490 



ILICACEAE. 



VOL. II. 



2. NEMOPANTHUS Raf. Journ. Phys. 89: 96. 1819. 



[ILICIOIDES Dumont. Bot. Cult. 4: 127. pi. 4. Hyponym. 1802.] 



A glabrous shrub, with slender-petioled oblong deciduous leaves, and polygamo-dioecious 

 axillary small flowers. Calyx of the staminate flowers none, that of the pistillate minute, 

 4-5-toothed. Petals 4 or 5, distinct, linear. Stamens 4 or 5, free from the corolla ; anthers 

 ovoid-globose. Ovary 3-5-lobed, 3-s-celled; ovules i in each cavity; stigmas 3-5, sessile. 

 Drupe subglobose. Nutlets 4 or 5. [Greek, referring to the slender pedicels.] 

 A monotypic genus of eastern North America. 



i. Nemopanthus mucronata (L.) Trelease. Wild or Mountain Holly. 



Fig. 2796. 



Vaccinium mucronatum L. Sp. PI. 350. 1/53. 



Nemopanthus fascicnlaris Raf. Journ. Phys. 89 : 97. 

 1819. 



N. canadensis DC. Mem. Soc. Gen. i : 450. 1821. 



Nemopanthes mucronata Trelease, Trans. Acad. St. 

 Louis 5 : 349. 1889. 



Ilicioides mucronata Britton, Mem. Torr. Club 5: 217. 

 1894. 



A shrub, 6-i5 high, with ash-colored bark. Leaves 

 elliptic or obovate, -2' long, acutish or mucronate 

 at the apex, obtuse or acute at the base, entire or 

 with a few small teeth ; petioles 3 "-6" long ; flowers 

 of both kinds solitary, or the staminate sometimes 

 2-4 together; pedicels very slender, often i long; 

 drupe red, 3"-4" in diameter; nutlets faintly ribbed. 



In swamps, Newfoundland to western Ontario, south 

 to Wisconsin, Indiana and Virginia. Cat-berry. Brick- 

 timber. May. 



Family 77. CELASTRACEAE Lindl. Nat. Syst. Ed. 2, 119. 1836. 



STAFF-TREE FAMILY. 



Trees or shrubs, often climbing. Leaves alternate or opposite, simple. 

 Stipules, when present, small and caducous. Flowers regular, generally per- 

 fect, small. Pedicels commonly jointed. Calyx 4-5-lobed or parted, persistent, 

 the lobes imbricated. Petals 4-5, spreading. Stamens inserted on the disk, 

 alternate with the petals. Disk conspicuous, flat or lobed. Ovary sessile, its 

 base distinct from or confluent with the disk, mostly 3-5 -celled ; style short, thick ; 

 stigma entire or 3-5-lobed; ovules 2 in each cell, anatropous. Fruit (in our 

 species) a somewhat dehiscent 2-5 -celled pod. Seeds arilled; embryo large; 

 cotyledons foliaceous. 



About 45 genera and 375 species, widely distributed in warm and temperate regions. 

 Leaves opposite. 



Large erect or decumbent shrubs ; fruit 3-s-lobed ; aril red. i. Enonyinns. 



Low spreading shrubs ; fruit oblong ; aril whitish. 2. Pachystima. 



Leaves alternate ; woody vine. 3. Celastrus. 



i. EUONYMUS [Tourn.] L. Sp. PI. 197. 1753. 



Shrubs, with opposite petioled entire or serrate leaves, and perfect cymose axillary greenish 

 or purple flowers. Calyx 4~5-cleft, the lobes spreading or recurved. Petals 4 or 5, inserted 

 beneath the 4-5-lobed disk. Stamens 4 or 5, inserted on the disk. Ovary 3-5-celled; style 

 short or none ; stigma 3-5-lobed. Capsule 3-5-celled, 3-5-lobed, angular, rounded or winged, 

 the cavities i-2-seeded, loculicidally dehiscent. Seeds enclosed in the red aril. [Ancient name 

 of the spindle-tree; also spelled Evonymus.] 



About 65 species, of the north temperate zone. Besides the following, 2 others occur in Cali- 

 fornia. Type species : Euonymus europaeus L. 

 Pods tuberculate ; low shrubs ; flowers greenish pink ; leaves subsessile. 



Erect or ascending; leaves ovate-lanceolate, acuminate. i. E. americanus. 



Decumbent, rooting at the nodes; leaves obovate, obtuse. 2. E.obovatus. 



Pods smooth ; high shrubs ; leaves distinctly petioled. 



Flowers purple; cymes 6-is-flowered. 3. E.atropurpurcus. 



Flowers greenish yellow ; cymes 3-7-flowered. 4. E. europaeus. 



