DICOTYLEDONOUS PLANTS 101 



42. SARRACENIACE^. Pitcher-plant Family. 



Perennial, stemless, marsh herbs. Leaves tubular or 

 trumpet-sliaped. Flowers single, nodding, on a naked or 

 bracted scape. Sepals 4-5, colored, persistent. Petals 5, 

 deciduous, or sometimes wanting. Stamens numerous. Pistil 

 compound, 6-celled, many-ovuled ; style terminal, nearly as 

 broad as the flower, shield-shaped.* 



SAHRACENIA, Toum. 



Eootstock short, horizontal ; scape naked. Leaves trumpet- 

 shaped, with a wing extending nearly to the base and a broad 

 blade at the apex (see Part II, Ch. XXVI) ; tube hairy 

 within, with downward-pointing, stiff hairs. Calyx 3-bracted. 

 Petals obovate, drooping or incurved. Style umbrella-shaped, 

 5-angled ; stigmas at the hooked angles of the style on the 

 under surface. Capsule globose, rough. [The tubular leaves 

 usually contain more or less water and dead insects, the latter 

 having been attracted by a honey-like secretion near the 

 opening. For a full account of the structure and peculiar 

 action of the leaves, see Goodale's Physiological Botany, 

 pp. 347-353.]* 



1. S. purpurea, L. Side-saddle Flowee. Leaves ascending, 

 curved, broadly winged, pm-ple-veined, 4-8 in. long; blade erect, 

 round-cordate, hairy on the inner side. Scapes 12-18 in. tall ; flower 

 deep purple, about 2 in. broad. Style yellowish. Mossy swamps.* 



43. SAXIFRAGACE.^;. Saxifrage Family. 



Herbs or shrubs. Leaves alternate or opposite, generally 

 without stipules. Sepals 4 or 6, more or less coherent with 

 each other and adnate to the ovary. Petals as many as the 

 sepals and alternate with them. Stamens as many as the 

 petals and alternate with them, or 2-10 times as many. 

 Ovary usually of 2 carpels, united only at the base or more 

 or less throughout. Fruit generally a l-2Tcelled capsule, 

 sometimes a berry. Seeds many, with endosperm. 



