PULSE FAMILV. 12S 



» Flowers yellow ; leaves simple, perfoliate. 



B. perfoli^ta, R. Br. Low and spreading, smooth and glaucous ; 

 leaves round-ovate ; flowers single, small, axillary ; pod small and glob- 

 ular. Carolina and Georgia. 



* * Flowers yellow ; leaves compound, of 3 leaflets. 



B. tinct6ria, R. Br. Wild Indigo. Pale or glaucous, smooth, bushy, 

 2° higli ; petiole very short ; leaflets small, wedge-obovate ; stipules minute, 

 deciduous ; racemes few-flowered, terminating the branches ; pods small, 

 globular. Common. 



B. villdaa. Ell. Minutely downy, stout stems, 2° high ; leaflets spatu- 

 late-oblong or wedge-obovate, becoming smooth above ; petiole very 

 short ; stipules more or less persistent ; many-flowered racemes of large 

 flowers on slender pedicels ; pod minutely downy, oblong, taper-pointed. 

 Va. to N. C. and Ark. 



B. lanceolfLta, Ell. Downy when young ; leaflets thickish, blunt, 

 lanceolate to obovate, very short ; petiole spreading ; stipules small, 

 deciduous ; flowers rather large, solitary in the axils and in short terminal 

 racemes; pod globular, slender-pointed. Common S. and S. W. 



* * * Flowers white, or crenm-color ; leaves all of 3 wedge-obovate to ob- 



lanceolate leaflets; flowers in long terminal racemes. 



B. leucophgea, Nutt. Low and spreading, 1° high, soft-hairy ; bracts 

 and stipules persistent, large and leaf-like ; racemes reclined, one-sided ; 

 flowers on slender pedicels, cream-colored, large (1' long) ; pods hoary, 

 ovate. Open woods, VV and S. 



B. leucdntha, Torr. & Gray. Smooth and glaucous, stout, 3°-5° high ; 

 branches spreading ; petioles rather short ; lanceolate stipules and bracts 

 deciduous ; racemes erect, long ; flowers large (1' long); pods oval-oblong, 

 2' long, raised on a stalk fully twice the length of the calyx. Alluvial 

 soil, from Ont. W. and S. 



B. ^ba, R. Br. Smooth, 2°-3° high ; branches slender, widely spread- 

 ing ; petioles slender ; stipules and bracts minute, deciduous ; racemes 

 loose, erect, or spreading, long-peduncled ; flowers small {\'-\' ^ong) ; 

 pods cylindrical. S. Ind. and Mo. to La. and E. 



* * * * Flowers indigo-blue ; leaves of 3 leaflets, as in the foregoing. 



B. austrilis, K. Br. Smooth and stout, pale, erect, 2°-5° high ; lance- 

 olate and rather persistent stipules as long as the short petiole ; racemes 

 erect ; flowers nearly 1' long, on short pedicels ; pods oval-oblong, 2'-3' 

 long, on a stalk as long as the calyx. Pa. to Ga. and W. to Mo.; also cult. 



3. THERMOPSIS. (Greek: resembling the Lupine.) 2/ 



* Stipules prominently shorter than the long petioles ; pod sessile. 



T. Carolini^na, Curtis. Stem smooth, 3°-6° high, simple ; leaflets 

 obovate-oblong, silky beneath ; stipules ovate or oblong, clasping ; racemes 

 6'-12' long, villous, erect, many-flowered; pods oblong-linear, erect. 

 Mts. of N. C. ; and cult. 



* * Stipules nearly equaling or longer than the short petioles ; pod stalked. 



T. mdllis, Curtis. Downy, l°-2° high ; branches spreading ; leaflets 

 3 obovate-oblong ; stipules oblong-ovate, leaflike, some as long as the 

 petioles ; long, narrow-linear, spreading pods ; flowers spring. Open 

 woods from S. Va., S. 



4. GLADRASTIS, YELLOWWOOD. (Greek: branches brittle.) 



C. tinctdria, Raf. Wood light yellow ; bark close, like that of Beech • 

 leaves of 7-U parallel-veined oval or ovate leaflets (3'-4' long and smooth, 



