CAKYOl'HYLLACK.-E. (PINK FAMILY.) 47 



1. S. Americana, Torr. & Gray. Stems prostrate, diffuse, pubescent in 

 lines ; leaves laneeolate, narrowed at the base ; the radical ones larger and 

 crowded ; flowers obovate, solitary in the forks of the stem, and clustered at the 

 end of the branches ; sepals rounded and incurved at the apex, the tube bristly 

 with hooked hairs; petals minute. (Herniaria Americana, Nutt. Paronychia 

 urceolata, Shuttl ) — Sandy banks of rivers, Florida to South Carolina, and 

 westward. June -Oct. (J) or (2) — Stems l°-3° long. Leaves sometimes 

 falcate and incrusted with brownish particles. Stipules small. 



2. S. diffusa, n. sp. Pubescent; stems prostrate, diffusely-branched; leaves 

 lanceolate, obtuse, narrowed at the base; flowers small, in compact, rectangular 

 cymes, terminating all the branches ; sepals linear, slightly concave and mucro- 

 nate at the apex, the tube bristly with hooked hairs; petals bristle-like. — Dry 

 sandy pine barrens, Florida. June -Oct. Q) — Stems 1° long. Stipules con- 

 spicuous, on young plants half as long as the leaves, at length 2-parted. Cymes 

 very numerous. 



3. S. erecta, n. sp. Stems smooth, clustered, erect, rigid, mostly simple ; 

 leaves erect, linear, acute, pubescent on the margins, those of the barren stems 

 imbricated; cyme compound, rectangular, fastigiatc, compact; sepals lanceolate, 

 smooth, acutish, or obscurely mucronate at the apex, the tube smooth and fur- 

 rowed ; petals bristle-like, half as long as the stamens. — Sands along the west 

 coast of Florida. June -Nov. 1J. — Hoot woody. Stems G'- 12' high. Stip- 

 ules half as long as the leaves. 



4. S. Rllgelii. Annual ; stem erect, successively forking, clothed with a 

 short and rather dense pubescence, as also the leaves and bracts ; leaves oblance- 

 olate, abruptly pointed, shorter than the internodes, the upper ones linear; stip- 

 ules £-£ as long as the leaves, soon 2-4-parted: cymes numerous, terminal, 

 rather loosely flowered ; calyx-tube short, pubescent, the linear-lanceolate divis- 

 ions conspicuously mucronate, white ; petals bristle-like; style included. (Pa- 

 ronychia Rugelii, Shuttl.) — Fast Florida. — Stems 1° high, at length diffuse " l 



4. STIPULICIDA, Michx. 



Sepals 5, emarginatc, white-margined. Petals 5, spatulate, 2-toothed near 

 the base, longer than the sepals, withering-persistent. Stamens 3, opposite the 

 inner sepals. Style very short, 3-parted. Capsule 1-celled, 3-valved, many- 

 seeded. — A small perennial, with an erect forking stem. Stem-leaves minute, 

 subulate, with adnate pectinate stipules. Radical leaves spatulate, clustered, 

 growing from a tuft oV bristly stipules. Flowers wliite, in terminal clusters. 



1. S. setacea, Michx. — Low sandy pine barrens, Florida to North Caro- 

 lina. April -June. — Stem 3' - 6' high, the branches spreading and curving. 



5. SPERGULARIA, Pers. 



Is 5. Petals 5, oval, entire. Stamens 2-10. Styles 3-;"). Capsule 

 3 - ."i-valvcd ; the valves when 5, alternate with the sepals. — A low maritime 

 herb, with opposite fleshy leaves, and conspicuous scarious stipules. Flowers 

 axillary, solitary, rose-colored. 



