568 MALVACEAE QMALLOW FAMILY) 



coast of N. E. and N. Y., also locally westw. to Mich, and Ark. Aug., Sept. — 

 Perennial root thick, abounding in mucilage. (Nat. from Eu.) 



A. CANNABINA L. , with digitatsly 5-parted leaves, is said to be somewhat 

 established at Washington, D. C. (Adv. from Eu.) 



A. R69EA Cav., the Hollyhock of gai'dens, sometimes persists after culti- 

 vation. 



7. MALVA [Tourn.] L. Mallow 



Calyx with a 3-leaved involucel at the base, like an outer calyx. Petals 

 obcordate. Styles numerous, stigmatic down the inner side. Fruit depressed, 

 separating at maturity into as many 1-seeded and indehiscent round kidney- 

 shaped blunt carpels as there are styles. Radicle pointing downward. (An old 

 Latin name, from the Greek name, fiaXdxv, having allusion to the emollient 

 leaves.) 



* Flowers fascicled in the axils. 



1. M. rotundif6lia L. (Common M., Cheeses.) Stems procumbent irom 

 a deep biennial root ; leaves round-heart-shaped, on very long petioles, crenate, 

 obscurely lobed ; petals twice the length of the calyx, whitish ; carpels pubes- 

 cent, even.— Waysides and cultivated grounds, common. (Nat. from Eu.) 



2. M. verticillIta L. Erect annual, with round crenately b-1 -lobed leaves; 

 flowers small, pale, sessile, crowded in the axils ; carpels slightly reticulated. — 

 Roadsides, waste places, etc., N. S., Que., and w. Vt. ; Pa. (Nat. from Asia.) 

 M. cRfsPA L. (the Curled M.), which scarcely differs save in its crisped leaves, 

 is occasionally spontaneous about gardens, etc. (Adv. from Eu.) 



3. M. sylvestris L. (High M.) Biennial; stem erect, branched, 6-9 dm. 

 high ; leaves shaiply b-1 -lobed ; petals thrice the length of the calyx, large, 

 purple and rose-color ; carpels wrinkled-veiny. — Waysides and about gardens, 

 rarely escaped from cultivation. (Introd. from Eu.) 



* * Flowers only in the upper axils, somewhat racemose or paniculate. 



4. M. moschXta L. (Mdsk M.) A low perennial, with mostly simple 

 pubescence; stem-leaves b-parted, and the divisions once or timce parted or cleft 

 into linear lobes, faintly musky-scented ; flowers rose-color or white, large, on 

 short peduncles crowded on the stem and branches ; fruit downy. — Fields and 

 roadsides, abundant in e. Canada and n. N. E., occasional elsewhere. (Nat. 

 from Eu.) 



5. M. Alcea L. Similar, with short stellate pubescence ; stem-leaves only 

 once b-parted or -cleft, the lobes incised ; large flowers as in the last ; fruit 

 smooth ; bractlets of the involucel ovate. — Escaped from gardens in N. E., Pa., 

 and Mich. (Introd. from Eu.) 



8. CALLfRHOE Nutt. Poppy Mallow 



CaJyx either naked or with a 3-leaved involucel at its base. Petals wedge- 

 ghaped and truncate (usually red-purple). Styles, etc., as in Malva. Carpels 

 10-20, straightish, with a short empty beak, separated within from the 1-seeded 

 cell by a narrow projection, indehiscent or partly 2-valved. Radicle pointing 

 downward. (Name drawn from Greek mythology.) 



* Involucel ^-leaved. 



1. C. triangulUta (Leavenw.) Gray. Stellate-pubescent; stems nearly erec^, 

 6 dm. high, from a fusiform root ; leaves triangular or halberd-shaped, or the 

 lowest rather heart-shaped, coarsely crenate ; the upper incised or 3-5-cleft ; 

 flowers panicled, short-pediceled, purple ; involucel as long as the 5-cleft 5-nerved 

 calyx ; carpels not rugose. — Dry prairies, Ind. to Minn., and southw. 



2. C. involucrata (T. & G.) Gray. Hirsute or hispid, procumbent ; leaves 

 rounded, b-1-parted or -cleft, the segments incisely lobed ; peduncles elongated, 

 1-flowered ; calyx 5-parted, the lanceolate 3-6- nerved sepals twice as long as 

 the involucel ; petals red or purplish ; carpels indehiscent, rugose-reticulated. — 

 Minn, to Tex., and westw. 



