416 POLTGONACE^. (buckwheat family.) 



pale or whitish ; style 2-cle/l, or not parted to the base. We have, sparingly, var. 

 iNciniTir, Koch (P. incannm, Wtlld.), and only a depauperate form of it, 

 3' - 6' higli ; leaves lanceolate, obtuse, white-downy beneath ; spikes barely 6" 

 long, erect. — Borders of Cayuga Lake, New York ( Chickering and Brewer), of 

 Lake Superior (0. B. Wheeler) and farther northward {Bourgeau). — The true 

 P. nodosum, Pers., which connects this species with the next, has not been 

 detected. (Eu.) 



7. P. PEKSicisiA, L. (Lady's Thumb.) Nearly smooth and glabrous 

 (12' -18' high); sheaths more or less bristly-ciliate ; leaves lanceolate, pointed, 

 roughish, usually marked with a dark triangular or lunar spot near the middle ; 

 spikes ovoid or oblong, dense, erect, on smooth (or at l^ast not glandular) peduncles ; 

 stamens mostly 6 ; styles half 2 - Z-cleJl ; achenium gibbous-flattened or some- 

 times triangular, smooth and shining. — "Waste and damp places : very com- 

 mon. — Plowers greenish-purple. (Nat. from Eu.) 



•*- •»- Annuals or perennials ; spikes slender, filiform, loosely flowered or inter- 

 rupted : fiowers greenish or whitish, sometimes purplish-tinged : sepals dotted 

 with conspicuous glands: leaves pellucid-dotted; sheatlts fringed with bristles: 

 whole herbage pungenily acrid I 



8. P. Hydrdpiper, L. (Common Smartweed or Water-peppee.) 

 Annual, l°-2° high, smooth; spikes nodding, usually short or interrupted; 

 flowers mostly greenish ; stamens 6; style 2 - 3-parted ; achenium dull, mmutely 

 striate, either fiat or obtusely triangular. — Moist or wet grounds ; apparently 

 introduced eastward, but indigenous northward. (Eu.) 



9. P. icre, H. B. K. (Water Smaktweed.) Pcrenm'oZ, nearly smooth ; 

 stems rooting at the decumbent base, 2° -5° high; leaves larger and longer 

 than in the last, taper-pointed; spikes erect; fiowers whitish, sometimes flesh- 

 color ; stamens 8 ; style mostly 3-parted, and the achenium sharply triangular, 

 smooth and shining. (P. punctktum. Ell. P. hydropiperoides, Pursh.) — Wet 

 places : common, especially southward. 



-I- -1- -I- Perennials, not acrid, aquatic or amphibious : sepals not glandular-dotted. 



10. P. hydropiperoides, Michx. (Mild Watek-Peppek. ) Stem 

 smooth (1°-3° high), branching ; the narrow sheaths hairy, fringed with bristles ; 

 leaves narrowly lanceolate ; sometimes oblong ; spikes erect, slender, sometimes 

 filiform, often interrupted at the base (l'-2^' long); flowers small, flesh-color 

 or nearly white ; stamens 8 ; style 3-clr-ft ; achenium sharjuly triangular, smooth and 

 shining. (P. mite, Pers., not of Schrank.) — Wet places, and in shallow water : 

 common, especially southward. 



11. P. amphibium, L. (Water Persioaria.) Stems somewhat sim- 

 ple, and usually terminated by a single ovate or oblong and very dense spike 

 (6" thick) of rather large bright rose-red fiowers ; sheaths not fringed with bris- 

 tles ; stamens 5 ; style 2-ctefl ; achenium biconvex ; leaves varying greatly, from 

 elliptical or cordate-oblong to lance-ovate or lanceolate. — The typical plant is 

 var. aquAticum, Willd. (Var. natans, Mcench. P. coccineum, MuU., &c.), in 

 water, nearly glabrous ; leaves long-petioled, floating, elliptical or oblong, some- 

 times heart-shaped at base; spikes short. — Var. tep.kestke, Willd, grows 

 in shallow water, or in wet soil, or even " in sandy prairies " in Illinois 



