H^MODORACEiE. (bLOODWORT FAMILY.) 457 



Order 121. H^MODORACE^. (Bloodwort Family.) 



Herbs, with fibrous roots, usually equitant leaves, and perfect 3 - 6-anc?rou* 

 regular flowers, which are woolly or scurfy outside ; the tube of the G-lobed 

 perianth coherent mth the whole surface, or with merely Hie lower part, of the 

 3-celled ovary. — Anthers introrse. Style single, sometimes 8-partible; 

 the 3 stigmas alternate with the cells of the ovary. Pod crowned or en- 

 closed by the persistent perianth, 3-celled, loculicidal, 3 - many-seeded. 

 Embryo small, in hard or fleshy albumen. A small family.* 



Synopsis. 



* Ovary wholly adherent to the calyx-tube : style filiform ; seeds peltate, amphitropous. . 



1. LACIINANTIIE3. Stamens 3, exserted ; anthers versatile. Leaves equitant. 



* « Ovary f^«e except the base : style 8-partible : seeds anatropous. 



2. LOPHIOLA. Stamens 6, inserted near the ba^e of the woolly 6-cleft perianth. Leaves 



equitant. 

 8. ALETRIS. Stamens 6, inserted in the tiiroat of ttie warty-roughened and tubular 6-tootl3ed 

 perianth. Leaves flat. 



X. LiACHIVAnTHES, EU. Red-koot. 



Perianth woolly outside, 6-partcd down to the adherent ovaiy. Stamens 3, 

 opposite the 3 larger or inner divisions : filaments long, exserted : anthers linear, 

 fixed by the middle. Style thread-like, exserted, declined. Pod globular. 

 Seeds few on each fleshy placenta, flat and rounded, fixed by the middle. — 

 Herb with a red fibrous perennial root, equitant sword-shaped leaves, clustered 

 at the base and scattered on the stem, which is hairy at the top, and terminated 

 by a dense compound cyme of dingy yellow and loosely woolly flowers (whence 

 the name, from Xap^i/ij, wool, and avBos, blossom). 



1. Xi. tinctoria, KU. — Sandy swamps, Bhode Island, New Jersey, and 

 southward, near the coast. July - Sept. 



a. liOPHiOLiA, Ker. Lophiola. 



Perianth densely woolly, deeply 6-cleft; the divisions nearly equal, spreading, 

 longer than the 6 stamens, which are inserted at their base. Anthers fixed by 

 the base. Pod ovate, free from the perianth except at the base, pointed with 

 the awl-shaped style, which finally splits into 3 divisions, one terminating each 

 valve. Seeds numerous, oblong, ribbed, anatropous. — A slender perennial 

 herb, with creeping rootstocks and fibrous roots, linear and nearly smooth equi- 

 tant leaves ; the stem leafless and whitened with soft matted wool towards the 

 summit, as well as the crowded or panicled cyme. Perianth dingy yellow in- 



* The character by which Endlicher distinguishes this family from the foregoing, viz. by hav- 

 ing the 3 cells of the ovary oj^asite the inner divisions of the perianth, is not true of either of 

 the following genera. Yet, in Lophiola and Aletris, the 3 stigmas, as well as the 3 divisions in- 

 to which the style splits at maturity, are indeed thus situated : but they stand over the parti- 

 tions, instead of the cells, and therefore exactly surmount the valves of the loculicidal pod. 

 89 



