composite. 625 



OLDENLANDIA, Plum. 



O. patens. Radical leaves acute ; flowers erect in the bud, seldom (if 

 ever) dimorphous; calyx-lobes acute; corolla 3" broad, deep blue, its tube 

 three times as long as the calyx; otherwise like 0. ccerulea, Gray. (Hous- 

 tonia, Ed.) — lioadsides, &c, Florida to South Carolina. 



CATESB^A, L. 



Calyx 4-toothed or 4-parted Corolla funnel-shaped, 4-Iobed. Stamens 4, 

 inserted on the base of the corolla. Stigma 2-lobed. Berry 2-celled, many 

 seeded, the placenta? at the top of the partition. Seeds flat, imbricated. — 

 Spiny shrubs, with small thick opposite leaves, and axillary whitish flowers. 



C parviflora, Swartz. Glabrous ; leaves oval or obovate, mostly shorter 

 than the spines, the margins revolute ; flowers sessile ; corolla small (4" long), 

 the tube 4-angled ; berry globose. — Bahia Honda, South Florida {Curtiss). 

 — Shrub 4° - 8° high. 



Order VALERIAXACE^E. 



FEDIA, Mcench. 



F. olitoria, VahL Flowers pale blue ; fruit compressed, oblique, with a 

 corky mas? at the back of the fertile cell, the empty cells large and some- 

 times confluent ; stem and leaves as in F. radiata. — New Orleans. Intro- 

 duced. 



F. patellaria, Sulliv. Flowers white ; fruit circular, notched at both 

 ends, the empty cells concave, broader than the fertile one, and forming a 

 wing around it. — Nashville [Dr. Gattinger). 



Order COMPOSITE. 



VERNONIA, Schreb. 



V. angUStifolia, var. pumila, Chapm. Low (G'-12'), smoothish ; 

 leaves short; heads 3-7, loosely corymbose ; involucre smooth ; pappus yel- 

 lowish ; achenium smooth. — Wet pine woods, South Florida. November. 



ELEPHANTOPUS, L. 



E. nudatus, Gray 1 Sparsely hirsute, and dotted with minute resinous 



i ('/-IS' high) with 3 or 4 short obovate leaves at the base, and 



ler one below the brandies of the cyme ; floral leaves broad-orate, 



barely acute, rather shorter than the heads'; scales of the involucre smooth, 



cuspidate ; scales of the pappus abruptly dilated at the base. — Damp ground 



near the coast, Florida. 



