COOPERIA 



CORDYLINE 



369 



AA. NecTi of bulb long: perianth tube short. 

 peduiiculS.ta, Herb. Giant Fairy Lilt. More robust 

 than C, Drummondii : bulb with a longer neck, 2-3 in. 

 long: Ivs. about 6, 1 ft. long, Kin. broad: peduncle 

 about 1 ft. long : spathe 1-2-valved at the tip : perianth 

 tube shorter, IHin. long : limb nearlv as long as the 

 tube, tinged red outside. B.M. 3727. R.H. 1853: 401.— 

 The best species. Fls. larger, of purer color, and remain- 

 ing open a day or two longer. ^. jy;. 



C0FR6SMA (Greek name referring to the fetid odor 

 of the plants ) . BublcLcem. Shrubs or small trees, often 

 trailing, of New Zealand, Australia and Hawaii. Cult, 

 for their pretty fr. or variegated Its. Lvs. opposite, 

 mostly small. Pis. small, solitary or fascicled, white or 

 greenish, polygamous dioecious; corolla-limb 4-6-lobed, 

 the lobes revolute ; stamens 4-6 : fr. an ovoid or globose 

 drupe. Coprosmas are greenhouse plants in the north, 

 but they are rarely cult. In S. Calif. 2 species are cult. 

 in the open. Prop, by hardened cuttings. The soil 

 which is found among Kalmia roots, mixed with good 

 loam and sand, if necessary, will suit these plants. 

 Cuttings should be rooted in moderate heat in spring, 

 before growth commences. If placed under a handlight 

 or propagating frame, care must be taken to preTcnt 

 damping, to which the cuttings are liable. 

 Baileri, Endl. (C. Baueri&na, Hook. f. 

 0. Stdckii, Hort.). Trailing plant, with 

 oval-obtuse or rounded entire Its., which 

 are oddly blotched with yellow and whit- 

 ish or even almost wholly yellow. New 

 Zealand.— With age it forms a compact 

 shrub. Vars. pioturMa, Hort., and varie- 

 gd,ta, Hort., are the common forms. 



acerdsa, A. Cunn. Low and spreading, 

 with minute lvs., small white fls., and 

 pretty sky-blue drupes or berries. New 

 Zealand. q. t^, Oliveb and L. H. B. 



C6FTIS (Greek, to cut, from the cut 

 leaves). Manunculdcem. Eight species of 

 hardy perennial herbs of the cooler parts 

 of the northern hemisphere. Low, stem- 

 less plants, with slender rootstocks ; lvs. 

 radical, compound or divided, lasting 

 over winter : fls. white or yellow, sea- 

 pose ; sepals 5-7, petal-like ; petals 5-6, 

 small, linear, hood-like; stamens numer- 

 ous: carpels stalked, few, becoming an 

 umbel of follicles. The bitter roots yield 

 the tonic medicine known as " gold thread ; " 

 also a yellow dye. The plants should have 

 peaty soil, with a little sand, and prefer 

 shade in damp situations. They require 

 some protection in winter, as in a cold 

 pit. Prop, by root division and seed. 



trildlia, Salisb. No stem : rootstock 

 yellow : lvs. compound, long-petioled ; 

 Ifts. broadly obovate, cuneate, obtuse, the 

 teeth mucronate : fl.-stem slender ; sepals 

 white, with yellow base ; petals small, 

 club-shaped : follicles 3-7, spreading, 

 equaled by their stalk ; seeds black. May- 

 July. Adlrondacks and westward. L.B.C. 

 2:173.— Neat and pretty, 

 with shining lvs. 



K. C. Davis. 



CORAL BEERY 



phoricarpus vulgaris. 



CORAL DROPS. Bes- 

 sera elegans. 



CORALLORHtZA(Greek 



for coral-root). OrchidA- 

 cecs, tribe ISpidindrem. 

 CoBAii Root. Low native 

 orchids, growing in woods and parasitic on roots, des- 

 titute of green foliage, the plant usually brownish or 

 yellowish and inconspicuous. Fl. small, somewhat 2- 



545, 



Corallorhiza multiflora. 

 {X%.) 



lipped, usually obscurely spurred at the base ; sepals 

 and petals nearly alike ; lip small, slightly adherent to 

 the base of the column ; pollinia 4. Species few, in N. 

