ORDER XXVIII. ZANTHOXYLACE2E. 253 



Genus I.— KALLSTRGE'MIA. Scop. 10—1. 

 (From an obscure botanist.) 



1. K max'ima, (T. <fc G.) Stems procumbent, diffuse, trailing, pubes- 

 cent. Leaves pinnate, generally with 3, sometimes 4 pairs of leaflets. 

 Leaflets oblong, mucronate, slightly falcate, pubescent beneath, the ter- 

 minal one largest. Flowers on solitary, axillary, 1-flowered peduncles. 

 Calyx persistent. Petals obovate, longer than the calyx, withering. 

 Cocci gibbous below, tubercled. — Yellow. U- June — Sept. Intro- 

 duced from the West Indies. Savannah. 1 — 2 feet long. 



Order XXVIIL— ZANTHOXYLA'CE^E. Ad. Juss. 



Flowers dioecious or perfect, regular. Sepals 3 — 7, cohering 

 at the base. Petals as many as the sepals or none, aestivation 

 twisted-convolute. Stamens as many or twice as many as the 

 petals. Filament distinct. Anthers introrse. Ovaries as many 

 as the sepals, or sometimes fewer, distinct or united. Fruit of 

 several drupes, or baccate or membranaceous, 2 — 5 -celled, sar- 

 cocarp fleshy, separable from the endocarp. Seeds anatropous, 

 solitary or in pairs, pendulous. Embryo lying within fleshy 

 albumen. Trees or shrubs, usually with prickles. 



Genus I.— £ANTHOX'YLTJM. L. 20—5. 

 (From the Greek xant7ios, yellow, and xulon, wood.) 



Dicecious. Sepals usually 5, small, united at the base. 

 Corolla none. Stamens 3, 5, 6, or 8, those of the pistillate 

 flowers rudimentary. Pistillate Jlowers sometimes with a co- 

 rolla. Styles 2, 3, or 5, and ovaries as many. Carpels crusta- 

 ceous in fruit, 2-valved, 1 — 2 -seeded. Seeds black, shining, and 

 globose when solitary, hemispherical when in pairs. 



1. £ America'num, (Will.) (Z. Clava, Herculis of Linn.) A shrub, 

 with the branches armed with strong stipular prickles. Leaves pinnate. 

 Leaflets ovate, acuminate, nearly sessile, more or less pubescent. Flow- 

 ers in axillary umbels, greenish. — ^ . April — May. 



Prickly-ash. Toothache-bush. 



2. % Carolinia'num, (Lam.) (Z. tricarpium of Ell.) A small tree, 

 with numerous expanding branches, bark with prickles. Leaves pin- 

 nate, alternate ; leaflets obliquely lanceolate, crenate, serrulate, gla- 

 brous, shining above. Flowers in terminal panicles. Sepals minute. 

 Petals long-oval, longer than the sepals. Stamens usually 5, but varia- 

 ble. Styles 2 — 3, incurved. Capsule 1 -seeded. Leaves and bark very 

 pungent to the taste. — June. On the coast of Car., Geo., and Florida. 

 12—20 feet. Prickly-ash. 



Genus II.— PTE'LEA. L. 4—1. 

 (From the Greek ptelea, the Greek name for Elm.) 



Dkecious. Sepals 4, united at the base. Petals 4, spread- 



