68 



THE INDIANA WEEP BOOK. 



23 POLYGONUM CONVOLVULUS L. 

 I. 1.) 



Fig. 35. Showing the flower and fruit. (After Small.) 



of the flood plains and by birds and 

 edies: mowing and burning before 

 tivation with hoed crops; sowing 

 clean seed; early fall plowing and 

 harrowing to induce the seeds to 

 sprout before winter. 



Black Bindweed. Wild Buckwheat. (A. 



Stem twining or trailing, 

 G inches-3 feet long, roughish, 

 the joilits naked ; leaves ovate 

 or arrow-shaped, pointed, long- 

 stemmed, 1-3 inches Jong. 

 Flowers in louse axillary clus- 

 ters, greenish-white, drooping ; 

 calyx- 5-parted. adhering close- 

 ly to the achene which is 

 3-angled, black, granular, dull- 

 pointed, | inch long. (Figs. 0, 

 a; 35.) 



Common in lowlands, es- 

 pecially in corn- and wheat- 

 fields, where it often twines 

 about and pulls down the 

 stalks or weeds. June-Sept. 

 The leaves and seeds are 

 similar to those of buck- 

 wheat and the plant is dis- 

 tributed widely by overflow 

 the droppings of cattle. Rem- 

 the seeds ripen ; thorough cul- 



A 



24. 



Climb- 

 Bind- 



POLYGONUM SCANDENS L. 



ing False Buckwheat. 



weed. (P. N. 3.) 

 Stem climbing, 2-25 feet long, 

 rather stout, branched. Leaves heart- 

 shaped, pointed, 1-6 inches long. Flow- 

 ers greenish yellow, in numerous inter- 

 rupted leafy panicles; calyx 5-parted, 

 the three outer segments strongly 

 keeled and hi fruit winged. Seeds 

 black, triangular, 1/6 inch long, blunt, 

 smooth, shining. 



Common in moist soil, along 

 fence-rows, borders of thickets and 

 cultivated, fields, climbing high 

 over fences, shrubs, brush piles, etc. 

 Julv-Oct. The seeds are often 



Fig. 36. Showing the flower and three-sided 

 fruit. (After Small.) 



