748 



HICORIA 



not shaggy : Ifts. generally broader, ovate or oblong- 

 ovate, glandular: fr. more ovoid, splitting almost to 

 the base; nut gray or brownish, slightly angled. S. S. 

 7:354 (partly). Var. Tilldsa, Sarg. (S. pallida, Ashe). 

 Bark deeply fissured: Ifts. 5-7, hairy along the midrib 

 beneath and the rachis covered with tufts of hair: fr. 

 subglobose to ovoid; nut brown, thick-shelled. Mo. tc 

 Del. and Ala. S.S. 7:3.55. G. P. 10:305 



BB. Buds large, %-l 



■ingled; kernel sueet 



c. Bark not shaggy : branches and petioles tomentose : 

 outer bud-scales falling in autumn : husk not 

 separating quite to the base. 

 filba, Britt. [Carya tomentdsa, Nutt. Not to be con- 

 founded with C. alba, which is ff. ovata). Mockerni't. 

 BiQ Bud Hickory. Tree, rarely attaining to 100 ft.: 

 Ifts. 7-9, almost sessile, oblong-lanceolate, long-acumi- 

 nate, usually finely serrate, glandular and tomentose 

 beneath, very fragrant when crushed, 4-8 in. long: fr. 

 globose to pear-shaped, lK-3 in. long; nut light brown, 

 globular to oblong, slightly compressed, angled, nar- 

 rowed toward the apex, thick-shelled ; kernel small, 

 sweet. Mass. to Ontario and Neb., south to Fla. and 

 Tex. S.S. 7:350-51. U.S.N.C. 12, 1-3. Em. 222. 

 CO. Birk shaggy, light gray : branches and petioles 

 glabrous or pubescent; husk very thick, sepa- 

 rating to the base : outer bud-scales persisting 

 through the winter. 

 lacinidsa, Sarg. (Carya sulcata ,'!!ivAt. E. acuminata, 

 Dippel). BiQ or Bottom Shellbark-Hickoey. King 

 Nut. Tall tree, occasionally to 120 ft.: branchlets 

 orange-red: Ifts. 7-9, oblong-lanceolate, acuminate, ser- 

 rate, pubescent when young, usually glabrous at length, 

 4-8 in. long: fr. generally oblong, 2-3 in. long; nut yel- 

 lowish white, oblong, but sometimes as broad as long, 

 slightly compressed and obscurely 4-angled, pointed at 

 both ends; kernel sweet. N. Y. to Iowa, south to Tenn. 

 and Ind. Terr. S.S. 7:348-49. U.S.N.C. 11. 



ovita, Britt. (C«)-!/a o76a, Nutt.). Shagbark-Hick- 

 ORV. Also Little Shellbark-Hickort, although the 



HIERACIUM 



latter name by some is applied to the preceding. Figs. 

 1067, 1068. Tree, occasionally to 120 ft.: Ifts. generally 

 5, sessile, oblong or oblong-lanceolate, acuminate, ser- 

 rate, densely fimbriate, pubescent and 

 glandular when young, glabrous at length, 

 4-6 in. long : fr. subglobose, aboiit 1H-2K 

 in. long; nut white, oblong to broadly obo- 

 vate, 4-angled ; kernel sweet. From Que- 

 bec to Minn., south to Fla. and Tex. S.S. 

 7:346-47. Em. 217. U.S.N.C. 10. A. G. 

 11:386, 6,9; 387, 3; 388,11. Gng.7:51. 

 A.F. 14:339. -Next to Pecan the best as 

 a fruit tree, especially for the northern 

 states, where Pecan is not quite hardy. 

 Several named varieties are in trade, of 

 which probably var. Halesi, Hort., with 

 large, thin-shelled nut, is the best known. 

 An ornamental, often very picturesque 

 tree; the stout branches forming a rather 

 broad, usually somewhat open head. 



H. Carolhlce-septentrionAlis, Ashe. Allied to 

 H. ovata: fr. smaller : Ifts. 3-5. oblong-lanceo- 

 late, glabrous. N. C. to Ga.- H. Maicana. 

 Engelm. Tree, with shaggy bark and tomen- 

 tose-pubescent Ivs.: fr. depressed, with rather 

 thick husk and broad, sharply 4-angled, white 

 nut. Mex. The only species not native to the 

 U. S.—H. Texdna. he Conte. Similar to H. 

 Pecan, but Ifts. broader, less falcate, almost 

 sessile; nut smaller, much darker, with some- 

 what rough surface: kernel bitter. Texas. 



AliPEED Rehder. 



HIDALGOA (■' after the Mexican Hidalgo"). Syn., 

 Oatdsia. Compisito!. This includes a tender her- 

 baceous vine, allied to Dahlia, with scarlet fls. about 

 2)4 in. across, introduced in 1899 by John Lewis Childs, 

 under the name of Childsia Wercklei. or "Treasure 

 Vine." Hidalgoa is closely allied to Dahlia and Coreop- 

 sis, but differs from both in the large, fertile akene of 

 the rays and in the sterile disc-fls., the styles of which 

 are entire or very shortly 2-lobed. Only 2 species were 

 hitherto recognized, both from Central America. From 

 these H. Werrklei differs in its more compound Ivs. 

 and much larger heads. Suitable for cool, shady ver- 

 andas. 



Wercklei, Hook. (Ch'ildsia Wircklei. J. L. Childs). 

 Tall, woody at base, much branched, climbing by peti- 

 oles : Ivs. opposite, pinnately ternatisect, 1H-2K in. 

 long, 2 in. wide, the teeth tipped reddish brown : petiole 

 VA-'l in. long, coiled at base: peduncle axillary, as long 

 as the Ivs., 1-fld.: rays about 10. Costa Rica. B.M. 

 7684. J.L. Childs' Cat. Rare Flowers, etc., 1899, p. 1, 

 with colored plate. A. G. 20:570. W. M. 



HIEEACIUM (Greek, a hawk; the ancients thought 

 that hawks sharpened their eyesight by using the sap 

 of these plants). Compdsitce. Hawkweeds. Over 250 

 species of hardy herbaceous perennials, mostly native 

 to Eu. and S. Amer.,some of which are bad weeds in 



1068. Fruit of Hicoria ovata. the Shagbark Hickory. 



Natural size. Tlie cross-section is to show stnicture. not to 

 show a good horticultural fruit. 



the eastern states. Lvs. often toothed, but never deeply 

 lobed : heads usually small, loosely paniculate or cy- 

 mose, rarely solitary: rays truncate, 5-toothed at the 

 apex : seeds angular. The genus passes into Crepis, 



