LENTIBULARIACEAE. Vo. III. 
g. Utricularia inflata Walt. Large Swollen 
Bladderwort. Fig. 3869. 
Utricularia inflata Walt. Fl. Car. 64. 1788. 
U. ceratophylla Michx. Fl. Bor. Am. 1: 12. 1803. 
Stems long, floating horizontally beneath the sur- 
face of the water. Leaves alternate, 10-12-dichoto- 
mous, usually more than 2’ long, bladder-bearing; 
scape 4-12-flowered, with a whorl of 4-9 inflated 
floats, above the floats 5’-12’ high; floats 2’-33’ long, 
lobed and dissected from near the middle; pedicels 
8-16” long; corolla 10’-12” long, the upper lip 
subtriangular, undulate, often emarginate, the lower 
lip a little longer and much broader, undulate, faintly 
3-lobed, with a prominent 2-lobed palate; spur conic, 
toothed, appressed to and about half the length of 
the lower lip. 
In ponds, Delaware to Florida, near the coast. May. 
4. LECTICULA Barnhart. 
Herbs, with horizontal usually submerged leafy stems. Leaves alternate, 3-parted from 
the very base, the middle lobe erect and linear, the lateral fobes capillary and root-like, bladder- 
bearing; bladders slightly beaked, but without bristles. Inflorescence strictly 1-flowered, the 
pedicel continuous with the scape, its point of origin marked by the solitary bract, appearing 
like a scale above the middle of the scape; true scales none; bract basally inserted, amplexi- 
caul and tubular, the free margin truncate, more or less deeply 2-notched, without bractlets. 
Calyx 2-parted, the lobes concave, herbaceous, appressed to the mature capsule. Corolla 
very strongly 2-lipped, the palate a mere convexity at the base of the lower lip. Anthers not 
lobed. Capsule many-seeded. ([Latin, a couch, from the transverse position of the corolla.] 
Two species, the following, and another, in tropical South America. Type species: Utricu- 
laria resupinata B. D. Greene. 
1. Lecticula resupinata (B. D. Greene) 
Barnhart. Reclined Bladderwort. a: 
Fig. 3870. 
Utricularia resupinata B. D. Greene; Bigel. FI. 
Bost. Ed. 3, 10. 1840. 
Utricularia Greenei Oakes, Hovey’s Mag. Hort. 7: 
180, 1841. 
Scape and pedicel slender, 1-4’ high, becoming , 
much elongated, 4’-6’ high in fruit, the bract "y 
4-1” long. Flower half-reversed so as to rest \ 
transversely upon the summit of the pedicel; 
calyx-lobes subequal, about 1” long; corolla a) 
purple, 4”-6” long, the upper lip narrowly oblong- 
3: 
spatulate, the lower spreading, entire; spur conic- 4 
cylindric, obtuse, the tip distant from the lower 
lip and bent upward; capsule globose, 14”-2” in f 
diameter. os 4 
Margins of ponds and lakes, New Brunswick to [eX 
western Ontario and Pennsylvania, and South Caro- oo 
lina to Florida. Rare and local. July—Aug. 
5. SETISCAPELLA Barnhart. 
Terrestrial herbs, with short root-like branches from the base of the scape. Leaves deli- 
cate, some basal, erect, with linear blades, usually evanescent and rarely seen, others root-like, 
borne on the root-like branches, and bladder-bearing; bladders minute, 2-horned at the apex. 
Inflorescence racemose, the raceme sometimes reduced to a single flower, when several- 
flowered usually becoming zig-zag above at maturity; scales on the lower portion of the 
scape several, scarious, peltate; pedicels from the axils of scarious peltate bracts, without 
bractlets. Calyx 2-parted, the lobes scarious, strongly longitudinally ribbed, spreading under 
or clasping the base of the mature capsule. Corolla strongly 2-lipped, the lower lip commonly 
