Oedeb 102.— POLTGONAOEiE. 



609 



often colored. Lvs. 2 to 4 long, a fourth as wide, entire, short-atalked, acumi- 

 nate. Fla. rose-colored, in man7 spikes, 1 to 2' long, 5 or 6" thick. Jn.— 

 Aug. § Eur. 



11 P. Pennsylvdnioum L. (Kg. 103, 607.) St. smooth, tumid at the joints; 

 Ivs. lanceolate, petiolate; stip. glabrous, not ciliate; spikes^ oblong, crowded; ped. 

 and often the branches above gkmdtdar-hispid; stam. 8 ; sty. *2-cleft ; ach. lenticular, 

 mtJi flat sides.— Q Margins of ponds and ditches, common. St. geniculate^ 

 branched above, 2 to 4f high. Lvs. 3 to 5' long, J as wide, slightly scabrous with 

 appressed hairs. Spikes short and dense, large, ^nd somewhat nodding. FIs. 

 large, rose-colored, pedicellate. Jl. 



12 P. incaraatum Ell. St. geniculate smooth below; sheaths .smoothish ; lvs. 

 lanceolate, smooth except the roughish midvein and margins, or minutely pu- 

 bescent above ; branches and peduncles glandular-dotted; spikes linear, nodding, at 

 length elongated ; cal. minutely glandular ; stam. 6; sty. 2-eleft; ach. lenticular 

 with concave sides. — "ID In ditches and pools, "VT. and S. States. Sts. 2 to 3f high. 

 Lvs. 5 to 9' by 1 to 3'. I'ls. Uesh-oolor or v/hite, in spiko3 1 to 3' long. JL — 

 Sept. (P. lapathifolium, 2d Edit.) 



13 P. ampbibium L. St. assurgent, prostrate or iecumbent at base, rooting at the 

 lower joints ; lvs. obkmg-lanceolate and oblong, acute, or rounded or cordate at 

 base, petiolate, smooth, acute or acuminate at apex ; spike terminal, ovoid or ob- 

 long, dense ; sia. 5 , sty. 2-cleft. — Marshes, ponds, Can. and U. S., more common 

 North. A very variable species, with large leaves and a terminal, dSnse spike of 

 bright red flowers. Stip. large. Lvs. 5 to 1' by 1 to 2', often shining. Spikes 1 

 to 2' long, the shorter mostly thicker. (Aug. P. coccinum Muhl.) 



p. aquXticum. Floating, smooth ; lvs. ovate-lanceolate or oblong-ovate, shin- 

 ing, thick ; spikes more usually short and thick. (P. fluitana Eaton.) 



y. TEBsiSTEE. Ascending or erect, more or less hirsute ; lvs. lance-oblong, 

 acute or acuminate ; sheath hirsute ; spikes more commonly elongated. — 

 Varies into the other. (Mr. S. 11. "Wright.) 



14 P. viviparum L. Alpine Biston. St. low, erect from a creeping rhizome, 

 simple; lvs. linear-lanceolate, revolute at the margin; spike linear, solitary. — !{. 

 White Mts., N. H. to Arc. Am. A dwarf alpine species 6' high, bearing a single 

 spike of white flowers which are often transformed into bulblets while on the 

 stem. Lvs. 1 to li' by 2 to 3'', with entire, obtuse, smooth stipules. Jl. 



15 P. orientale L. Prince's Eeatheb. St. erect, paniculately branched ; lvs. 

 large, with hairy, salver-form stipules ; sta. 1 ; sty. 2. — 2) Native of the East, 

 naturalized in fields and roadsides, throughout the TJ. S. A tall, showy plant, 

 often cultivated for ornament. Stem 5 — 8f long, J as wide, ovate, acuminate. 

 Spikes numerous, large, red, plume-like, terminal. Aug. •]• § Eur. 



16 P. Virginianum L. St. simple, minutely appressed-hairy above ; lvs. ovate 

 and lanceolate, acuminate, short-petiolate ; sheath bristly ; rac. wand-like, termi- 

 nal ; fls. remote, solitary in each sheath ; cal. 4-parted ; stam. 5, included ; sty. 2, 

 bent downwards, hooked at apex, as long as the shining, tumid-lenticular ache- 

 nium. — y' Shades, Can. and U. S. St. 3 to 4f' high, the raceme half its length. 

 Lvs. lai-ge, 3 to 6' long, half as wide. Els. greenish-white. Jl., Aug. 



17 P. convolvulus L. Kxot-Bin-dweed. St. prostrate or climbing, twining, 

 roughish ; sheaths naked ; lvs. hastate, acuminate ; fls. in axillary fasicles or in- 

 terrupted racemes ; cal. obtusely keeled ; ach. purplish -black, dull, exserted. — (D 

 Eields and waste grounds. Can. to Car. Sts. angular, 2 to 3f long. Lvs. 1 to 2' 

 by 7 to 15'', petioles half as long. Cal. whitish, twice longer than the pedicels. 

 Jl., Aug. § Eur. 



18 P. cilinode Mx. Minutely pubescent, twining; sheaths girt at base wiOi a 

 ciliate hairy ring ; lvs. deeply cordate, ovate, acuminate, lobes scarcely hastate; 

 rac. paniculate, loose-flowered, axillary and terminal ; ach. shining. — Fields and 

 hedges. Can. to "Wis. and Ga. St. slender, often reddish-purple, 3 to 6 to 8f long. 

 Jivs. 1' to 18" by 9 to 15", petioles about half as long. Panicles simple, 5' long 

 or less. Cal. wingless, scarcely keeled, not quite covering the brown achenium. 

 Jl.— Sept. 



19 P. dumitoruiu L. Hedge Bindweed. St. smooth, twining and climbing ; 



39 



