■WATKR-PLANTAIN FAMILY. 319 



minute scales interposed, ttie lower of pistils, each ovary with a few small 

 scales at its base, the whole ripening into a spherical head of small nuts, 

 which are wedge-shaped below and with a pointed tip. 



1. TYPHA, CAT-TAIL FLAG. (From Greek word for fin, in which 

 these plants abound.) Fl. early summer. 3/ 



T.latifdlia, Common C. or Reed-Mace ; with flat leaves, these and the 

 stem 6°- 10° high ; no interval between the sterile and fertile part of the spilvc. 



T. angustif61ia, Narrow-leaved C. Less common, smaller; leaves 

 narrower, more channelled toward the base ; commonly a space between the 

 sterile and the fertile part of the spike. 



2. SPAEGANIUM, BUR-REED. (Name from Greek for a fillet, al- 

 luding to the ribbon-shaped leaves ) Fl. summer. IJ. 



S. euryc&rpum, Great B. Border of ponds and streams, 3° -5° high, 

 with panicled-spiked heads, the fertile when in fruit 1^" thick, the nuts broad- 

 tipped ; stigmas 2; leaves \' -\' wide, flat on upper side, keeled and concave- 

 sidL'd on the other. 



S. simplex, Smaller B. Only N. : in water ; erect, sometimes floating, 

 l°-2° high, mostly with a simple row of heads; leaves narrower; stigina 

 simple, linear, as long as the style ; nuts tapering to both ends and with a 

 stalked base. 



S. minimum. Smallest B. Mostly with leaves floating in shallow 

 water (6'— 10' long) and flat; heads few; stigma simple, oval; nuts oval, 

 shortrpointed and short-stalked. 



II. PETALOIDEOUS DIVISION. Flowers not on a spadix, 

 with a perianth (calyx and corolla), all or part of it usually colored. 



114. ALISMACE^, WATER-PLANTAIN FAMILY. 



Marsh herbs, with flowers on scapes or scape-like stems, in pani- 

 cles, racemes, or spikes, with distinct calyx and corolla, viz. 3 se- 

 pals and 3 petals, and from 3 to many distinct pistils ; stamens on 

 the receptacle. Juice sometimes milky. The genuine Alismaceee 

 have solitary ovules and seeds, and wholly separate pistils. Some 

 outlying related plants differing in these respects are annexed. 



L ARROW-GRASS FAMILY. Calyx and corolla colored 

 alike (greenisii). Anthers turned outwards. Ovaries 3 partly 

 united, or a single 3 - 6-celled compound pistil. Leaves petiole-like, 

 without a blade. 



1. TEIGLOCHIN. Flowers perfect, small, in a slender spike or raceme, brnct- 



less. Calyx and corolla deciduous. Stamens 3 or 6, with oval anthers on 

 short filaments. Ovary 3 - 6-oelled, splitting when ripe from the central axis 

 into as maivy closed and dry seed-like 1-seeded cells : stigmas sessile. 



2. SCHEUCHZtRIA. Flowers perfect, few and rather small, in a loose bracted 



raceme. Sepals and petals oblong, persistent. • Stamens 6, with linear an- 

 thers. Pistils 3; with globular 2-3,-ovuled ovaries slightly united at base, and 

 diverging in fruit, forming 3 turgid pods. Stigmas flat, sessile. 



IL WATER^PLANTAIN FAMILY proper. Calyx of 3 

 persistent green sepals. Corolla of 3 deciduous white petals. An- 

 thers turned outwards. Ovaries many, tipped with short style or 

 stigma, 1-ovuled, becoming akenes in fruit. Leaves sometimes only 

 petioles, commonly with distinct blade, when the nerves or ribs 

 are apt to be more or less joined by cross veins or netted. 



