274 DOGBANE FAMILY. 



87. APOCYNACE^, DOGBANE FAMILY. 



Herbaceous or woody plants, known mainly by the milky acrid 

 juice, opposite (sometimes whorled) simple and entire leaves, with- 

 out stipules, and regular monopetalous flowers with 5 in the calyx, 

 corolla, and stamens, the lobes of the corolla convolute or twisted in 

 the bud, the anthers conniving around the stigma or often adhering 

 somewhat to it, ordinarj' pollen, filaments separate, the 2 free ovaries 

 commonly separate, but often the styles and always the stigmas 

 united into one. The ovaries also are often united into one, the juice 

 in several (as of Periwinkle and Oleander) is not at all or slightly 

 milky, and one of our genera has alternate leaves. Some are orna- 

 mental in cultivation, many are acrid-poisonous. There is com- 

 monly a ring, membrane, or other appendage on the style below the 

 stigma, to which the anthers are apt to adhere. 



§ 1. Shrubs cult, for ornament, natives of warm climates: haves oftener whorled. 



1. ALLAMANDA. Corolla large, yellow, with short tube abruptly expanded into 



cylindrical bell-shaped or funnel-form, the 5 lobes broad and rounded. Sta- 

 mens at the summit of the proper tube or throat, alternate and conniving with 

 as many 2-parted narrow scales. Ovary one and 1-celled, with 2 parietal pla^ 

 centse, becoming a pricltly pod. Style slender. Seeds naked. 



2. NERIUM. Corolla salver-form or the long tube narrow funnel-form, the throat 



crowned with 5 slender-toothed scales. Stamens on the middle of the tube: 

 anthers 2-taLled at base and tapering at the apex into a long hairy twisted 

 awn-like appendage. Style 1. Ovaries 2, forming pods. Seeds tutted. 



§ 2. More or less woody-stemmed twiners, with opposite leaves. 



8. ECHITES. Corolla funnel-form or salver-shaped, naked in the throat. Fila- 

 ments very short. Style 1. Ovaries 2, becoming 2 long terete pods. Seeds 

 with a downv tuft, i lowers large and showy. ' 



4. FORSTERONfA. Corolla funnel-form, nearly as in Echites, but the flower 

 small, and filaments slender. 



§ 3. Eerbs or scarcely woody plants, not twiners : bark mually abounding with tough 

 fibres : ovaries 2, becoming many-seeded pods in fruit. 



* Leaves (pposite. 

 6. VINCA. CbroUa salver-shaped or the tube funnel-form, the throat narrow 

 and naked. Stamens inserted on the upper part or middle of the tube: fila^ 

 ments short. Style 1, slender. Pods rather short. Seeds abrupt at each 

 end, naked, rough. The hardy species trail or creep. 



6. APOCYNUM. Corolla beU-shaped, crowned with 5 triangular appendages in 



the throat. Stamens attached to the very base of the corolla. Style none. 

 A large ovate stigma unites the tips of the 2 ovaries, which in fruit foi-m long 

 and slender pods. Seeds with a long tuft of silky down at one end. Upright 

 or ascending herbs, with small pale or white flowers In terminal cymes or 

 corymbs, and vei-y tough fibrous bark. 



* * Leaves alternate, very numerous. 



7. AMSONIA. Corolla salver-shaped or the slender tube somewhat fannel-forra, 



bearded mside, without appendages at the throat, the lobes long and linear. 

 Stamens inserted on and included in the tube: anthers blunt at both ends. 

 Style 1, slender. Pods long (4' -6') and slender. Seeds cylindrical, abrupt 

 at both ends, with no tuft. Upright herbs, with terminal panicled cymes of 

 bltush flowers. 



1. ALLAMANDA. (Named for Dr. F. AUamand, who discovered the 



common species in Guiana.) 



A. eath&rtJoa. A showy shrub of the conservatory, with bri-ht r:-c-:\ 

 oblong thinnish leavjs, nnd go'.dcu-yellow flowers 2|^'-3' long. '^ 



