ASOLEPIADACEAE (MILKWEED FAMILY) GG7 



* Crown upon a column shorter than the globular mass of anthers and stigmas; 

 leaves mainly alternate-scattered. 



1. A. auriculkta Engelm. Glabrous, or puberulent above, 1 ra. or less high ; 

 leaves narrowly linear or filiform, 1 or 2 dm. long; umbels numerous, lateral, 

 on peduncles about as long as the slender pubescent pedicels f column very 

 short and inconspicuous ; hoods emarginate, appendaged below with a pair oj 

 broad auricles. — IJry ground. Neb. and Kan., westw. and southw. June-Aug. 



2. A. floridana (Lam.) Hitchc. Minutely roughish-hairy or smoothish ; 

 leaves linear to lanceolate; umbels few, terminal or lateral, on peduncles of 

 about the length of the slender pedicels ; column about 1 mm. long ; hoods 

 entire, not auricled. {A. longifolia Ell.) — Prairies and pine barrens, O. to Ont., 

 Minn., Tex., and Fla. June-Sept. 



** Grown sessile, the oblong hoods nearly equaling the anthers; leaves often 

 opposite and broader. 



3. A. viridiflbra Ell. Minutely soft-downy, becoming smoothish; stems 

 ascending, .3-8 dm. high ; leaves oval to oblong, thick, 4-10 cm. long ; umbels 

 nearly sessile, lateral, dense and globose ; flower (when the corolla is reflexed) 

 1 em. long, short-pediceled. — Dry soil, Mass. to Sask. , and southw. June-Sept. 

 Var. lanceol\ta (Ives) Gray. Leaves lanceolate, 6-10 cm. long. (Var. Ivesii 

 Britton. ) — Range of the typical form. Var. lineXris . Gray. Leaves elon- 

 gated, linear ; stems low ; umbels often solitary. — Man., N. Dak., and southw. 



4. A. lauuginbsa (Nutt.) Dene. Hairy, low (1-2.6 dm. high) ; leaves lan- 

 ceolate or ovate-lanceolate ; umbel solitary and terminal, peduncled ; flowers 

 smaller ; pedicels slender. — Prairies, 111. to Minn., and westw. July. 



4. GON6lOBUS Mlchx. Angle-pod 



Crown of free leaflets, which are truncate or obscurely lobed at the apex, 

 where they bear a pair of flexuous awns united at base. Anthers nearly as in 

 Asclepias; pollen-masses oblong, obtuse at both ends, fixed below the summit 

 of the stigma to the descending glands. Follicles elongate-ovoid to lanceolate, 

 smooth. Seeds with a tuft, as in Asclepias. — A perennial twining herb, smooth, 

 with opposite heart-ovate and pointed long-petioled leaves, and small whitish 

 flowers in raceme-like clusters on slender axillary peduncles. (Name from yavla., 

 an angle, and Xo;S6s, a pod, from the angled fruit.) Enslenia Nutt. 



1. 6. laevis Michx. Climbing, 3-4 m. high ; leaves 3.5-12 cm. wide. (JEns- 

 lenia albida Nutt. ; Ampelamts albidus Britton.) — River-banks and thickets, 

 Pa. to 111., Kan., and southw. July-Sept. 



6. CYNAnCHUM L. 



Crown flat, simple. Anthers, smooth follicles, and seeds much as in Asclepias. 

 — Herbs, often twining. (An ancient name for some plant supposed to be 

 poisonous to dogs, from kAwv, dog, and &yxei.v, to strangle.") Vinoetoxicom 

 Medic, Moench, etc., not Walt. 



1. C. nIgkum (L.) Pers. Twining, nearly smooth ; leaves ovate or lance- 

 ovate ; floivers small, dark purple, in an axillary cluster, on a peduncle shorter 

 than the leaves ; corolla pubescent toithin. — Waste places and old fields, e. 

 Mass. and Vt. to Pa. and O. June-Sept. (Introd. from Eu.) 



2. C. ViNCETdxiccM (L.) Pers. Suberect, 3-6 dm. high ; leaves ovate- 

 lanceolate ; flowers greenish-white ; corolla glabrous. — Escaped from cultivation 

 in s. Out., near Niagara Falls (according to J. M. Macoun). (Introd. from Eu.) 



6. VINCET6XICUM Walt. Angle-pod 



Corolla wheel-shaped, sometimes reflexed-spreading ; the lobes convolute in 

 the bud. Crown small, annular or cup-shaped, in the throat of the corolla. 

 Anthers partly hidden under the flattened stigma, opening transversely. Pollen 



