w 



WAAHOO, WAHOO, or BURNING BUSH is Enonn- 

 mus atropiirpiireus. Ulmus alata, the Winged Elm, is 

 also called Whahoo or Wahoo. 



WAFER ASH. PteUa irifoUata. 



WAHLENBfiKGIA grandifldra. See PUitycodon. 



WAITZIA (F. A. C. Waitz, born 1768, state physician 

 to the Dutch at Samarang, Java; wrote on Javanese 

 plants). CompdsiUe. Includes one of the rarer "ever- 

 lasting flowers," a half-hardy annual which grows about 

 IX ft. high and bears flat-topped clusters of yellow 

 flower-heads, with a golden disk. The clusters are 

 about 5 in. across, and the heads 2 in. across, the showy 

 part being the involucral bracts, which are arranged in 

 4 or 5 series, and are petal-like in character but of 

 stiffer texture than ordinary petals. Waitzia is a genus 

 of 7 species of Australian herbs,*inostly annuals: Ivs. 

 alternate, linear or nearly so: fl. -heads In terminal 

 corymbs or rarely in oblong, leafy racemes : involucre 

 various In outline, the bracts overlapping In many rows, 

 all colored and petal-like : receptacle flat, without scales : 

 anthers provided with tails of microscopic size : akenes 

 somewhat compressed, glabrous or papillose, termi- 

 nating in a slender beak; pappus of capillary bristles 

 usually cohering at the base, simple, barbellate or plu- 

 mose. The genus is distinguished from Helipterum and 

 Helichrysum by the beaked akenes. Flora Australien- 

 sis, vol. 3. 



grandiildra, W. Thompson. (The authorship of this 

 species is credited to Naudin by Index Kewensis.) 

 Half-hardy everlasting or "immortelle," annual, ex- 

 ceeding 18 in. in height: Ivs. lanceolate, long-acumi- 

 nate, sessile, green above, slightly villous beneath, 

 prominent midrib beneath: fls. yellow, in terminal 

 corymbs. F. 1865:41, where it was originally described. 

 Probably the most desirable of the genus. It seems to 

 have replaced W. aurea, the favorite of the previous 

 generation, being larger-fld., more robust, and rather 

 easier of cultivation. t^ jj_ 



WALDSTEtNIA (Franz Adam, Count of Waldstein- 

 Wartenburg, born 1759 at Vienna; wrote with Kitaibel 

 an illustrated work on rare plants of Hungary; died 

 1823). Rosicem. The Yellow or Barren Straw- 

 berry, Walsteinia fragarioides, is a little plant that 

 looks much like a strawberry plant, but it has yellow 

 flowers and bears no edible fruit. It is a hardy North 

 American tufted perennial herb, about 4 in. high, with 

 glossy Ivs. composed of 3 wedge-shaped Ifts. and 5- 

 petaled fls. less than 14 in. across. It comes with the 

 first rush of spring, and continues to bloom until sum- 

 mer. There Is no satisfaction in growing only a few 

 plants of this wild flower. The plant is appropriate to 

 the rockery, where every effort should be made to in- 

 duce it to form a dense mat. Masses of the Yellow 

 Strawberry have been used with good effect for edging 

 shrubbery borders, and the plant is listed by several 

 nurserymen. 



Only 4 species of Waldsteinia are well known. They 

 are hardy, creeping, perennial, strawberry-like plants: 

 Ivs. alternate, mostly basal, long-stalked, entire, lobed. 

 3-5-cut or with 3-5 Ifts., the Ifts. crenate or incised: 

 scapes bracted, bearing 2-5 yellow fls.: petals 5, obo- 

 vate, about as long as the calyx-lobes; stamens indefi- 

 nite : carpels 2-6: akenes obliquely obovoid, dry or 

 slightly fleshy. Natives of north temperate zone. 



fragarioides, Tratt. Fig. 2708. Popular description 

 above. Pubescent or nearly glabrous: Ifts. dentate or 

 crenate except at the base, 1-2 in. long: scapes corym- 

 bosely 3-8-fld. : akenes 4-6. May, June. Woods and 

 shaded hill-sides. New England to Minn, and Ind., 

 along the Alleghanies to Ga. B.B. 2:218. R.H. 1890, p. 

 510. B.M. 1567 and L.B.C. 5:408 (both as Balibarda 

 fragarioides). ^_ jl_ 



WALDMEISTER is Aspertihi odorata. 

 WALKING-LEAF FERN is Cimpfosorns. 

 WALL CRESS or ROCK CRESS is Arabis. 

 WALL FERN. Pnl,,podium rulgare. 

 WALLFLOWER. Consult Cheirantlius Cheiri. 



WALLlCHIA (Nathaniel Wallich, 1786-1854, Danish 

 botanist; wrote on plants of India). PalmAcece. Three 

 species of Himalayan palms, one of which, the first de- 

 scribed below, is cult, outdoors in S. Pla. and S. Calif, 

 and in Eu. under glass, and the second, while not ad- 

 vertised in America, is believed to be in a few northern 

 greenhouses. 



Low palms, cespitose, with short branching caudices, 

 or in 1 species tall: ivs. densely fasciculate, terminal, 

 distichous, scaly, unequally pinnatisect: segments soli- 

 tary or the lowest in groups, cuneate at the base, ob- 

 long-obovate or oblanceolate, erose-dentate, the terminal 

 one cuneate; midnerve distinct; nerves flabellate; 

 margins recurvfl :it tlir I'livc; jietiole slender, laterally 

 compressed; slnatli ^h.nt. -]ilit. with the margins deeply 

 crenate: spading slp.rt i-i ilmirlfd, the staminate droop- 

 ing or recurved, ovi.id. iiiurli liranched, densely fld.,the 

 pistillate looser, erect; spatlies very numerous, slender- 

 coriaceous, the lower ones the narrower, tubular, the 

 upper ones eyrabiform, entire, imbricated : fls. medium, 

 yellow: fr. ovoid-oblong, red or purple. Stove palms. 

 For culture, see Didiimosperma. 



Wallichia is allied to Didymosperma, Arenga and 

 Caryota, differing in having 6 stamens instead of an 

 indefinite number. Caryota is the only one of this 

 group with ruminate albumen. Didymosperma has a 

 cup-shaped, 3-lobed calyx, and in Arenga the calyx 

 has 3 distinct sepals. 



diBtlcha, T. Anders. Caudex 10-15 ft. high, 5-6 in. in 

 diam.; naked: Ivs. distichous, 6-10 ft. long, alternate, 

 erect; Ifts. 1-2 ft. long, 2-2}.^ in. wide, fascicled, linear, 

 narrowed to the base, truncate and denticulate at the 



