CUCURBITACEAE — GOURD FAMILY 



751 



i-j-r-' 



Fig. 438. Muskmelon iCucuiiiis Melo). 

 A part of a plant of the common melon. 

 (W. S. Dudgeon). 



Fig. 439. Pistillate flowef of cu- 

 cumber iCucumis). a, sepal; b» 

 petal; c, pistil; d, stigma; e, style; 

 f, ovary. (Pieters, U. S. Dept. 

 Agr.). 



American origin. The hubbard squash is a well known representative of the 

 species and is used in various food preparations. Other species like cushaw 

 (C tnoschata) are also cultivated. The Missouri gourd (C. foetidisshna) , with 

 a large root, sometimes a foot in diameter, occurs from Nebraska to Texas. 

 The wild cucumber or wild balsam apple {Echmocystis lobata) is frequently 

 used as a climber and is sometimes weedy. The star cucumber (^Sicyos an- 

 gulatus) is used in a similar way. The cocoon antidote, (Fevillea cordifolia), 

 a native of Jamaica, has seeds which are used as a cure for snake bites and as 

 an antidote against Entada scandens. They also contain an oil. The seeds of 

 Tefaria pedata, a native of the East coast of Africa and Zanzibar, contain an 

 excellent oil. The bryony of Europe (Bryonia dioica) is a climbing plant pro- 

 ducing a pretty colored fruit. It is a drastic purgative and is poisonous. It 

 contains the alkaloid bryonicin Cj^H^^NOj, and the root of Bryonia alba con- 

 tains the glucoside bryonin C^^H^gOgj. Dr. Halsted states that a friend of 

 his has been repeatedly poisoned by handling the star cucumber {Sicyos angu- 

 lata). Friedberger and Frohner state that poisoning has occurred from Cucur- 

 hita Pepo, causing symptoms of dullness and in some cases the animals showed 

 excitement. Major Kirtikar says that the pulp of a cucurbitaceous plant of 

 India, Trichosanthes palmata, a perennial herb, is used in India to poison cattle, 

 and that the T. cucumerina also of that country is an emetic and a drastic pur- 

 gative. Echinocystis macrocarpa, according to Trimble and Sayre contains a 

 glucoside. The marimbo or dipper gourd (^Lagenaria vulgaris) yields gourds 

 which are edible when small. 



LoBELiACEAE. Lobelia Family 

 Herbs with acrid milky juice; leaves alternate; flowers perfect, irregular, 

 5-lobed; gamopetalous corolla; stamens 5, free from the corolla, united into a 

 tube; stamens monadelphous and syngenesious ; flowers proterandrous, the 

 stigma of the single style often fringed with hairs; fruit a capsule with numer- 

 ous small seeds; embryo minute and straight. 



