Lli.l MINOSAK. 



151 



Wistkria. Wistaria. 

 (Family Leguminosae). 



Woody twiners: deciduous. 

 Stems moderate, somewhat fluted: 

 pith moderate, white or becoming 

 brown, round, continuous. Buds 

 moderate, solitary, sessile, nar- 

 rowly oblong, very acute, nearly 

 surrounded by the outer scale. 

 Leaf-scars alternate, transversely 

 elliptical, much raised and with a 

 horn- or wart-like prominence at 

 each side: bundle-trace 1, trans- 

 verse: stipule-scars lacking. 



Winter-character references: 

 Wisteria brachybotrys. Shirasawa, 

 260, pi. 7. W. polystachya. Schnei- 

 der, f. 81. 



The different species of Wiste- 

 ria are not easily named except 

 when they are in flower. The 

 most beautiful of them are the 

 Asiatic species, W. sinensis and 

 W. floribunda, the latter especially extensively grown near 

 the coast; in the interior the native species, of which W. 

 macrostachys is one, succeed better, though they are far less 

 attractive. 



Wisteria, or Wistaria as it was intended to be written 

 and as it has passed into popular parlance, was named in 

 honor of Dr. Caspar Wistar, one of a number of American 

 physicians forming the subject of a little volume on some 

 American medical botanists commemorated in our botanical 

 nomenclature, published in Troy by Dr. Howard A. Kelley in 

 1914. 

 Stems somewhat retrorsely hairy. W. macrostachys. 



