showing a large round scar. Cotyledons large and fleshy, somewhat coherent. 

 Trees or shrubs ; leaves opposite, digitate, without stipules ; leaflets serrate, pin- 

 nately veined ; flowers showy, on jointed pedicels, in a large terminal thyrse or 

 panicle, mostly sterile. 



A 



America, 



is often seen in cultivation, and grows to be a large tree. The seeds are farinaceous but un- 

 palatable and unwholesome ; those of the Californian species are said to be eaten by the Indians. 



1. JE. Californica, Nutt. Leaflets 4 to 7, usually 5, smooth, oblong-lanceo- 

 late, acute, obtuse at base, slenderly petiolulate, serrulate, 3 to 5 inches long : 

 flowers in a close finely pubescent thyrse which is 6 to 12 inches long : calyx 2- 

 lobed, the lobes scarcely toothed : petals slightly unequal, white or pale rose, half 

 an inch long or more : stamens 5 to 7 ; anthers orange-colored : ovary densely 

 pubescent: fruit unarmed, usually 1 -seeded : seed an inch in diameter. Torr. & 

 Gray, Fl. i. 251 ; Nutt. Sylva, ii. 69, t. 64; Newberry, Pacif. E. Rep. vi. 20, fig. 

 1 ; Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 5077. 



From San Luis Obispo to Mendocino Co. and Mt. Shasta, and in the foot-hills of the Sierra 

 Nevada. It is usually a shrub 10 to 15 feet high, but sometimes in the valleys, particularly 



genus of about 15 species, nearly half North American, two in the mountains of Central 

 srica, the rest in Asia. The Horse-chestnut, ^E. Hippocastanum, Linn., originally from Asia, 



