OEDEE XLin. LEGTJMmOS^ PEA-FAMILY. 



149 



sidea. Stigma capitate Ovary stipitate. Legume flat, 2^-4- 

 SPeded. Flowers of 2 kinds ; upper ones complete, but mostly bar- 

 ren ; those at the base of the stem apetalov^ ami productive. 



1. A. monoica. Wild Pea-vine. 



Stfim Blender, hairy, twining; leaves pinnately trifoliate; leaflets rhombic- 

 ovate, acute, smooth ; apper and perfect flowers nodding, in axillary racemes 

 no longer than the leaves, purplish- white; lower Imperfect flowers on radical 

 peduncles ; cauline legumes 8— T-seeded ; radical ones often beneath the sur- 

 face, 1-seedofl. A very delicate vine in low woods and thickets. July— Sep. 

 An. 



8. EOBlNIA. 



Calyx short, campanulate, 5-toothed ; 2 upper segments more 

 or less cohering, shorter. Banner large. Keel obtuse. Stamens 

 diadelphous. Style bearded on the inside. Legume compressed, 

 many-seeded, nearly sessile. Trees and shrubs. 



1. R. pseudo-acacia. Locust Tree. 



Branches with stipular prickles ; prickles mostly 8 together; leaves 9 — 19- 

 foliate ; leaflets ovate, or oblong-ovate, thin, mucronate, smooth, paler beneath ; 

 flowers largo, white, numerous, fragrant, in axillary, pendulous racemes which 

 areS'— 5' long; legumes smooth. A beautiful tree with elegant foliage and 

 abundant showy flowers. Native of tho South and West, but naturalized In 

 N. England andN. York. May — June. 



2. R. viscosa. Clammy Locust, 



stipular spines very short ; branchlets, petioles and legumes, glandular- viscid ; 

 leaves 11 — 15-foUate ; leaflets ovate ; flowers numerous, rose-color, without 

 fragrance, in crowded racemes. An oAamental Southern tree, common in 

 cultivation at the North. May — June. 



3. E.. hispida. Bose-acacia. 



stipular spines scarcely any; branches, calyx and legumes, hispid ; flowers 

 targe, deep ruse-color without fragrance, abundant, in loose and somewhat erect 

 racemes. A very ornamental shrub, 3 — 4 feet high. Native at the South, 

 Very common in cultivation. May. 



9. TEPHE6SIA. 

 Calyx with 5 nearly equal teeth. Bracteoles none. Banner 

 large, round, spreading, or reflexed. Keel obtuse, cohering with 

 the wings. Stamens in 1 or 2 sets. Legume commonly sessile, 

 much compressed, many-seeded. Per. 



1. T. Virginiana. Goafs Rue. 



Villous; stem simple, erect; leaves sab-sessile. 17 — 29-foliate; leaflets ob- 

 long, more or less acute, mucronate, softly villous beneath; racemes terminal, 

 oblong, nearly or quite sessile ; flowers large, pale yellow and purple ; legumes 

 faleato, villous. — An exceedingly beautiful plant, growing in sandy solla Not 

 very common, stems 1 — 2 feet high. July. 



10. TRIF6LIUM. 

 Calyx tubular, campanulate, 5-cleft, persistent. Petals more 

 or less united at base, withering. Banner larger than the wings, 

 reflexed. "Wings oblong, mostly longer than the keel. Legume 

 small, membranaceous, indehiscent, included in, and scarcely 

 longer than the calyx, 2 — 4-seeded. Seeds sub-globose. Leaves 

 trifoliate. Flowers in dense heads* 



1. T. repens. WhitQ Glover. 



Smooth ; stem creeping, spreading ; leaflets obcordate, denticulate ; petioles 

 iong, semi-terete; stipules narrow-lanceolate, scarious; heads globose, on long 

 axillary, angular peduncles ; coroflas white, becoming pale brown, very fragrant, 

 reflexed when past flowering ; calyx-teeth unequal, shorter than the tube; le- 

 game 4-seeded. A very common Clover in damp soils, flowering the entire 

 season. Per. 



2. T. arvense. Bahhifs-foot Clover. 



Silky-pubescent; stem erect, branching ; leaflets oblong-obovate, minutely 

 8-toothed at apex; petioles very short ; stipules ovate-lanceolate; flowers pale 

 rod or whitish, in cylindrical, vory hairy heads, calyx-teeth IVinged with hairs 

 much longer than themselves. A small hairy plant, 8'— 8' high, not uncom- 

 mon in pastures and dry soils. July— Aug. An. 



