206 POPULAR FLORA. 



92. CAT-TAIL FAMILY. Older TYPHACEiE. 

 Marsh herbs, with Hnear, sword-shaped leaves (erect, except they float in water), and 

 monoecious naked flowers in dense spikes or heads, one sort consistinij; of some stamens 

 only, the other of pistils only. Fruit a one-seeded akene. No spathe, except some ojjen 

 bracts or leaves. 



Flowers in one long spike orsnadix, the upper part bearing stamens only, the lower slen- 

 der pistils only closely packed together ; ovary long-stalked and surrounded 

 by slender down, ( Typha) Cat-tail. 



Flowers in separate heads, some bearing stamens only, others pistils only, each sur- 

 rounded by several scales, but no down, {Sparyanium) Buk-Reed. 



II. Petaloideoiis Division. 



93. WATER-PLANTAIN FAMILY. Order ALISMACEiE. 

 Marsh or aquatic herbs, with a distinct calyx of 3 green or greenish sepals and a corolla 

 I 3 white petals, 6 to many stamens on the receptacle, and many one-o'iuled pistils 

 collected into a ring or head, becoming akenes in fruit. Leaves mostly oblong-heart-shaped. 

 lance-shaped, or arrow-shaped, sometimes with cross veinlets, long-petioled. Flowers on 

 scapes. Two genera are common. 

 Flowers perfect with about 6 stamens, small, in an open panicle: pistils 15 to 20 in a ring: 



leaves not arrow-shaped, (Alisma) Water-Plantain. 



Flowers monoecious or dioecious, in a loose I'aceme or spike; the sterile ones with many 



stamens; the fertile with many pistils in a head, making thin winged akenes. 



Leaves or some of them generally arrow-shaped, {Sagittaria) Arrowhead. 



94. TRILLIUM FAMILY. Order TRILLIACEiE. 

 Herbs with simple stems rising from a short rootstock, rather conspicuously netted- 

 vcined leaves in a whorl, and perfect and regular flowers : — containing in this country 

 only the genus Trillium and the Indian Cucumber-root, which are here described. 



Trillinm.* Trillium. 

 Stem bearing at the summit a whorl of 3 broad leaves and one rather large flower. Calvx of 

 3 green spreading sepals. Corolla of 3 spreading petals. Stamens 6, with short filaments and long 

 erect anthers turned inwards, inserted on the receptacle. Pistil one, 3-celled, commonly with 3 to 6 

 lobes or ridges, and making a purple many-seeded berry in fruit: styles or long sessile stigmas 3. 

 spreading. — They all grow in rich woods, and blossom in spring or early summer. 

 J Sessile flowered T. Flower and the ovate leaves both sessile ; petals rather erect, dark dul 



purple or greenish. W. & S. T. sessile. 



^. Recurved T. Leaves narrowed at the base into a footstalk; sepals turned down: petals nar 



rowed at both ends ; otherwise like No. 1. W. T. recurvatum, 



Also called Bikthkoot, Wake-Robin, and Three-leaved Nightshade, 



