LENTIBULARIACEAE (BLADDER WORT FAMILY) 737 



scapes slender, 1 dm. high ; lips of the yellow corolla nearly equal in length, 

 the lower broader and 3-lobed, somewhat longer than the approximate thick 

 and blunt spur. Ponds, N. B. to Del. and Pa., chiefly near the coast. July, 

 Aug. FIG. 895. 



-t- H- No cleistogamous flowers. 



n- Pedicels recurved in fruit ; corolla yellow. 



3. U. vulgaris L. (GREATER B.) Immersed stems 

 3-10 dm. long, crowded with 2-3-pinnately many-parted 

 capillary leaves bearing many bladders' scapes 5-12- 

 flowered, 1-3 dm. long ; corolla closed, 1-2 cm. broad, 

 the sides reflexed ; spur conical, rather shorter than the 

 lower lip, thick and blunt. Eurasia ; n. w. Am. 

 Represented with us by 



Var. americana Gray. Spur more slender and rather acute. Common in 

 ponds and slow streams, Nfd. to Minn., s. to Va. and Tex., and 

 westw. June- Aug. FIG. 896. 



4. U. minor L. (SMALLER B.) Leaves scattered on the thread- 

 like immersed stems, 2-4 times forked, short ; scapes weak, 2-8- 

 flowered, 0.5-2 dm. high ; upper lip of the gaping corolla not 

 longer than the depressed palate ; spur very short and blunt, or 

 almost none. Shallow water, e. Que. to B. C., s. to N. J., w. 

 N. Y., Great L. region, Utah, and Cal. May-July. (Eu.) FIG. 



97 : 



897. U. minor. 



++ ++ Pedicels erect in fruit, few and slender ; corolla yellow. 



/A 5. U. gibba L. Scape 2.5-10 cm. high, l-2-flowered, at base 



/^v furnished with very slender short branches, bearing sparingly dis- 

 sected capillary root-like leaves and scattered bladders ; corolla 

 6-8 mm. broad, the lips broad and rounded, nearly equal ; the 

 lower lip with the sides reflexed, exceeding and approximate to the 

 | very thick and blunt conical gibbous spur. Shallow water, Me. 



to Fla. arid Ala., near the coast : and from w. Vt. to Ont., 111., and 

 398. U. gibba. u Mimi July _ Sept> FlG< 898> 



6. U. biflbra Lam. Scape 0.5-1.3 dm. high, l-3-flowered, at the base bearing 

 somewhat elongated submersed branches with capillary root-like leaves and 

 numerous bladders ; corolla 8-13 mm. broad, the spur 



oblong, equaling the lower lip ; seeds scale-shaped. 

 Ponds and shallow waters, Mass, to Fla.; and from 

 Wise, and Minn, to Ala. and Tex. Aug., Sept. FIG. 

 899. 



7. U. fibrbsa Walt. Leaves crowded or whorled on 

 the email Immersed sterns, several times forked, capil- 

 lary ; the bladders borne mainly along the stems ; flowers 

 2-6, 1-1.3 cm. broad ; lips nearly equal, broad and ex- 

 panded, the upper undulate, concave, plaited-striate in 

 the middle ; spur nearly linear, obtuse, approaching and 

 almost equaling the lower lip. Shallow pools in pine 

 barrens, L. I. and N. J. to Fla. and Ala. May-July. 



8. U. intermedia Hayne. Leaves crowded on the im- 

 mersed steins, 2-ranked, 4-5 times forked, rigid, the divi- 

 sions linear-awl-shaped, minutely bristle-toothed along the 

 margins ; the bladders borne on separate leafless branches ; 

 upper lip of corolla much longer than the palate ; spur 

 conical-subulate, acute, appressed to and nearly as long as 

 the very broad (1-1.5 cm.) loicer lip. Shallow pools and 

 streams, Nfd. to B. C., s. to N. J., Pa., Great L. region, 

 900. U. intermedia. la., and Cal. May-July. (Eurasia.) FIG. 900. 



++++++ Pedicels erect in fruit, rather long ; corolla violet-purple. 

 9. U. purpurea Walt. Leaves whorled along the long immersed free-floating 

 GRAY'S MANUAL 47 



lilt. 



899. IT. biflora. 



