Asclepias. ASCLEPIADACEiE. 91 



as to Hort. Clife. ; Michx. 1. c. A. pulchra, Ehrhart ; Sweet, Brit. Fl. Gard. ser. 2, t. 18. — 

 With tlie smooth form. 



Var. longifolia. Leaves elongated- or linear-lanceolate, 4 to 7 inches long, a third 

 to half inch wide, glabrous or with minute pubescence : stems 4 to 6 feet high : flowers 

 paler. — A. tuberosn, Torr. in Pacif. R. Rep. vii. 18. — Texas to New Mexico. 



* * # Corolla and crown greenish, yellowish, white, or merely purplish-tinged : leaves opposite 

 or sometimes whorled, or the upper rarely alternate or scattered. 



•*^ Follicles echinate with soft spinous processes and densely tomentose, large (-3 to 5 inches long) 

 and ventricose, ovate and acuminate, arrect on deflcxed pedicels : leaves large and broad, short- 

 petioled, transversely veined: stems stout and simple, 2 to 5 feet high. 



''^^'^ A. speciosa, Torr. Finely canescent-tomentose, rarely glahrate with age : leaves from 

 subcordate-oval to oblong, thickish . peduncles shorter than the leaves : pedicels of the 

 many-flowered dense umbel and the calyx densely tomentose : flowers purplish, large : 

 corolla-lobes ovate-oblong, 4 or 5 lines long : hoods 5 or 6 lines long, spreading, the dilated 

 body and its short inflexed horn not surpassing the anthers, but the centre of its truncate 

 summit abruptly produced into a lanceolate-ligulate thrice longer termination; column 

 hardly any : wings of the anthers notched and obscurely corniculate at base. — Ann. Lye. 

 N. Y. ii. 218. A. Douglasii, Hook. Fl. ii. ,53, t. 142, & Bot. Mag. t. 441.3. — Along streams, 

 Nebraska to Arkansas, and west to S. Utah, California, and Washington Territory. 



™*"-'^A. Cornuti, Decaisne. (Comjiox Milkweed.) Finely soft-pubescent or tomentulose: 

 leaves green and early glabrate above, oval or oblong, obtuse or roundish at base : pe- 

 duncles little longer than the very numerous pubescent pedicels : corolla dull purple or 

 greenish-purple, rarely almost wlute ; the lobes ovate, three or four lines long : hoods 

 whitish, ovate, rather longer than the anthers, with a tooth on each side below the middle ; 

 the subulate horn short and incurved : column short. — Prodr. 1. c. 564 ; Torr. Fl. N. Y. 

 ii. 119. A. Si/riaca, L. (Cornuti, Canad. t. 90) ; Spenner in Nees Gen. Germ. fasc. 21, t. 1-3. 

 — Canada to Saskatchewan and N. Carolina, chiefly in fields. 



-1— -i— Follicles minutely warty-echinate along the tapering apex, otherwise as in the succeeding: 

 wings of the anthers emarginately bicorniculate at base. 



"rn -A. Sullivantii, Engelm. Glabrous throughout, a yard high, leafy to the top: leaves 

 opposite, thickish, oblong, with subcordate or rounded base, nearly sessile (4 or 5 inches 

 long) : umbels terminal and from the uppermost axils, short-peduncled, rather many- 

 flowered : flowers flesh-colored : corolla-lobes oval, 5 lines long : column short : hoods 

 oval, vfith a gibbosity on each side near the base, almost truncate at summit, a third 

 longer than the anthers ; the falcate-subulate horn rising from near the base, horizontally 

 and slightly exserted from the middle. — Gray, Man. ed. 1, 366, ed. 5, 395. — Low groimds, 

 Ohio {Siillivant) to Kansas {Fremont). Follicle 3 to 5 inches long, ovate-lanceolate, nearly 

 glabrous, smooth, except small and soft conical warty processes scattered along the beak. 



H— -1— -)— Follicles wholly unarmed and smooth throughout, either glabrous or tomentulose-pubes- 

 cent. 



++ Arrect or ascending on the deflexed or decurved fructiferous pedicels. 



= Umbel solitary on the perfectly simple strict stem, elevated on a naked terminal peduncle : 

 leaves all closely sessile, broad, transversely veined : plant glabrous and pale or glaucous : follicles 

 fusiform : anthers either bicorniculate or salient-angled at base of the wing. 



:a!s=» A. obtusifolia, Michx. Stem 2 or 3 feet high : leaves undulate, oblong or elliptical, 

 3 to 5 inches long, with rounded or refuse apex and cordate-clasping base : peduncle 2 to 

 12 inches long : umbel loosely many-flowered : corolla dull greenish-purple ; the lobes 

 oblong, 4 lines long : column as high as broad : hoods flesh-color, erosely truncate and 

 somewhat toothed at the broad summit, hardly exceeding the anthers, shorter than the 

 falcate-subulate incurved horn : anther-wings bicorniculate at base in the manner of A. 

 Sullivantii. — Fl. i. 113 ; Decaisne, he. 565. A. purpurascens, Walt. Car. 103. — Dry or 

 sandy soil. New England to Florida, Texas, and Nebraska. 

 A. Meadii, Torr. A foot or two high : leaves plane and even, ovate-lanceolate, or 

 rarely lanceolate, obtuse or acute, rounded at the sessile base, rough-margined, 1-J to 3 

 inches long : peduncle 2 to 4 inches long : umbel 6-20-flowered : corolla greenish-yellow ; 

 the lobes ovate, 3 or 4 lines long ; column very short : hoods purplish, with rounded-trun- 

 cate entire summit and a tooth at the inner margins, exceeding the anthers and the subu- 

 late inflexed horn : anther-wings with entire but descending salient angle at base. — Gray, 

 Man. ed. 2, addend. 704, ed. 5, 397. — Dry ground, Illinois, S. B. Mead, Iowa, Vasey, &o. 



