CONVOLVULUS FAMILY. Convolvulacess. 



White, pink= flowers ranging from pure white to pink- 

 tinged tinged borne singly on long stems; the 

 June-August * 



five stamens cream yellow, the pistil 



white. The five-parted calyx is inclosed in two pale 

 green bracts. The flower generally closes before noon; 

 it is sometimes over 2 inches broad and 3 long. Vine 

 3-10 feet long. Along moist roadsides and borders of 

 fields, climbing over shrubbery, from Me., south to N. 

 Car., west to S. Dak. and Utah. Also in Europe. 



A more or less fine-hairy, trailing species, 



with simple or slightly branched stem, and 

 Bindweed 



Convolvulus ovate or oblong leaves, arrow-shaped or 

 sepium, var. slightly heart-shaped at the base, 1-2 inches 

 pubescens long. Flowers white or pink-tinged, borne 



tinned r Plnk " singly On lon S stalks ' and about 2 inches 

 June-August l n g- Calyx inclosed in two ovate bracts. 



1-3 feet long. Common. The var. fra- 



terniflorus has short flower-stems wing-angled. Va. 



to Mo. south. The typical C. sepium is quite smooth. 



A smooth-stemmed, very slender species 



with oblong and arrow-shaped gray-green 

 C Ivulus leaves, the lateral lobes of which are acute. 

 arvensis Small flowers not over 1 inch long, white 



White or pink- or pink-tinged, and generally borne in 

 tinged clusters of two. The calyx without leafy 



September bracts at the base. 1-2 feet long. In 



fields and waste places from Me., south 

 to N. J. and Pa., and west to Kan. 



A miserable parasite often troublesome 

 Common . r . 



Dodder m gardens, but found in low, damp, shady 



Cuscuta situations. It climbs high upon other 



Gronovii plants by twining closely about their 



Dull white stalks and exhausting their -juices through 

 July-October 



a thousand tiny suckers. Its threadlike, 



twisting stem varies in color from dull yellow to dull 

 orange, it is crowded with bunches of tiny dull white 

 bell-shaped flowers having five lobes. The calyx is 

 greenish white. All the dodders start at first from the 

 ground, but finally securing a convenient plant upon 

 which to climb, the root in the earth dies and they be- 

 come parasitic. Common everywhere. 

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