(CAT-TAIL FAMILY.) 429 



6. AC OR US, L. SWEET FLAG. CALAMUS. 



Spadix lateral, sessile, emerging from the side of a scape which resembles the 

 leaves, densely covered with perfect flowers. Sepals 6, concave. Stamens 6 : 

 filaments linear : anthers kidney-shaped, 1 -celled, opening across. Ovary 2-3- 

 celled, with several pendulous orthotropous ovules in each wll : stigma minute. 

 Fruit at length dry, gelatinous inside, 1 -few-seeded. Embryo in the axis of 

 albumen. -Pungent aromatic plants, especially the thick creeping rootstocks 

 (calamus of the shops), which send up 2-edged sword -like leaves, and scapes 

 similar to them, bearing th-e spadix on one edge; the upper and more foliaceous 

 prolongation sometimes considered as an open spathe. (The ancient name, 

 from a privative, and K.opn, the pupil of the eye, having been used as a remedy 

 >r sore eyes.) 



1. A. Calamus, L. Scape leaf-like and prolonged far beyond the 

 rlindrical (yellowish-green) spadix. Margin of rivulets, swamps, &c. June 

 It appears to be truly indigenous northward. (Eu.) 



ORDER 113. TYPHACE^E. (CAT-TAIL FAMILY.) 



Marsh herbs, with nerved and linear sessile leaves, and monoecious fl,owers 

 on a spadix or in heads, destitute of proper floral envelopes. Ovary taper- 

 ing into a slender style and usually an elongated 1 -sided stigma. Fruit nut- 

 like when ripe, 1 -seeded. Seed suspended, anatropous : embryo straight 

 in copious albumen. Comprises only the two following genera. 





1. TYPIIA, Tourn. CAT-TAIL FLAG. 



wers in a long and very dense cylindrical spike terminating the stem ; the 

 upper part consisting of stamens only, intermixed with simple hairs, and insert- 

 ed directly on the axis ; the lower or fertile part consisting of ovaries, surrounded 

 by club-shaped bristles, which form the copious down of the fruit. Nutlets 

 minute, very long-stalked. Spathes merely deciduous bracts, or none. Root- 

 stocks creeping. Leaves long, sheathing the base of the simple jointless stems, 

 erect, thickish. (Name from rl^os, a fen, alluding to the place of growth.) 



1. T. latifolia, L. (COMMON CAT-TAIL or REED-MACE.) Leaves near- 

 ly flat ; staminate and pistillate parts of the spike approximate or continuous. 

 Borders of ponds, c. July. (Eu.) 



2. T. aiBjfiBStifolia, L. (NARROW-LEAVED or SMALL CAT-TAIL.) 

 leaves channelled towards the base, nairowly linear ; staminate and pistillate parts 

 of 'the spike usually separated by an interval. In similar places Avith the last; 

 a rarer and smaller plant; probably a mere variety of it. (Eu.) 



2. SPARGANIUM, Tourn. BUR-REED. 



Flowers collected in separate dense spherical heads, scattered along the sum- 

 mit of the stem, subtended by leaf-like bracts, the upper ones sterile, consisting 

 merely of stamens, with minute scales irregularly interposed ; the lower or for- 