 Amer., Eu. and Asia. The Coral-roots have little merit 

 as garden plants, although very interesting to the stu- 

 dent. They may be grown in rich, shady borders. Two 

 species have been offered by dealers in native plants : 

 0. multifldra, Nutt. (Fig. 545), is purplish, IHft. or less 

 high, 10-30-fld., lip deeply 3-lobed: grows in dry woods 

 in northern states; C. Mertensi&na, Bong., scape many- 

 fld., 8-15 in. high, the lip entire and broadly oblong: 

 occurs in Brit. Col. and N. to Alaska, l_ jj_ 3_ 



CORAL-ROOT. Corallorhiza. 



CORAL-TREE. Erythrina. 



CORCHORITS Jap6nieuB. See Kerria. The genus 

 contains the two plants that furnish Jute, C. capsularis 

 (which yields most) and G. olitorius. They are annual 

 plants, natives of Asia but cultivated throughout the 

 tropics, growing 10 or 12 ft. high, with a straight stem 

 as thick as the little finger and branched only at the top. 

 The young shoots of both are used as pot herbs. O. oli- 

 torius is much grown for this purpose in Egypt, and is 

 known as Jews' Mallow. They belong to the TiU&eece. 



CORDIA (an early German botanist, Valerius Cordus). 

 Borraginhcece. Warm-climate trees or shrubs, mostly 

 American. Calyx tubular or campanulate, toothed or 

 lobed : corolla tubular, lobed, the parts and the stamens 

 4 or more: style 2 -lobed: fr. a drupe which is 4-loculed 

 and usually 4-seeded : lvs. entire or toothed. The 

 Cordias are greenhouse plants with showy fls., of easy 

 cult. Grown in the open in the extreme S. IProp. by 

 cuttings of flrm wood and by seeds. 



SebestSna, Linn. (G. s^ecidsa, Willd.). Geiger Tree. 

 Tall shrub or small tree, hairy, with rough, broad-ovate, 

 large-stalked lvs. : fls. 1-2 in. long, scarlet, stalked, in 

 large, open, terminal clusters, the crumpled corolla- 

 lobes and stamens 5-12 : drupe enclosed in the hazel- 

 like husk formed by the persistent calyx. Keys of Pla. 

 and S. B.M. 794. 



FrdnciBi, Tenore. Tall: lvs. dark green : fls. white. 

 S. Amer. 



Other Cordias, of which there are many, are likely to come 

 into ciilt. in the southern country. O. Greggii. Torr., v&r. PAl- 

 meri. Wats. (G.F. 2:233), of Mexico, "in the size and beauty of 

 its fls. equals the C. Sebestena." — O. Myxa, Linn., from trop. 

 Asia and Austral., is one of the best woods for kindling fire by 

 friction, and is useful in many other ways. jj_ jj_ g^ 



CORDYLtNE {club-lihe: referring to the fleshy roots ) . 

 Lilidcece. Dbac^na. A genus of greenhouse plants 

 closely related to DracEena, but the ovary contains sev- 

 eral ovules in each cell, and the solitary pedicels are 

 provided with a 3-bracted involucre : stem tall, often 

 woody, bearing large, crowded lvs. , to the striking varie- 

 gation of which the group owes its value: fls. panicled; 

 stamens 6 : pedicels articulated : perianth 6-parted : 

 ovary 3-celled : fr. a berry. Cultivated for the orna- 

 mental foliage. The horticultural forms and names have 

 become very numerous. The various species are in the 

 trade under Dracaena, which see for a key to the species 

 of both genera combined. In the following paragraphs, 

 the initial D indicates that the plant in question is 

 known in the trade as a Draceena, and C that it is known as 

 aCordyline {seeBraccena}. For amonograph, see Baker, 

 Journ. Linn. Sdc. 14:538 (1875). g. M. Wiegand. 



Of Cordylines or Draceena, propagation is generally 

 effected by cutting the ripened stems or trunks, from 

 which all lvs. have been removed, into pieces from 2-4 

 in. long. These are laid either in very light soil or in 

 sand in the propagating bed, where they receive a bot- 

 tom heat of about 80° , being barely covered with sand 

 or moss (Pig. 546). The eyes soon start into growth, 

 and, as soon as they have attained a height of 3-4 in., 

 are cut off with a small heel and again placed in the 

 propagating bed until rooted, after which they are 

 potted off into small pots in light soil, kept close until 

 they become established. They are then shifted on into 

 larger pots as soon as well rooted. They delight in a 

 mixture of 3 parts good, turfy loam and 1 part well- 



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