Rhvx. LEGUMINOS.E. 



Ill 



suifaco of dense foliage ns smooth and uniform as that of the best trained hedge. According to 

 Nuttall the smooth ^rny bark exudes in small (|uaiitities a very astringent gum-resin. Tiie fresh 

 red berries are descnlwd liy I'aimrr as coated witii an iey-lool<ing white substance, wliich is pleas- 

 antly acid and used by the Indians to make a cooling drink. 



§ 4. Flowers ■perfect or polygamous, in ample terminal or axillary compound jyanicles : 

 fruit small, glabrous : leaves simple, coriaceous. — Lithrsa, I3entb. & Hook. 

 (Lithrcea, !Miers. lihus § Malosma, Nutt.) 



4. R. laurina, Nutt. A largo evergreen much-hranclied aiui very leafy shrub, 

 exhaling an aromatic odor, glabrous : leaves lanceolate, acute, mucronate, rounded 

 at ])ase, glaucous, entire, 2 or 3 inches long, on slender petioles : panicles dense, 2 

 to 4 inches long : flowers yellowish, a line long, or less : fruit whitish (?), ovate, li 

 lines long, beaked by the stout styles. — Torr. & Gray, Fl. i, 219. Lithrcea laurina, 

 Walp. ; iorrey, Pacif. H. Rep. iv. 73, & Bot. Mex. Bound. 44, t. 7. 



From Santa Barbara to San Diego, in the valleys ; Guadalupe Island, Palvicr. According to 

 Dr. Torrcy "the thin pulp of the dry fruit consists chiefly of a white waxy material, soluble in 

 strong alcohol, which seems to be almost entirely cerine." The seeds are said to yield a pungent 

 oil. 



Order XXXI. LEGUMINOS^. 



The single and simple free pistil, becoming a legume in fruit, and the alternate 

 leaves with stipules (to which in the proper Pulse family are added the papiliona- 

 ceous corolla and 10 diadelphous or nionadelphous or rarely distinct stamens) mark 

 this order, one of the largest and ne.vt to Grnminar. the moat important of the vege- 

 table kingdom. It comprises the following suborders. 



Suborder I. PAPILIONACE^. 



Flower irregular. Calyx mostly 5-cleft or 5-toothed, the tube or cup extending 

 beyond the perigynous disk Avhich lines its bottom and bears the petals and sta- 

 mens. Corolla of 5 petals (rarely fewer), imbricated in the bud ; one (the standard) 

 superior (next the axis of inflorescence), larger and always external, covering in the 

 bud the two lateral ones (wings), and these covering the inferior pair, which to- 

 gether form the keel, being commonly united or at least coherent by their lower 

 edges ; the claws of all five usually distinct. Stamens and pistil enclosed in the 

 keel. Filaments 10, seldom 5, rarely separate around the pistil, commonly united 

 from the base upward into a sheath enclosing the ovary, which is either entire 

 (nionadelphous) or open on the upper side, the 10th or upper stamen being free 

 from the others or becoming so (diadelplious) : anthers 2-celled. Ovary with sev- 

 eral, few, or rarely solitary amphitropoua or flomctimoa anatropous ovules on the 

 single parietal placenta : stylo generally inflexed or incurved : stigma simple, ter- 

 minal or nearly .so. Legume normally one-celled and two-valved, sometimes falsely 

 2-celled or divided lengthwi.so hy an intrusion of the dor.'^al suture, or else several- 

 celled transversely by constrictions or articulations, not rarely indehiscent. Seed 

 destitute of albumen, or orcnsionally with a layer of it. Embryo otherwise filling 

 the seed : cotyledons broad, thick or thickish : radicle almost always accumbently 

 inflexed. Leaves simple or simply compound ; the earliest pair or pairs often oppo- 

 site ; the others almost always alternate. Leaflets mostly entire, sometimes den- 



