LIMNANTHACEAE (FALSE MEKMAID FAMILY) 551 



sepals greenisli or purpjish ; filaments white (their size and thickness giving the 

 name, from jraxws, thick, and d,H)p, used for stamen)^ 



1. P. procumbens Miohx. Stems 1.5-2.3 dm. long, bearing several approxi- 

 mate leaves at the summit on slender petioles, and a few many-flowered spikes 

 along the base ; the intervening portion naked, or with a few small scales. — 

 Woods, mts. of Ky., W. Va., and southw. ; adv. northw. March-May. 



EMPETRACEAE (Ckowberey Family) 



Low shruihy evergreens, with the foliage, aspect, and compound, pollen of 

 ileaths, and the drupaceous fruit of Arctostaphylos, hut the divided or laciniate 

 stigmas, etc., of some Euphorbiaoeae. —Probably only an apetalous and degen- 

 erate foi-m of Ericaceae, and comprising three genera, two within the limits of 

 this work, the third farther south. 



1. Empetrum. Flowers scattered and solitary in the axils. Sepals 8, petalold. 



2. Coiema. Flowers collected in terminal heads. Calyx none. 



1. :t;MPETRUM [Toum.] L. Ceowbeert 



Flowers polygamous, scattered and solitary in the axils of the leaves, incon- 

 spicuous, scaly-bracted. Calyx of 3 spreading and somewhat petal-like sepals. 

 Stamens 3. Style very short ; stigma 6-9-rayed. Fruit a berry-like drupe, with 

 6-9 seed-like nutlets, each containing an erect anatropous seed. (An ancient 

 name, from ii/, upon, and irirpo^, a rock. ) 



1. E. nigrum L. (Black C.) Procumbent and spreading ; branchlets and 

 scattered linear-oblong leaves glabrous or merely pulverulent ; fruit black. — 

 Arctic Am., s. to the coast of e. Me., mts. of n. N. E. and N. Y., n. Mich., and 

 coast of Ore. (Eurasia.) Var. puKPtEEUM (Raf.) DC. Fruit red or purple. — 

 Less common. 



Var. andinum (Philippi) DC. Branchlets and young leaves tomentose ; ber- 

 ries reddish or plum-colored, larger and more juicy. — Nfd., and mts. of Me. and 

 N. H. (Chili.) 



2. CORIJMA D. Don. Broom Crowberrt 



Flowers dioecious or polygamous, in terminal heads, each in the axil of a scaly 

 bract, and witli 5 or 6 soarious imbricated bractlets, but no proper calyx. Sta- 

 mens 3, rarely 4. Style slender, 3(or rarely 4-5)-cleft ; stigmas narrow, often 

 toothed. Drupe small, with 3 (rarely 4^-5) nutlets. — Diffusely branched little 

 shrubs, with subverticillate narrowly linear heath-like leaves. (Name K6prifj.a, a 

 broom, from the bushy aspect.) 



1. C. Conrjldii Torr. Shrub, 1.5-6 dm. high, diffusely branched, nearly 

 smooth ; drupe very small, dry and juiceless when ripe. — Sandy pine-barrens 

 and dry rocky places, N. J. and L. I. (?), Shawangunk Mts., N. Y., coast of 

 s. e. Mass. and Me. to Nfd. — The sterile plant is handsome in flower, on account 

 of the tufted purple filaments and brown-purple anthers. 



LIMNANTHACEAE (False MbrmaiB Family) 



Berhaceotts plants with perfect regular S-tS-merous slightly perlgynous sym- 

 metrical flowers, the persistent sepals valvate. Glands alternate with the petals. 

 Stamens distinct. Carpels nearly distinct, with a common style, \-ovuled, at 

 length fleshy and indehiscent, not beaked, separating from a very short axis. 

 Embryo straight; cotyledons very thick; radicle very short. — Low tender 

 annuals, with alternate pinnate exstipulate leaves. 



