r.rriiORr.iAcrc.'E. (srUROE family.) 4$& 



* * * Perennials or annuals ; ours urith'eatire and scattered leaves, only the floral ones 



in the umbel-like inflorescence whorled or opposite arid of different shajn : '/lands 

 of the involucre mostly 4, crescent-shaped or 2-horned. 



■*- Seeds smooth and dark-colored : perennials, with running rootstocks. 



19. E. Esula, L. Stems clustered (1° high) ', leaves lanceolate or linear; the 

 flora! (yellowish) broadly heart-shaped, mucronate ; umbel divided into many rays, 

 then forking; //lands short-horned (brown); pods smoothish and granular. — 

 Essex County, Massachusetts, Oakes. June. (Adv. from Eu.) 



20. E. Cyparissias, L. Stems densely clustered (6'- 10' high) ; stem-leaves 

 lineur, crowded, the floral ones heart-shaped ; umbel many-rayed ; glands crescent- 

 shaped; rods granular. — Escaped from gardens to roadsides, in a few places in 

 New England. (Adv. from Eu.) 



■*- -t- Seeds sculptured, ash-colored: pod smooth: annuals or biennials. 



21. E. Peplus, L. Erect or ascending (5'- 10' high); leaves petioled, thin, 

 round-obovate, the upper floral ones ovate ; umbel 3-rayed, then forking ; glands 

 long-horned ; lobes of the pod 2-wing-crested on the back ; seeds 2-grooved on the 

 inner fare, pitted on the b<wk (scarcely over half a line long). — Waste places east- 

 ward : not common. July, Aug. 



22. E. commut&ta, Engelm. Stems branched from a commonly de- 

 cumbent base (6' -12' high); leaves obovate, obtuse ; the upper all sessile, the 

 upper floral ones roundish-dilated, broader than long ; umbel 3-forked ; glands 

 with slender horns ; pod obtusely angled, crestless ; seeds ovate, pitted all over (a line 

 long). (E. Ohiotica, Steudel §• Hochstetter.) — Along streams and shady slopes, 

 from Virginia towards the mountains to Kentucky, Wisconsin, and westward. 

 May, June. — Leaves often persistent over the winter on sterile shoots, turning 

 red. Larger in all its parts than E. Peplus, with which it has been confounded ; 

 but the characters of the pod and seeds readily distinguish it. 



* * * * A glabrous annual or biennial, ivith entire opposite and decussate leaves, an 



umbelliform inflorescence, and short-horned glands : seeds carunculate. 



23. E. Latiiyris, L. Stem stout (2° -3° high) ; leaves thick, linear or ob- 

 long, the floral ones oblong-ovate and heart-shaped ; umbel 4-rayed, then forking. 

 — Sparingly escaped from gardens, where it is common. (Adv. from Eu.) 



2. JATROPHA, L. (Cnidoscolus, Pohl., Ed. 2.) 



Flowers monoecious, rarely dioecious, in a terminal open forking cyme ; the 

 fertile ones usually in the lower forks. Calyx corolla-like, in the staminate 

 flowers often salver-shaped, 5-lobed; in the pistillate, 5-parted, imbricated or 

 convolute in the bud. Corolla of 5 distinct or apparently united petals, or in 

 our species none. Glands of the disk opposite the calyx-lobes. Stamens 10-30, 

 in 2 or more whorls : filaments monadelphous at the base. Ovary mostly 3- 

 celletl : styles 3, united below, their summits once or twice forked. Pod 3-celled, 

 3-seeded, separating into 3 two-valved carpels. Seed carunculate. — Perennial 

 herbaceous or shrubby plants, chiefly tropical, with alternate mostly long- 

 petiolcd palmately-veined leaves, and stipules. — Our species is of the section 

 Cnidoscolus ; of plants mostly armed with stinging bristles. (Name said by 

 Linnieus to be formed of larpov, a remedy, and </>dyco, to eat.) 



