60 SALVINIACEAE 



carries the sporangia on a series of short branches or lobes. (Named for Aloysius 

 Marsili, an early Italian naturalist.) 



1. M. quadrifblia L. Leatiets broadly obovate-cuneate, glabrous ; sporo- 

 carps usually 2 or S on a short peduncle from near the base of the petioles, 

 pediceled, glabrous or somewhat hairy, the basal teeth smail, obtuse, or the 

 upper one acute. — In water, the leatiets commonly floating on the surface , 

 frequently cultivated and now somewhat extensively introduced from material 

 taken chiefly from Bantam Lake, Litchfield, Ct., where perhaps casually intro- 

 duced from Eu. 



2. M. vestita Hook. & Grev. Leaflets broadly cuneate, usually hairy, entire 

 (5-15 mm. long and broad) ; petioles 2-11 cm. long ; peduncles free from the 

 petiole, very short ; sporocarps solitary, hairy when young (about 4 mm. long), 

 with upper basal tooth longest, acute, straight or curved, lower tooth acute, the 

 sinus between them rounded. — In swamps which become dry in summer j la. 

 and southwestw. 



SALVINlACEAE 



Floating plants of small size, having a more or less elongated and sometimes 

 branching axis, bearing apparently distichous leaves ; sporocarps (sori) very soft 

 and thin-walled, two or more on a common stalk, one-celled and having a 

 central, often branched receptacle which bears either macrosporangia containing 

 solitary macrospores, or microsporangia with numerous microspores. — A small 

 and interesting family of plants without close affinity to other groups. 



1. AZ6lLA Lam. 



Small moss-like plants, the stems pinnately branched, covered with minute 

 2-lobed imbricated leaves, and emitting rootlets on the under side. Sporocarps 

 in pairs beneath the stem ; the smaller ones acorn-shaped, containing at the 

 base a single macrospore with a few attached bodies of doubtful function above 

 it; the larger ones globose, and having a basal placenta which bears many 

 pedicellate microsporangia which contain masses of microspores. (Name not 

 satisfactorily explained.) 



1. A. caroliniana Willd. Plants somewhat deltoid in outline (6-25 mm. 

 broad), much branched; leaves with ovate lobes, the lower lobe reddish, the 

 upper one green with a reddish border ; macrospore with three attendant 

 corpuscles, its surface minutely granulate ; masses of microspores glochidiate. — 

 Floating on quiet waters, from L. Ontario westw. and south w. — Appearing like 

 a reddish hepatic moss. 



2. SALVINIA [Mich.] Adans. 



Leaves 'apparently 2-rankef', horizontally floating or subaerial, a third series 

 of foliar structures developed ventrally on the stem taking the form of fascicles of 

 root-like fibers. Sporangia subsessile, clustered, depressed-globose, longitu- 

 dinally sulcate, formed from the tips of short basal divisions of the filiform ven- 

 tral leaves. Sori basal within the fruit, the macrosporangia subsessile, the 

 microsporangia (in separate fruits) borne on filiform pedicels. (Named for 

 Frof Antonio Maria Salvini of Florence, 1633-1729.) 



L S. natans (L.) Ad. Foliage-leaves suborbicular-oblong, thickish, mostly 

 iO-15 mm. long, hairy or papillose on both sides, the lower surface commonly 

 brownish or purplish. — Marshes and ponds, Minn, and Mo. — Long ago re- 

 ported by Pursh as "floating, like Lemna, on the surface of stagnant waters: 

 in several of the small lakes in the western parts of New York," but not 

 detected in this region by recent botanists. (Eurasia.) 



