T6TR ADYNAMIA. SILl^UOSA. TS 



467. CLEOME. Z. 



JVedariferous glands 3, one under each of the 

 3 upper calix leaves, the lower one without a 

 gland. Calioc 4-leaved, small and deciduous. 

 Fetals 4, all ascending to one side. Capsule si- 

 liquosc, stipitate, 1 -celled, •'2-valved. 



Principally annual plants, disagreeably scented, and 

 somewhat actively deletereous; leaves producing 2 glands 

 or 2 spines at the base, simple, ternate, or digitate; flow- 

 ers axillary, or in terminal racemes, pedicells bracteate. 

 Stamina 4, 6, 12, 20, or more. 



Species. 1. C- peiitaphylla. — Flowers white, extremely 

 singular. Calix small, green, and distinctly 5-leaved. 

 Petals roundish, upon capillary claws 3 times their length. 

 Stamina 6, very long, originating about the middle of the 

 styloid pedicell which supports the fruit; anthers linear 

 and never curved. — In confirmation, in some measure, of 

 the sagacious suspicions of Linnxus, I have now before 

 me a somewhat viscidly pubescent specimen, in which the 

 peduncles produce now and then a distinct prickle, thus 

 proving the near affinity of this species to C. heptaphyllu 

 and C. trrphylla. 2, clodecmulra. Common on the sandy 

 shores of lake Erie, near Buffaloe creek, also along the 

 margins of the Missisippi and the Missouri. Flowers 

 white. Pods large and sessile. The whole plant more 

 or less viscid and foetid. 3. * cime/'folia. Muhl. Catal. 

 'Everywhere smooth; leaves simple, cuneate, retuse, flow- 

 ers racemose, hexandrous. v. s. In Herb. Baldwyn and 

 Muhlenberg. Obs. Annual. Petals white, with long and 

 capillary claws. Silique stipitate. Indigenous to Geor- 

 -gia. 



• Atalanta. Calix 1-leaved, deciduous, margin 

 5-toothed. Glands none. Petals equal, subsessile. Sta- 

 mina 6, monadciphous, equal; anthers revolute. Silique 

 oblong, stipitate, 1-celled, 2-valved, terminated by a small 

 persistent style. 



Annual, and smooth, leaves ternate, flowers in terminal 

 racemes, bracteolate, peduncle surrounded by the sece- 

 ding calix. 



4. serrulata. {Cleome serrxilata. Ph.) Leaves ternate, 

 glaucous; secondary leaves lanceolate, subulately acumi- 

 nate, obsoletely subserrulate, petals ovate. Hab. Abun- 

 dant on the alluvial and sandy margin of the Missouri for 

 more than a thousand miles continuance. Obs. Stem 3 



VOJi. II. G 



