132 LEGUMLNOS^E. (PULSE FAMILY.) 



straggling ; leaflets 5-15, oblong, varying to obovate- wedge-shaped and oblance- 

 olate; peduncles longer than the leaves, 2 - ^-flowered ; flowers reddish-purple. — 

 Dry sandy soil, Virginia and southward. 



14. ASTRAGALUS, L. Milk-Vetch. 



Calyx 5-toothed. Corolla usually long and narrow : standard narrow, equal- 

 ling or exceeding the wings and blunt keel, its sides reflexed or spreading. Sta- 

 mens diadelphous. Stigma minute, terminal. Pod several - many-seeded, various, 

 mostly turgid, one or both sutures usually projecting into the cell, either slightly 

 or so as to divide the cavity lengthwise into two. Seed-stalks slender. Chiefly 

 herbs (ours perennials), with odd-pinnate leaves and spiked or racemed flowers. 

 (The ancient Greek name of a leguminous plant, as also of the ankle-bone ; but 

 the connection between the two is past all guess.) 

 § 1. Pod very thick and juicy when fresh, not stalked in the cjlyw, 2 -celled, indehiscent, 



or tardily separable into 2 closed portions: stems low> decu,nbent or ascending: 



leaflets numerous. 



1. A. caryocarpus, Ker. (Ground Plum.) Pale and minutely ap- 

 pressed-pubescent ; leaflets narrowly oblong; flower in a short spike-like 

 raceme : corolla violet-purple ; fruit glabrous, ovate-globular, more or less pointed. 

 about %' in diameter, very thick-walled, cellular or corky when dry. Upper Mis- 

 sissippi River, thence westward and southward. May. 



2. A. Mexicanus, A. DC. Smoother, or pubescent with looser hairs, 

 larger; leaflets roundish, obovate, or oblong; flowers larger (10"- 12" long); 

 calyx softly hairy ; corolla cream-color, bluish only at the tip ; fruit globular, very ob- 

 tuse and pointless, 1' or more in diameter: otherwise like the last: the unripe 

 fruits of both resemble green plums, — whence the popular name, — and are 

 eaten, raw or cooked, by travellers. (A. trichocalyx, Nutt.) — Prairies and open 

 plains, from Illinois opposite St. Louis westward and southward. 



3. A. Plattensis, Nutt. Loosely villous ; stipules conspicuous ; leaflets 

 oblong, often glabrous above ; flowers crowded in a short spike or oblong head, 

 cream-color often tinged or tipped with purple ; fruit ovate, pointed, and with the 

 calyx villous, — invar. Texnesseensis (A. Tennesseensis, Gray, in Chapm. S. 

 Fl. ) oblong and slightly curved, much less fleshy and thick than in the preceding. 

 — Gravelly or sandy banks of Illinois River ( Vasey, Slosson, Btbb), thence south- 

 ward and westward. May. 



§ 2. Pod dry and dehiscent, more or A ss thin-walled, turgid, not stalked in the calyx, 

 completely 2-celled only in No. 4. 



4. A. Canadensis, L. Tall and erect (l°-4°high), somewhat pubes- 

 cent ; leaflets 21 - 27, -oblong ; flowers greenish cream-color, very numerous, in long 

 and close spikes ; pods ovoid-oblong, coriaceous, small, completely 2-celled. — River- 

 banks : common from N. New York westward and southward. July - Aug. 



5. A. Codperi, Gray. Nearly smooth, erect (l°-2° high); leaflets 11- 

 21, elliptical or oblong, somewhat notched at the end, minutely hoary under-- 

 neath; flowers white, rather numerous in a short spike; pods inflated-ovoid (al- 

 most 1' long), thin-walled, one-celled, the dorsal suture slightly, the ventral more 

 decidedly projecting inwards. (Phaca neglecta, Torr. Sr Gray. Now named for 



