150 UMBELLIFER^E. (PARSLEY FAMILY.) 



18. 'BOTLEURUM. Flowers yellow. Fruit oroid-oblong : the carpels somewhat 

 Leaves all simple. 



19. D1SCOPLEURA. Flowers white. Fruit ovoid : the lateral ribs united with a thick corkj 



margin. Leaves cut into capillary divisions. 



20. CICUTA. Flowers white. Fruit subglobose, twin : the carpels strongly and equally 6- 



ribbed. Leaves twice or thrice ternate. 



21. SIUM. Flowers white. Fruit ovate-globose: the carpels 5-ribbed. Leaves all simply 



pinnate. ^ 



22. CRYl'TOT^ENIA. Flowers white. Fruit oblong. Leaves 3-parted. Umbel irregular 



IL Inner face of the seed hollowed out lengthwise, or the margins involute, 

 so that the cross-section is semilunar. (Umbels compound.) 



28. CH2EROPIIYLLUM. Fruit linear-oblong, narrowed at the apex : ribs broad. 



24. OSMORR1I1ZA. Fruit li near-club-shaped, tapering below : ribs bristly. 



25. CONIUM. Fruit ovate, flattened at the sides : ribs prominent, wavy. 

 20. EULOPUUS. Fruit ovoid, somewhat twin, nearly destitute of ribs. 



III. Inner face of the seed hollowed in the middle, or curved inwards at 

 the top and bottom, so that the section lengthwise is semilunar. 



27. BRIOENIA. Fruit twin ; carpels nearly kidney-form. Umbellets few-flowered. 



1. HYDKOCOTYLE, Tuurn. WATER PENNYWORT. 



Calyx-teeth obsolete. Fruit flattened laterally, orbicular or shield-shaped , 

 the carpels 5-ribbcd, two of the ribs enlarged and often forming n thickened 

 margin: oil-tubes none. Low and smooth marsh perennials, with slender 

 Btcins creeping or rooting in the mud, and round shield-shaped or kidney-form 

 leaves. Flowers small, white, in simple umbels or clusters, which are either 

 single or proliferous, appearing all summer. (Name from v8<i>p, water, and 

 KoriXq, a flat cup, the peltate leaves of several species being somewlm cup- 

 shaped.) 



* Stems procumbent and branching : flowers 3-5 in a sessile cluster. 



1. II. Americana, L. Leaves rounded kidney-form, doubly eremite, 

 somewhat lobed, short-pctiolcd ; fruit orbicular. Shady springy places ; com- 

 mon northward. 



w * Umbels on scape-like naked peduncles, arising, with the long-petioled lea res, from 

 the joints of creeping and rooting stems. 



2. II. ranuilCllIoides, L, Leaves round-renifonn, 3 - 5-rlrft, the lobes 

 crenate; peduncles much shorter than the petioles; umbel 5- 10-flowered; ped- 

 icels very short; fruit orbicular, scarcely ril^bcd. Petm. and southward. 



3. II. iiltcrriipta, Muhl. Leaves peltate in the middle, orbicular cre- 

 nate ; peduncles about the length of the leaves, bearing clusters of few and .sv.w'/e 

 flowers interruptedly along its length ; fruit broader than long, notched at the 

 base. New Bedford, Massachusetts, and southward along the coast. 



4. II. lllllbellftta, L. Leaves peltate in the middle, orbicular, notched 

 at the base, doubly crenate; peduncle elongated (3' -9' hi<;h), bearing a many- 

 flowered umbel (sometimes proliferous with 2 or 3 umbels); pedicels slender; 

 *ruit notched at the base and apex. Massachusetts and southward near the 

 coast 



