262 OEDEB 21. CARYOPHYLLACE.E. 



14. POLYCARPON, L. ALL-SEED. (Gr. TroA^r, many, Kaprr&s, fruit. 

 The capsules are numerous.) Sepals 5, ovate, carinate, scarious-edged ; 

 capsule 3-valved, many-seeded. (J) Lvs. opposite and quaternate on the 

 low spreading branches. 



P. tetraphyllum I. Lvs. spatulate or oval, tapering to a petiole, some of ihem 

 in whorls of 4 ; stam. 3. Around Charleston, S. Car. A low, much branched 

 plant, sts. 3 to 6' high. Lvs. 2 to 5" long. Stip. several at each joint, ovate- 

 lanceolate, membraneous. Fls. small, in dense cymes. Pet. much shorter than 

 Sep., notched, white. May, Jn. Eur. 



15. STIPUL'ICIDA, Michx. (Lat. stipula, cccdo ; the stipules being 

 much cleft.) Sepals oblong, with broad, scarious margins ; petals 5, as 

 long as the sepals, entire ; stigmas 3, subsessile ; capsule subglobous, 

 3-valved, few-seeded. (D A slender, tufted, dichotomously branched 

 herb, almost leafless, with the small fls. in terminal cymules. 



B. setacea MX. In dry, sandy soils, Ga. (Feay, Mettauer) and Fla. (Chapman). 

 Sts. many from one root, glabrous, 6 to 10' high, each several times forked, slen- 

 der, the branches almost setaceous. Root Ivs. round ish-obovate, narrowed to a 

 petiole, 1" diam. Joints distant, each marked by a fringo of leaves and stipules 

 ij" long. Fls. sessile, 4 to 6 together, green and white, at length reddish. May. 



16. PARONf CHIA, Tourn. NAILWORT. (Gr. Trapa, with, ovvlj, the 

 nail ; i. c., the whitlow ; supposed cure for.) Sepals 5, linear-oblong, 

 connivent, slightly hooded and mucronate or awned near the apex; 

 petals or sterile filaments very narrow and scale-like or none ; stam. 2, 

 3, or 5 ; stigmas 2 ; with the styles more or less united into 1 ; utricle 

 1-seeded, not exceeding the calyx. Low herbs dichotomously branched, 

 with scarious, silvery stipules, and at least the lower Ivs. opposite. 



PARONYCIIIA. Sepals evidently awned at apex. Lvs. linear and subulate Nos. 1, 2 



ANYCIIIA (Mx. partly). Sep. merely mucronato at apex. Lvs. lanceolate to oval.(*) 



* Stems procumbent, diffuse on the ground. Stamens 5 Xos. 3, 4 



* Stems erect, with diffusely ascending branches. Stamens 2 or 3. . .Xos. 5, 6 



1 P. dicliotoma Nutt. Glabrous, densely branched ; Ivs. acerose, mucronate ; 

 bracts like the leaves; cymes fasiiyiate, with no central flower ; sep. S-veined t cus- 

 pidate. 7J. Rocks (Harper's Ferry), Va., and Car. to Ark., rare. Densely matted 

 and branched, the flowering stems 6 to 12' high. Lvs. crowded, 1' by ". Sty. 

 bifid at top. Minute setse in place of petals. Jl. Nov. 



2 P. argyrocoma Nutt. Pubescent, tufted, decumbent; Ivs. linear, acute; cymes 

 glomerate, terminal ; fls. enveloped in dry, silvery bracts: sep. hairy, 1-veined, 

 setaceously cuspidate. r i\- White Mts., N. II., in the gorge behind the Willey 

 house (Chapman) and in the Allegh. and Cumb. Mts. Flowering stems 4 to 10' 

 high. Lvs. crowded, 6 to 10" long. Fls. concealed in tho bracts; the cusp 

 equaling the sepals. Jl. 



3 P. herniarioides Nutt. Scabrous, diffusely branched ; Ivs. oval or oblong, 

 mucronate; the raminal alternate. Fls. sessile in the axils of the leaves; sep. 

 3- veined, merely mucronate. % N. Car. (Miss Carpenter) to Ga., in sandy soil. 

 A little depressed plant, spreading on the sand, with minute Ivs. and fis* 

 Branches alternate with 1-sided branchlets. Lvs. 3 2 1" long, \ as wide, 

 stip. shorter. Fis. 'Mong. . 



4 P. Baldwin!! Torr. & Gr. Diffusely branched, procumbent; Ivs. linear- 

 lanceolate, very acute, all opposite ; fls. longer than the setaceous stipules, mostly 

 terminal, stalked ; stam. 6. Fla (Mettauer), in dry fields. Sta more openly 

 branched, many from the same root, covering a circular spot 12 20' diam. 

 Lvs. few, 38" long, \ 2" wide, sessile. Fls. a \ larger than in No. 3. Oct. 



5 P. Canadensis. Stem erect, slender, pubescent, many times forked, with 

 slender or capillary branches ; Ivs. lanceolate, varying to oblanceolate ; the 