3. T. pratense. Bed Clover. 



stems ftssurgent, hairy, slightly pubescent; petioles pubescent; leaflets 



ovate, nearly or quite entire, with a large, lighter-colored spot in the centre, 

 emarginate; stipules ovate-lanceolate, membranaceous, acuminate, strongly 

 nerved ; flowers red, never reflexed, in dense, short, fragrant heads. A common 

 and beautiful species, often cultivated for hay ; blooming all summer. Intro- 

 duced. Per. 



11. MELIL6TUS. 



Calyx tubular, persistent, 5-toothed. Corolla deciduous. Ban- 

 ner longer than the wings. Keel-i)etals completely united, co- 

 hering with the wings. Style terminal, filiform. Stamens in 2 

 sets (9 and 1). Legume coriaceous, longer than the calyx 1 — 

 few seeded. 



1. M. officinalis. Yellow Mellilot Glover, 



Stem erect, branching, smooth ; leaves pinnately 8-foliate; leaflets obovate- 

 oblong, obtuse, remotely serrate ; stipules setaceous; flowers yellow, in loose, 

 axillary racemes, corolla twice as long as the calyx ; legume ovate, 2-seeded. 

 A very fragrant annual plant 2 — 3 feet high, found in alluvial soils. Introduced. 

 June— Aug. 



2. M. leucdntha. White Mellilot Glover. 



stem fiirrowed, smooth, branched ; leaflets ovate-oblong, truncate at apex, 

 remotely serrate; stipules setaceous; flowers white, in long, loose, axillary, ra- 

 cemes ; corolla more than twice as long as the calyx; legume ovate, 2-seeded. 

 A fragrant plant, 2 — 1 feet high, much resembling the last, but easily distin- 

 guished by the color of the flowers, and longer racemes. Alluvial meadows, 

 also in waste places, and round old housea Introduced. June— Aug. Bieri' 

 niaZ, 



12. MEDIOlGO. 



Calyx 5-clcft, somewhat cylindric. Keel of the corolla re- 

 mote from the standard. Legume falcate, or spiraUy coiled, 

 usually many-seeded. 



1. M. lupulina. Nonesuch. 



stem procumbent, angular, more or less pubescent; leaves trifoliate ; leaflets 

 obovate, serrulate, mucronate; stipules lanceolate, acute, nearly entire; flowers 

 small, yellow, in small ovate heads, on slender, pubescent peduncles, longer 

 than the petioles; legumes reniform, 1-seeded, rugose. A common plant in 

 fields and roadsides, with clover-like foliage, and yellow flowers. Introduced. 

 May — Oct. Siennial. 



13. desm6dium. 

 Calyx with 2 bracteoles at base, bilabiate, 5-cleft Corolla 

 inserted on the calyx at the base. Banner roundish. Keel obtuse. 

 Stamens diadelphous (9 and 1), sometimes monadelphous. Style 

 filiform. Stigma capitate. Legume (loment) compressed, com- 

 posed of several, 1-seeded, separate joints. Leaves pinnately 

 trifoliate. Fer. 



1. D. nudifldrum. Scape Trefoil. 



Stem erect, leafy at summit; leaflets rhombic-ovate, acuminate, somewhat 

 glaucous beneath ; flowers small, in radical and scape-like, paniculate racemes, 

 purple; stamens monadelphous; legame with obtusely triangular joints. A 

 common and well marked species, distinguished by its radical scapes, which 

 are 1—2 ft. high, with a long raceme of purple flowers, "Woods. July— Aug. 



2. D. acumiBatum. Bush Trefoil. 



stem erect, simple, pubescent, leafy at summit ; leaves long-petiolate ; leaf- 

 lets broad-ovate, terminal one rhomboidal, all conspicuously acuminate; 

 flowers small, pale purple, in a long, terminal, loose, raceme-like panicle, on a 

 very long, slender peduncle; legumes with about 3 triangular joints. Woods, 

 common. About a foot high, with a panicle 1 — 2 ft. long. JuVy — Aug. 



3. D. Canadense. Canadian Trefoil. 



stem erect, branching, hairy, striate; leaves on short petioles; leaflets ob- 

 long-lanceolate, nearly glabrous ; stipules subulate ; bracts ovate-lanceolate, 

 ciliate, conspicuous ; flowers purple, in axillary and terminal racemes ; legumo 

 3—5 jointed ; joints obtusely triangular, hispid. A fine showy species in dry 

 woods, 2 — 4 fL high. July. 



4. D. canescens. Hoary Trefoil. 



stem erect, branching, hairy, striate, scabrous ; leaflets ovate, more or less 

 acute, scabrous, pubescent on both sides ; stipules large, ovate, oblique, clliatc, 

 finely striate, persistent; panicle terminal, very large, naked, densely can- 

 esceut; bracts deciduous, ovate-lanceolate; flowers small, violet-purple, be- 

 coming greenish when withering; loments with about 4 oblong- triangular, 



