134 off A GRACED. (EVENING-PRIMROSE FAMILY.) 



1. C. .Llltetiana, L. Stem, mostly pubescent (l-2 high) ; leaves ovate, 

 pointed, Bllffhtly toothed ; bracts none; hairs of the roundish 2-ccl.l<-d fruit bristly. 

 Mois; woodlands. July. (Eu.) 



2. C Sllpinzi, L. Low (3'-S' high), smooth and weak; leaves heart-ehaped, 

 thin, shining, coarsely toothed: bracts minute; hairs of the obovatc-oblong l-celled 

 fruit soft and slender. Cold woods; common northward. July. (Eu.) 



SUBORDER II. HAL.OKAGE JB. THE WATER-MILFOIL FAMILY. 



7. PROSERPIWACA, L. MERMAID-WEED. 



Calyx -tube 3-sided, the limb 3-parted. Petals none. Stamens 3. Stigmas 

 3, cylindrical. Fruit bony, 3-angled, 3-celled, 3-seeded, nut-like. Low, peren- 

 nial herbs, with the stems creeping at the base (whence the name, from proserpo, 

 to creep), alternate leaves, and small perfect flowers sessile in the axils, solitary 

 or 3 - 4 together. 



1. I*. pSil&BSfriSf L. Leaves lanceolate, sharply serrate, the lower pecti- 

 nate when under water ; fruit sharply angled. Wet swamps. June - Aug. 



2. P. pcctinacca, Lam. Leaves all pectinate, the divisions linear-awl- 

 shaped ; fruit rather obtusely angled. Sandy swamps, near the coast. 



8. BIYRIOPIli'LLIJM, Vaffl. WATER-MILFOIL. 



Flowers monoecious Or polygamous. Calyx of the sterile flowers 4-parted, of 

 the fertile 4-toothed. Petals 4, or none. Stamens 4-8. Fruit nut-like, 4- 

 celled, deeply 4-lobed : stigmas 4, recurved. Perennial aquatics. Leaves 

 crowded, often whorlcd; those under water pinnatcly parted into capillary 

 divisions. Flowers sessile in the axils of the upper leaves, produced above 

 water ; the uppermost staminate. (Name from pvpios, a thousand, and </>uAXoi/, 

 a leaf, i. e. Milfoil.) 

 # Stamens 8 : petals deciduous : carpels even : leaves whorled in threes or fours. 



1. !?! S]>icatiiBii, L. Leaves all pinnately parted and capillary, except 

 the floral ones or bracts; these are ovate, entire or toothed, and chiefly shorter than 

 the Jlowers, which thus appear to form an interrupted leafless spike. Deep 

 water, common. July, Aug. (Eu.) 



2. HI, verticillsYtlim, L. Floral leaves much longer than the Jlowers, pec- 

 tinate-pinmifijid: otherwise nearly as No. 1. Ponds, &c. northward. (Eu.) 



* # Stamens 4 : petals rather persistent : carpels 1 - 2-rtdged and rotu/hencd on the 

 back : leaves whorled in fours and Jives, the lower with capillary divisions. 



3. M. heteropliylluin, Michx. Stem stout ; floral leaves ovate and 

 lanceolate, thick, crowded, sharply serrate, the lowest pinnatifid ; fruit obscurely 

 roughened. Lakes and rivers, from N. New York westward and southward. 



4. HI. SOabrntllin, Michx. Stem rather slender ; lower leaves pinnatcly 

 parted with few capillary divisions ; JJoral /Kins /incur (rarely scattered), /xctimtte- 

 toothcd or cnt-scmifc- : rar/K/s Rt rough/ 2-riili/ed and roughened on the back. Shal- 

 low ponds, from Rhode Island and Ohio southward. 



