230 ERICACE^. (heath FAMILY.) 



1. M. uniflora, Gray. Herb with 1 -flowered scape 2 to 4 inches high, a 

 cluster of roundish and serrulate thin leaves at base, on a short stem or the 

 ascending summit of a filiform rootstock : corolla white or tinged with rose- 

 color, about § inch in diameter. — Deep moist woods, Colorado and Utah to 

 Oregon, Pennsylvania, and northward. 



8. PYROLA, Tourn. Wintergreen. Shin-leaf. 



Acaulescent evergreens ; with a cluster of round or roundish leaves, and 

 some scarious scales on the ascending summit of slender subterranean root- 

 stocks : scape more or less scaly-bracted, bearing a raceme of white, greenish, 

 or purplish nodding flowers, in summer. 



* Stjjle straight, much narrower than the expanded depressed b-rayed stigma : 

 anthers not narrowed below the openings. 



1. P. minor, L. Leaves orbicular, thinnish, obscurely serrulate or crenu- 

 late, an inch or less long : scape a span high, 7 to 15-flowered : petals ivhite or 

 flesh-colored, orbicular, naked at the base, globose-connivent : stigma peltate, 

 large, obscurely 5-lobed : hijpogi/nous disk none. — INIountains from Xew IMexico 

 to Oregon and northward, thence eastward across the continent. 



2. P. secunda, L. Inclined to be caulescent from a branching base : 

 leaves thin, ovate, serrulate or crenate, 1 or 2 inches long: scape a span long, 

 bearing numerous _^o?x'ers in a secwid spike-like raceme : petals greenish ivhite, 

 oblong, each ivith a pair of tubercles on the base, equally conniveut : stigma pel- 

 tate, large, 5-lobed: ht/pogijnous disk lO-lobed. — Mountains of Colorado, Cali- 

 fornia, and far northward and eastward. 



* * Sti/le stronglg declined or decurved and toward the apex more or less curved 

 upward, longer than the concave someivhat campanulate-connivent or partly 

 spreading petals: stigma much narrower than the truncate and usually exca- 

 vated apex of the style, which forms a ring or collar: anthers more or less 

 contracted under the terminal orifices. 



3. P. chlorantha, Swartz. Leaves small (J to 1 inch in diameter), 

 orbicular or nearly so, coriaceous, not shining, shorter than the petiole : scape 4 to 

 8 inches high, 3 to 10-flowered : calyx-lobes very short and obtuse or rounded, 

 appressed to the greenish-ivhite corolla: anther-cells with distinctly beaked tips. 

 — Mountains of Colorado, northward and eastward. 



4. P. elliptica, Nutt. Leaves oval or broadly oblong, 1| to 2j inches long, 

 membranaceous, acute or merely roundish at base, longer than their petioles, pli- 

 cately serrulate: scape a span or more high, loosely several to many-flowered : 

 calyx-lobes ovate and acute, short : corolla greenish ichite : anther-tips hardly at 

 all beaked. — Mountains of New Mexico to British Columbia, the X. Atlantic 

 States, and Canada. 



5. P. rotundifolia, L. Leaves generally orbicular or broadly oval, 1^ to 

 2 inches long, obscurely crenulate or entire, coriaceous, shining above, mostly 

 shorter than the slender petioles: scape a span to a foot high, several to many- 

 flowered, scaly-bracteate : calyx-lobes lanceolate to ovate-lanceolate, usually ^ or 

 I the length of the ichite or flesh-colored petals. — Dry woods, from California, 

 New Mexico, and Georgia, northward to the arctic regions. 



