MALVACEAE. (MALLOW FAMILY.) 67 



dtmcles (rose-color or white) , involved none; carpels obtusely beaked, crested and 

 strongly wrinkled on the back. 1J. (Sida alcseoidcs, Michx.} Barren oak -lands, 

 S. Kentucky and Tennessee. 



4. NAP^EA, Clayt. GLADE MALLOW. 



Calyx naked at the base, 5-toothcd. Floivers dioecious ; the stamim.te flowera 

 entirely destitute of pistils, with 15-20 anthers ; the fertile with a short column 

 of filaments but no anthers. Styles 8-10, stigmatic along the inside. Fruit 

 depressed-globular, separating when . ripe into as many kidney-shaped 1-seeded 

 beakless and scarcely dehiscent carpels as there are styles. Radicle pointing 

 downwards. A tall and roughish perennial herb, with very large 9- 11-partcd 

 lower leaves, the pointed lobes pinnatifid-cut and toothed, and small white flow- 

 ers in paniclcd clustered corymbs. (Named by Clayton from vairr], a wooded 

 valley or glade, or, poetically, the nymph of the groves, alluding to the place 

 where he discovered the plant.) 



1. N. dioica, L. (Sida dioica, Cav.) Limestone valleys, Penn. and 

 southward to the Valley of Virginia, west to Ohio and Illinois ; rare. July. 



5. Sfl>A, L. SIDA. 



Calyx naked at the base, 5-cleft. Petals entire, usually oblique. Styles 5 or 

 more : the ripe fruit separating into as many 1-seeded carpels, which remain 

 closed, or commonly become 2-valved at the top, and tardily separate from the 

 axis. Embryo abruptly bent ; the radicle pointing upwards. Stigmas termi- 

 nal, capitate. Flowers perfect. (A name used by Theophrastus.) 



1. S. Napifea, Cav. Nearly glabrous, tall (2 -4 high), erect; leaves 5- 

 cA;/?, the lobes oblong and pointed, toothed ; flowers (ichitc) umbellatc-corymbcd, 

 large; carpels 10, pointed, 1J. (Napaea laevis & hermaphrodita, L.) Rocky 

 river-banks, Pcnn., Muhlenberg. Kanawha Co., Virginia, Rev. J. M. Brown, 

 (Cultivated in old gardens.) 



2. S. EHiOttii, Torr. & Gray. Nearly glabrous (l-4 high); leaves 

 linear, serrate, short-petioled ; peduncles axillary, 1 -flowered, short; flowers (t/tl- 

 low) rather large ; carpels 9 - 10, slightly and abruptly pointed, forming a depressed 

 fruit. 1J. Sandy soil, Virginia (near Petersburg) and southward. May- Aug. 



3. S. SPINOSA, L. Minutely and softly pubescent, low (10' -20' high), much 

 branched ; leaves ovate-lanceolate or oblong, serrate, rather long-petioled ; pedun- 

 cles axillary, 1-flowered, shorter than the petiole; flowers (yellow) small; carpeh 

 5, combined into an ovate fruit, each splitting at the top into 2 beaks. A little tu- 

 bercle at the base of the leaves on the stronger plants gives the specific name, 

 but it cannot be called a spine. Waste places, common southward and 

 eastward. (Nat. from Trop. Amer. or Afr.) 



6. ABtlTlL-ON, Tourn. INDIAN MALLOW. 



Carpels 2 - 9-seeded, at length 2-valred. Radicle ascending or pointing in- 

 wards. Otherwise as in Sida. (Name of unknown origin.) 



