BATIDACEAE. 133 



2. Pisonia rotundata Griseb. Cat. PL Cub. 283. 1866. 



Pisonia subcordata rotundata Heimerl, Bot. Jahrb. 21: 630. 1896. 



An unarmed shrub, or small tree, up to 5 m, high, in Cuba becoming larger, 

 the twigs and leaves glabrous or finely pubescent. Leaves oval, oblong or 

 obovate, firm in texture, 2.5-7 cm. long, rounded or retuse at the apex, obtuse or 

 broadly cuneate at the base, minutely reticulate-veined beneath, the petioles 

 3-10 mm. long; cymes many-flowered, rather densely pubescent or glabrate; 

 fruit clavate, 6-7 mm. long, with 5 rows of short-stalked glands above the 

 middle. 



Coppices, pine-lands and scrub-lands, Andros, New Providence, Eleuthera : — 

 Florida ; Cuba. Round-lea\-ed Pisoxia. 



Family 4. BATIDACEAE Dammer. 



Saltwort Family. 



Low fleshy much-branched shrubs, with opposite semiterete, linear or 

 clnb-shaped, entire sessile estipnlate leaves, and small dioecious .o:reenish 

 flowers in axillary spikes. Staminate spikes with many persistent imbri- 

 cated scales, each subtending a flower; calyx 2-lobed; stamens 4 or 5, vdih. 

 stout filaments alternating- with staminodia; anthers introrse. Pistillate 

 spikes 4-12-flowered, the scales deciduous; calyx and corolla wanting; 

 ovary sessile, 4-celled; ovule 1 in each cavity, erect, anatropous; stigma 

 sessile, somewhat 2-lobed; fruit aggregate, about 4-seeded. Seeds club- 

 shaped, the testa membranous; endosperm none;' cotyledons large. Only 

 the following genus. 



1. BATIS L. Syst. ed. 10, 1289. 1759. 



Characters of the family. [Greek, from the fancied resemblance of the 

 fruit to a blackberry.] A monotypic genus. 



1. Batis maritima L. Syst. ed. 10, 1289. 1759. 



A glabrous shrub 1 m. high or less, the rather stout stems spreading, 

 prostrate or ascending, the branches nearly erect, angular. Leaves acutish, 

 ]-2.5 cm. long; spikes ovoid or oblong, 5-10 mm. long, the staminate sessile, 

 the pistillate short-peduncled; bracts nearly orbicular or reniform, longer than 

 the calyx; stamens exserted, longer than the triangular staminodia; fruit 1-2 

 em. long^ drooping. 



Mangrove mud and saline marshes, Great Bahama, North Bimini, Andros. Wat- 

 ling's. Grand Turk, Inagua and Anguilla Isles : — Georgia to Florida ; southern 

 California ; West Indies ; continental tropical America. Saltwort. Turtle-wked. 



Family 5. PHYTOLACCACEAE Lindl. 



PoKEWEED Family. 



Herbs, some tropical species shrubs, vines or trees, ^^^th alternate entire 

 mostly estipulate leaves, and perfect rejrular polygamous or monoecious 

 flowers. Calyx 4-5-parted or of 4 or 5 sepals, its segments or sepals 

 imbricated in the bud. Petals wanting. Stamens as many as the calyx- 

 segments or sepals and alternate with them, or more numerous, hypog>'n- 

 ous; filaments distinct, or united at the base; anthers 2-celIed, the sacs 



