ALlSMACEiE. (wATER-rLANTAIN FAMILY.) 437 



Suborder I. JUNCAGINEjE. The Arrow-grass Family. 



1. TRIG 1,6c II IN, L. AEEOw-GnAss. 



Sepals and petals nearly alike (greenish), ovate, concave, deciduous. Sta- 

 mens 6 : anthers oval, on very short filaments. Pistils united into a 3 - 6-celled 

 compound ovary : stigmas sessile : ovules solitary. Pod splitting when ripe 

 into 3-6 carpels, which separate from a central axis. — Leaves rush-like, fleshy, 

 sheathing the base of the wand-like naked and jointless scape. Flowers small, 

 in a spiked raceme, bractless. (Name composed of rpeis, three, and ■yXw^'") 

 poimt, from the three points of the ripe fmit in No. 1.) 



1. T. palustrc, L. Scape (6'-18'liigh) and leaves slender ; fruit linear- 

 club-shaped ; the 3 carpels when ripe separating from below upwards from the tri- 

 angular axis, and awl-pointed at the base. H. — Marshes, both fresh and brack- 

 ish, New York to Ohio and northward. Aug. (Eu.) 



2. T. maritimuni, L. Scape [12' -20' high) and leaves thicMsh,Jleshy; 

 fruit ovate or oblong, acutish, of % or rarely 5 carpets which are rounded at the base 

 and slightly grooved on the bach; the edges acute. U — Salt marshes along the 

 coast ; salt springs, Salina, New York ; shore of the Great Lakes, and north- 

 ward. — Var. elAtum (T. elatum, Nvtt.) grows in cold and fresh bogs, from 

 W. New York to Wisconsin, often 2^° high, and has the angles of the carpels 

 sharper, or almost winged. (Eu.) 



2. SCHEVCHKXIRIA, L. Schbuchzekia. 



Sepals and petals oblong, spreading, nearly alike (greenish-yellow), but the 

 latter narrower, persistent. Stamens 6 : anthers linear. Ovaries 3, globular, 

 slightly united at the base, 2-3-ovuled, bearing flat sessile stigmas, in fruit 

 forming 3 diverging and inflated 1 - 2-soeded pods, opening along the inside. — 

 A low bog-herb, with a creeping jointed rootstock, tapering into the ascending 

 simple stem, which is zigzag, partly sheathed by the bases of the grass-like con- 

 duplicate leaves, terminated by a loose raceme of a few flowers, with sheathing 

 bracts. (Named in honor of the two brothers Scheudizer, distinguished Swiss 

 botanists.) 



1. S. palustris, L. — Peat-bogs, New England to Penn., Wisconsin, and 

 northward; rather rare. July. (Eu.) 



Suborder II. AL.ISMEJE. The Water-Plantain Family. 



3. ALiiSMA, L. Watek-Plantain. 



Flowers perfect. Petals involute in tlie bud. Stamens definite, mostly 6. 

 Ovaries many in a simple circle on a flattened receptacle, forming flattened cori- 

 aceous achenia, which are dilated and 2-3-keeled on the,back. — Roots fibrous. 

 Leaves all from the root, several-ribbed, with connected veinlets. Scape vritU 

 whorled panicled branches. Flowers small, white or pale rose-color. (Tha 

 Greek name ; of uncertain derivation.) 

 37* 



