CONVOLVULUS FAMILY. 2G3 



2. Style 2-cleft or 2 separate styles, rarely 3. Spreading or trailing, not twining. 

 ft, BONAMIA. Like Convolvulus, but the styles 2 or sometimes 3, or in one 



species 2-cleft, and stigmas capitate. Peduncles 1 - 7-flowered. 

 6. EVOLVULUS. Corolla short and open funnel-form, or almost wheel-shaped. 



Styles 2, each 2-cleft: the 4 stigmas obtuse. Pod 2-celled: cells 2-seeded. 



II. DODDER FAMILY ; slender parasitic twiners, without 

 green herbage and with only some minute scales in place of leaves ; 

 embryo slender and spirally coiled in the seed, destitute of coty- 

 ledons. 



7- CU SCUT A. Calyx 4 - 5-c-left, or of 5 separate sepaK Corolla short, 4 - 5-cleft. 

 Stamens with a'scale-like mostly fringed appendage at their base. Styles 2 

 in our species. Ovary 2-celled:* cells 2-ovulecl. rod commonly 4-seeded. 



1. QUAMOCLIT. (Aboriginal Mexican name.) Twiners, with small 

 flowers red or crimson, and with pale or white cultivated varieties, in summer, 

 open through the day. 



Q. vulgaris, CYPRESS- VINE. Cult, from Mexico : leaves pin nately parted 

 into slender almost thread-shaped divisions ; peduncles 1 -flowered ; border of 

 the narrow corolla 5-lobed. 



Q. COCCinea. Run wild S. & W. : leaves heart-shaped, pointed ; sepals 

 awn-pointed ; peduncles several-flowered ; border of (!' long) corolla merely 

 5-angled. 



2. IPOMCEA, MORNING GLORY. (Greek-made name.) Fl. summer. 



1. Ovary and pod 3-cellcd (or accidentally 4-cellaf), with 2 seeds in each cell: 

 stigma more or less 3-lobed: corolla funnel -funn, opening in early morning 

 for a few hours : stems twininy freely, hairy, the hairs more or less retrorse. 



I. purptirea, COMMON M. Cult, from Trop. Amer. and wild around 

 dwellings ; with heart-shaped pointed entire leaves, 3-4-flowercd peduncles, and 

 purple sometimes variegated or nearly white corolla, 2' long. 



I. Nil. Cult, or run wild S. : with heart-shaped 3-lobed leaves, 1 -3-flow- 

 ercd* peduncle?, slender-pointed sepals, and blue-purple or sometimes white 

 corolla 1' -2' long. 



I. limbata or albo-marginata, perhaps a var. of the preceding . a 

 tender species, with leaves little lobed, angled or entire, and larger corolla with 

 deep violet border, edged with white .V$' broad. 



I. Lcarii, c-ult. from S. Amer. : lender, less hairy, with heart-shaped and 

 some deeplv 3-lobed haves, many flowers crowded on the summit of the 

 peduncle, and deep violet-blue corolla, 3' long and border 3' wide. ^ 



2. Ovary ami ;>./ 2-celled, the cells ^.-sredfd, or sometimes each cell divided by a 

 partition mak-hiy 4 on>-*enled ce'Js: lobes of the stigma if any only 2. 



I. Bona-N6x, or CALONYCTIOT* SPECIOSUM. Cult., also wild far S. : 

 tall-twining, very smooth, but stcros often beset with soft almost prickly 

 projections; leaves heart-shaped, ha'.lierd-shapcd, or angled; peduncles long, 

 I - few-flowered ; corolla salver- torn with a slender tube 3' -4' long and the 

 border still broader, white, opening rA evening. 



I. Batatas, SWKET POTATO. Cult, from East Indies : creeping, seldom 

 twinin"' smooth producing the large fleshy edible roots for which the plant is 

 cultivated ; leaves variously ^cart-shaped, halberd-shaped, or triangular, some- 

 times eut-lobed ; peduncle* bearing 3 or 4 flowers ; corolla funne -form, purple, 

 H' loni; ; pod with 4 one-seeded cells. 2/ 



I. Michaiixii. Light soil along the coast S. : creeping or twining, with 

 heart-shaped or triangular sometimes lobed leaves downy beneath; flowers 

 downy corolla purplish-white with purple eye, 3' -4' long, opening at night; 

 pod partly 4-celled, with silky seeds ; root extremely large and fleshy. ^ 



