CUPDLIFERuE. (OAK FAMILY.) 403 



kernel is difficult of extraction from the thick and bony nut. .- A var. MAXIMA, 

 Nutt., bears fruit '"'as large as an apple," with an exceeding!/ thick husk. 

 o. C. microcarpa, Nutt. (SMALL-FRUITED HICKORY.) Leaflets 5- 



7, oblong-lanceolate, serrate, glandular underneath (not downy) ; catkins smooth ; 

 fruit roundish-ocoid, with a thin husk : nut slightly 4-angled, the shell rather thin. 



Moist woodlands, Penn. (N. England?) and southwcstward. ITruit only f 

 in diameter, shaped like that of the last ; the foliage much as in the next. 



6. C. glabra, Torr. (PIG-NUT or BSOOM HICKORY.) Leaflets 5-7, 

 ovate-lanceolate, serrate, smooth or nearly so ; fruit pear-shaped or roundish-obovate, 

 thin, splitting about half-way down into 4 coriaceous valves; nut hard and 

 tough, with a sweetish or bitterish small kernel. (C. porcina, Nutt.) Wood- 

 lands; common. A large tree, with a close bark, very tough and valuable 

 wood, and exceedingly tough sprouts (used as hickory withes) : the fruit and nuts 

 of variable form. 



* =fc * Seed intensely bitter : husk thin and soft : bark smooth : buds little scaly. 



7. C. amara, Nutt. (BITTER-NUT or SWAMP HICKORY.) Leaflets 

 7-11, oblong-lanceolate, serrate, smooth ; fruit globular, with ridged or promi- 

 nent seams opening half-way down ; nut inversely heart-shaped, its shell thin 

 and fragile. Wet woods ; common. A graceful tree; the timber inferior to 

 the other Hickories. Nut-shell so fragile that it may be crushed with the hand; 

 the bitter kernel remarkably corrugated. 



ORDER 107. CTJPULIFER^E. (OAK FAMILY.) 



Trees 0? shrubs, with alternate and simple straight-veined leaves, deciduous 

 stipules, and monoecious flowers ; the sterile in catkins (aments) (or capitate- 

 clustered in the Beech) ; the fertile solitary or clustered, furnished icith an 

 involucre which forms a cup or covering to the l-celled I -seeded nut. Ovary 

 2-7-celled, with 1-2 pendulous anatropous ovules in each cell; but all 

 the cells and ovules except one disappearing in the fruit. Calyx adherent 

 to the ovary, the minute teeth crowning its summit. Seed with no albu- 

 men, filled with the embryo: cotyledons very thick and fleshy: radicle 

 short, superior. 



Synopsis. 



* Fertile flowers scattered or few in a cluster. 



1. QUERCUS. Involucre 1-flowered, of many imbricated small scales, forming a cup around 



the base of the hard and rounded nut. 



2. CASTANEA Involucre 2-3-flowcred, forming a prickly bur enclosing 1-3 coriaceout 



nuts, opening at length by 4 valves. 



8. FAGUS Involucre 2-flowered, rather prickly. 4-valved, enclosing 2 sharply triangular 



nuts. Sterile flowers in capitate clusters. 



4. CORYLUS Involucre 1 - 2-flowered, formed of 2 - 3 confluent scales, which lecome leafy- 



coriaceous, much enlarged and cut or torn at the apex, enclosing a bony nut. 

 * * Fertile flowers clustered in a kiud of ament. 



5. CARPINUS. Involucre a separate open leaf, 2-flowered. Fruit a small ovoid nut. 



6. OSTRYA. Involucre a bladdery bag, 1-flowered, enclosing the seed-like nut. 



