BALSAMINACJS;^. (HALSAM FAMILY.) 65 



styles, adnate to an elongated central axis, from which they separate elas- 

 tically at maturity. Seed solitary, without albumen. Embryo convolute. 



1. GERANIUM, Toum. Craneshill. 

 Flowers regular. Stamens perfect, the inner ones with a gland at the base. 

 Styles at maturity separating with the 1 -seeded carpels, and coiled upward, the 

 inner face naked. — Herbs. Stems forking. Leaves palmately lobod. Pedun- 

 cles 1-3-flowered. 



1. G. maculatum, L Perennial, erect, hairy; leaves 5-7-parted, the' 

 divisions acutely lobed and toothed ; peduncles 1 - 2-flpwered, the terminal ones 

 often umbellate ; petals large, entire, 2-3 times longer than the oblong awned 

 sepals — Open woods in the upper districts and northward. April and May. 

 — Root tuberous, very astringent. Stem l°-2° high. Flowers purple, 1' 

 wide. 



2. G. Carolinianum, L. Annual, generally prostrate, pubescent ; leaves 

 5 - 7-parted, the narrow divisions obtusely lobed and toothed ; peduncles 2-<low- 

 ercd; petals cmarginate, as long as the ovate awned sepals. — Waste places, 

 common. March and April. — Stems forking, 6' -18' long. Flowers pale 

 purple. 



Order 33. BAL.SAMINA CEiE. (Balsam Family.) 



Smooth and succulent annual herbs, with undivided exstipulate leaves, 

 and irregular hypogyuous pontandrous flowers. — Sepals 5, colored, de- 

 ciduous; the two inner (and upper) ones united, the lowest large and 

 saccate. Petals 4-5, distinct or united. Stamens 5, coherent above. 

 Ovary 6-celled, the cells 2 - several-ovuled. Fruit capsular or drupa- 

 ceous. Seeds anatropous, without albumen. Embryo straight, with thick 

 cotyledons. 



1. IMPATIBNS, L. Jewel-Weed. 



Lowest sepal saccate and spurred. Petals 4, united by pairs. Filaments 

 short, with a scale on the inner face. Capsule 5-celled, bursting elastically into 

 5 valves. Placentas central, persistent. — Stems brandling, somewhat pellucid. 

 — Leaves serrate. Peduncles axillary, 1 - several-flowered. Earliest flowers 

 fruiting in the bud. 



1 I. pallida, Nutt. (Pale Tohcii-me-not.) Leaves ovate or oval, ob- 

 tusely serrate, membranaceous ; flowers pale yellow ; lower sepal slightly spotted, 

 dilated, open, tipped with a short recurved spur. — Wet shady places, Georgia 

 and northward. July - Sept. — Stems 2° - 4° high. 



2. I. fulva, Nutt. (Spotted Todch-me-not.) Flowers deep orange; 

 lower sepal conical, conspicuously spotted, tipped with a rather long recurved 

 spur ; otherwise like No 1 , but with smaller flowers. — Shady swamps, Florida 

 and northward. July -Sept. 

 6* 



