GUZMANIA 



AAA. Corolla (or segments) yellow. 

 Melinonis, Regel (Caraguata Melindnis, Morr. ). Lvs. 

 trap-shaped, green above and brown-tinted beneath: 

 rls. yellow, subtended by oblong red bracts. French 

 Guiana. L jj B 



GYMN6CLADUS (Greek, naked branch; referring to 

 he naked branches, which in winter are destitute of 

 wigs). Legiiminosce. A genus of 2 species, one of 

 .vhich is a scarce native tree, the Kentucky Coffee Berry, 

 so called because its seeds were used for coffee west of 

 ,he Alleghanies before and during the Revolutionary 

 N&r. It is a desirable shade tree for city streets, and is 

 especially interesting in winter. It is a clean, stout tree, 

 mght and graceful in appearance and free from disease, 

 'rowing from 30-60 ft. high in cultivation, and not leaf- 

 ng out until the middle of May, after the other trees 

 ire in full foliage. It is thornless and has compound 

 'oliage. Grows with erect divisions, making narrow, pyra- 

 Bidal head. Branchlets very stout and destitute of 

 spray: fls. white, dioecious or polygamous, in terminal 

 racemes: pods long, hanging. Grows naturally in bot- 

 tom lands and richest soils. May be planted in any soil, 

 out thrives best in deep, rich, or rather humid soil. 

 Prop, by seeds and cuttings. 



Canad6nsis, Lam. (G.didica, C.Koch). KENTUCKY COP- 

 FEE TREE. Fig. 1008. Height in the wild, 75-100 ft. : Ivs. 

 large, twice pinnate with 4-7 pairs of partial leaf-stalks, 

 each partial leaf-stalk with 5-13 ovate, acute Ifts., except 

 the lowest of 1 1ft., 1-3 in. long, standing edgewise. Ra- 

 cemes many-fld. and elongated, nearly white, terminat- 

 ing branches of the season; staminate clusters 3-4 in. 

 long; pistillate 10-12 in., and compact: ovary sessile: 

 pods 6-10 in. long, flat, scythe-shaped, dark reddish 



GYMNOGRAMMA 



701 



1008. Gymnocladus Canadensis Kentucky 

 Coffee Tree. 



brown, hanging unopened all winter. Early summer. 

 S. Ontario to Penn., Tenn., Minn., Neb. and Indian 

 Terr. S.S. 3:123, 124. R.H. 1897, p. 491. B.B. 2:261. 



0. Chinensis, Baill., with smaller, more numerous Ifts. and 

 much thicker pods, is not cult. A. PHELPS WYMAN. 



GYMNOGRAMMA (Greek, a naked line; referring to 

 the sori). Also written Gymnogramme. Polypodiaceoe. 

 An unnatural aggregate of plants of very dissimilar 



habit, agreeing in the possession of naked sori, which 

 extend along the veins in various lines. A large num- 

 ber of the species are coated on the under surface with 

 a white or yellow waxy powder, which has given the 

 names of Gold Ferns or Silver Ferns. Two species occur 

 in the West, the "Golden-back" of California, and a 

 species less common from Arizona and other parts of 

 the Southwest. Over 80 species of wide distribution 

 have been included in the genus, which by many is di- 

 vided into a series of natural genera. The name Gym- 

 nogramma itself is probably not tenable. 



argyrophylla, 9. 

 aurea, 6. 

 calomelanos, 8. 

 chrysophylla, 4. 

 decomposita, 7. 

 elegantissima, 2. 



INDEX. 



hispida, 1. 

 Laucheana, 4. 

 magnified, 8. 

 Peruviana, 9. 

 pulchella, 11. 

 schizophylla, 2. 



sulphurea, 5. 

 Tartarea, 10. 

 Tatarica, 10. 

 triangularis, 3. 

 Wettenhall iana. 

 11. 



A. Under surfaces of Ivs. not powdery. 

 B. Lvs. pentagonal, hairy on both sides. 



1. hispida, Mett. A low plant, 5-8 in. high, with pen- 

 tagonal, palmate Ivs. 1 in. or more either way, densely 

 covered on both sides, but especially below, with stri- 

 gose hairs. Has been incorrectly referred to G. Ehren- 

 bergiana. Tex., Ariz., Mex. Hardy. 



BB. Lvs. triangular-lanceolate, naked ; ultimate seg- 

 ments narrow. 



2. schizophylla, Baker. Lvs. 18-24 in. long, quadri- 

 pinnatifid, the stalks, rachises and divisions slender, 

 the ultimate segments finely 



cut. A comparatively recent 

 introduction ; very graceful in 

 cultivation. Jamaica. A. G. 

 18:421. G.F. 2:533. A. F. 10: 

 827. I.E. 31:522. Gn. 48, p. 

 417. Var. elegantissima ,. 

 elegantissima, Hort. W. 

 Bull.), has reddish brown 

 rachises. 



AA. Under surfaces with wax- 

 like powder. (Gold and 

 Silver Ferns.) 



B. Powder yellow: Ivs. about 

 as broad as long. 



3. triangnlaris, Kaulf . Fig. 

 1009. Lvs. 2-5 in. wide and 

 long, on stalks 6-12 in. long, 

 dark green above, below deep 

 golden yellow, or occasionally 

 white ; lower pinnae much 

 larger than the others, del- 

 toid ; the upper lanceolate. 

 Calif, to B.C. Gn. 48, p. 444.- 



A white powdered variety with a viscous upper surface 

 and coarser cuttings (var. viscdsa, D. C. Eaton) is found 

 in S. Calif. 



BB. Powder yellow: Ivs. lanceolate, several times as 



long as broad, 

 c. Lvs. scarcely more than bipinnate. 



4. chrysopltflla, Kaulf. Lvs. 12-18 in. long, witn 

 blackish stalks and rachises, the segments slightly pin- 

 natifid at the base: powder golden yellow. W. Indies to 

 Braz. R.H. 1856:201. G.C. III. 23:373.-Often consid- 

 ered a var. of G. calomelanos. Var. Laucheana (G. 

 Laucheana, Hort.), has triangular Ivs. except in its sub- 

 variety gigantea. Gn. 48, p. 437. -By many this species 

 is considered a variety of G. calomelanos. 



CC. Lvs. tripinnatifid to quadripinnate. 



5. sulphurea, Desv. Lvs. 6-12 in. long on chestnut- 

 brown stalks, the pinnae long, tapering, less than 1% in. 

 wide at base, the pinnules compact, with 3-7 divisions; 

 powder sulfur-yellow. W. Indies. 



6. aurea, Desv. Lvs. 6-12 in. long, 7-10 in. wide, del- 

 toid ; pinnae deltoid, 2-3 in. wide at base, the ultimate 

 divisions cuneate. Madagascar. By some this is re- 

 ferred to G. argentea, Mett., a similar fern with white 

 powder. 



1009. Gymnogramma 

 triangularis (X%). 



