352 MINNESOTA BOTANICAL STUDIES. 



A. Anthora Linn. Sp. PL 532. 1753. 



A. Pyrenaicii7n Pall. Reise. 2: 316. 1776. 



A. ochroleucum Salisb. Prod. 375. 1796. 



A. Anthorideimi DC. Syst. i : 366. 1818. 



A. Anthorwn St. Lag; in Ann. Soc. Bot. Lyon, 7: 119. 

 1880. 



Reichenbach used these names : Candollei, eulophum, 

 Jacqtiiiii, nemerosum, Bieb., Pallasii, tuberosum Patr. 



Stem erect, 1-2 feet high : leaves parted, usually at the base, 

 parts deeply cut and lobed ; more or less hispid beneath, smooth- 

 ish above ; petioles long : flowers in lateral and terminal 

 racemes, pale yellow, often large ; inflorescence generally pu- 

 bescent ; spur refracted or hooked ; helmet arched but cylindri- 

 cal at base : follicles 5. June-July. Southern Europe. There 

 are several garden varieties differing in pubescence, size of 

 flower, shape of galea, and width of leaf segments. Bot. Mag. 

 2654. 



A. autumnale Reichb. Monog. t. 17,/. 2. 1820. 



Stem erect, 3-5 feet high : leaves pedately five lobed : 

 flowers in simple spike becoming a panicle ; blue, lilac, or 

 whitish : helmet closed. Sept. -Nov. North China. Intro- 

 duced about 1870. 



A. reclinatum Gray Am. Journ. Sci. 42 : 34. 1842. 



Stem always trailing, 2-5 feet long, nearly glabrous ; leaves 

 thin, deeply 3-7 cleft, toothed and cut, lower ones petioled, 

 large, upper ones sessile ; flowers white or dull cream-color, 

 pubescent, in loose raceme or simple panicle : helmet twice as 

 high as wide, conic; beak very short; follicles 3, nearly ^ 

 inch long. Summer. Wooded mountain regions of Va. to 

 Ga. (t). 



Note : The mark (t) indicates that the native species or variety has not jet 

 been introduced to the American trade. Citations at the end of a description 

 are mostly to colored plates. 



