FROO'S-BIT FAMILY. 321 



always tapering into the thick petiole, the nerres nearly all from the thick 

 and prominent midrib. 



S. variabilis. The common species everywhere, exceedingly variable ; 

 almost all the well-developed leaves arrow-shaped ; filaments nearly twice the 

 length of the anthers, smooth ; akenes broadly obovate, with a long and- 

 curved beak ; calyx remaining open. 



S. calyclna. Along rivers, often much immersed ; many of the leaves 

 linear or with no blades; the others mostly halberd-shaped; scapes weak, 

 3' -9' high ; pedicels with fruit recurved ; filaments roughish, only as long as 

 the anthers ; akenes obovate, tipped with short horizontal style ; calyx appressed 

 to head of fruit and partly covering it ; the fertile flowers show 9-12 stamens, 

 the sterile occasionally some rudiments of pistils. 



* * Filaments veri) short and broad. 



S. heteroph^lla. Common S. & W. : scapes 3' -2° high, weak; the 

 fertile flowers almost sessile, the sterile long-pedicelled ; filaments glandular- 

 pubescent; akenes narrow-obovate, with along erect beak ; leaves linear, lance- 

 olate, or lance-oblong, arrow-shaped with narrow lobes or entire. 



S. gr^aminea. Common S. : known from the foregoing by the slender 

 pedicels of . both kinds of flowers, small almost beakless akenes, and leaves 

 rarely arrow-shaped. 



S. pusilla. From N. Jersey S. near the coast : known by the small size 

 (1 -3' high), few flowers, usually only one of them fertile and recurved in fruit ; 

 stamens only about 7, with glabrous filaments ; akenes obovate, with erect beak ; 

 and leaves without a true blade. 



S. nd:tans, only S. is probably a large state of the last, with leaves having 

 a floating blade l'-2' long, ovate or oblong, or slightly heart-shaped, 5-7 

 nerved. 



6. LIMNOCHARIS. (Name from the Greek means </e/«7A/q/"(Aepoo&.) 



Zj. Humb61dtii. Tender aquatic plant' from S. America, which, turned 

 into pools, spreads widely by its proliferous branching and rooting stems, and 

 flowers all summer and autumn ; each flower lasting but a day, the 3 broad 

 sulphur-yellow petals I'-lJ'long; pistils about 6"; leaves about 3' long, the 

 midrib swollen below. 



U5. HyDROCHARIDACE-ffil, FROGS-BIT FAMILY. 



Water-plants, with dioecious, monoecious, or polygamous flowers 

 on scape-like peduncles from a sort of spathe of one or two leaves, 

 the perianth in the fertile flowers of 6 parts united below into a 

 tube which is coherent with the surface of a compound ovary : — we 

 liave three plants, two of them very common. 

 « Floating, spreading by proliferous shoots ; leaves long-petioled, roumdedheaH-shaped. 

 1. LIMNOBIUM. Flowers monoecious or dicecious, from sessile or short-stalked 

 leaf-like spathes, the sterile spathe of one leaf surrounding 3 long-pedicelled 

 staminate flowers: the fertile 2-leaved, with one short-pedicelled flower. 

 Perianth of 3 outer oval lobes (calyx) and 3 narrow inner ones (petals). A 

 cluster of 6-12 unequal monadelphous stamens in the sterile flower: some 

 awl-shaped rudiments of stamens and a 6-9-oeUed ovary in the fertile 

 flower; stigmas 6-9, each 2-parted. Fruit berry-like, many-seeded. 

 # * Growing under water, ike fertile flowers only rising to the surface ; the sterile 

 (not often detected) breaking o^ their sluirt stalks, and floating on the surface 

 around the pistillate flowers. 

 1. ANACHARIS. Stems leafy and branching. Fertile flowers rising from a tubu- 

 lar spathe; the perianth prolonged into an exceedingly slender stalk-like 

 tube, 6-lobed at top, commonly bearing 3-9 apparently good stamens : ovary 

 1-celled with a few ovules on the walls : style coherent with the tube of the 

 perianth: stigmas 3, notched. * 



8. VALLISNERIA. Stemless ; leaves all in tufts from creeping rootstocks. Fer- 

 tile flowers with a tubular spathe, raised to the surface of the water on an 



21 



