ANNONACEAE. 141 



Family 3. ANNONACEAE DC. 



Custard-apple Family. 



Trees or shrubs, generally aromatic, with alternate entire leaves. 

 Stipules none. Sepals 3 (rarely 2), valvate or rarely imbricate. Petals 

 about 6, arranged in 2 series. Stamens co ; anthers adnate, extrorse. 

 Carpels oo, separate or coherent, mainly fleshy in fruit. Seeds large, 

 anatropous; embryo minute; endosperm copious, wrinkled. About 46 

 p-enera and 550 species, mostly in the tropics, a few in the temperate 

 zones. 



1. ANNONA L. Sp. PI. 536. 1753. 



Mostly trees, with coriaceous or chartaeeous leaves, and perfect, usually 

 solitary and axillary, nodding, peduncled flowers. Sepals 3, valvate, deciduous. 

 Petals usually 6, valvate, the 3 outer larger than the 3 inner. Receptacle 

 hemispheric. Anther-sacs contiguous. Pistils borne at the top of the recep- 

 tacle; ovaries 1-ovuled; stigma sessile or nearly so. Fruit compound, aggre- 

 gate, many-seeded; seeds arillate, [Name said to be derived from Malayan.] 

 I'ifty species or more, of tropical and subtropical distribution. Type species: 

 Annona muricata L. 



Outpr nptals broad, ovate, the inner as long, or somewhat shorter ; fruit 



smooth. 1. A. glahni. 



Outer iietals linear-oblong, the inner minute. 



Fruit tubercled. 2. A. squatunsa. 



Fruit reticulated or areolate. 3. A. reticulata. 



1. Annona glabra L. Sp. PI. 537. 1753. 



Annona palustris L. Sp. PI. ed. 2, 757. 1762. 

 Anona laurifolia Dunal, Monogr. Anon. 65. 1817. 



A tree, up to 12 m. high, with a trunk 4 or 5 dm. in diameter, usually 

 smaller, sometimes shrubby, the fissured bark reddish brown, the twigs glabrous. 

 Leaves ovate to oblong, subcoriaceous, 8-18 cm. long, acute or short-acuminate 

 at the apex, usually rounded at the base, the petioles 1-4 cm. long; flowers 

 solitary in the axils, nodding, short-peduncled, yellowish green, 2-3.5 cm. long; 

 sepals broader than long, slightly united ; petals thick, concave, the outer a 

 little larger than the inner; fruit ovoid, 6-13 cm. long, smooth, roundeJ at 

 apex, impressed at base, yellowish brown ; seeds 1-2 cm. long. 



Ponds and water-holes. Great Bahama, Andros. New rrovidenre. Cat Island. 

 Watling's Island. Crooked Island: — Florida; West Indies; northern South America. 

 Catesby, 2: pi. 6.'f, 67. Fond- apple. 



2. Annona squamosa L. Sp. PI. 537. 1753. 



A tree, up to about 12 m. high, the young twigs densely pubescent. 

 Leaves elliptic, lanceolate to oblong, chartaeeous, 6-12 cm. long, pubescent, at 

 least when young, sometimes glabrous when old, acute at the apex, narrowed 

 at the base, the petioles 5-12 mm. long; peduncles about as long as the 

 petioles; flowers greenish, about 2 cm. long; sepals triangular, acute, pubescent, 

 1.5 mm. long; outer petals linear-oblong, puberulent; fruit globose, 5-0 cm. 

 in diameter, strongly tubercled, greenish, the tubercles rounded, the pulp white; 

 seeds oblong, brown, shining. 



Scrub-lands. New Providence, probably introduced : — Cuba to Virgin fJorda 

 and St. Vincent ; Jamaica ; widely cultivateil in tropical regions. Sugar-apple. 



