486 naiadace^e. (pondweed family.) 



about equalling the rather dilated petioles, with 5 - many nerves beneath deeply 

 impressed ; upper submersed leaves either with or without a lance-oblong of 

 broad-linear proper blade; the numerous lower ones narrow-linear, tapering 

 towards the obtuse apex {%' -\^' long, j"-§" wide) ; stipules early lacerate; 

 submersed flowers usually solitary on very short erect peduncles ; shell-shaped fruit with 

 the back either winged and with 4-5 distinct teeth or wingless and entire ; embryo 

 coiled 1 % turns. — Rivers, and even far up small streams, in company with the 

 No. 3, or rarely with the following, Maine (J. Blake) to Lake Superior and 

 Virginia. June -Aug. — Stem less slender than the next. 



6. P. hy'brid.US, Michx. Floating leaves varying from oval to lance- 

 oblong; (the largest 10" long and 6" wide), often acute, longer than the filiform 

 petioles, with about 5-7 nerves beneath deeply impressed ; submersed leaves very 

 numerous, almost setaceous, (l'-3' long, very rarely £" wide) ; stipules obtuse; 

 submersed spikes 1 -4-rlowered, their peduncles (of their own length) frequently 

 recurved; fruit minute, about 8-toothed on the margin; embryo coiled 1| turns. (P. 

 diversifolius, Barton. P. setaceus, Pursh.) — Shallow stagnant waters. June - 

 Aug. — Emersed spikes 4" to (in var. spicatus, Engelm.) 7" long. 



* * Submersed leaves lanceolate, rarely oval or linear, membranaceous. 



7. P. rufescens, Schrader. Stem simple, floating leaves (often wanting, 

 P. obrutus, Wood) rather thin, wedge-oblanceolate, narrovjed into a short petiole, 11- 

 1 7-nerved ; submersed leaves almost sessile, lanceolate and lance-oblong, smooth 

 on the margin, fewer-nerved ; stipules broad, hyaline, obtuse, upper ones 

 acuminate ; fruit obovate, lenticular, pitted when immature, with an acute 

 margin and pointed with the rather long style ; embryo incompletely annular. 

 — Rivers and streams, New England to Pennsylvania, Illinois, and especially 

 northward. — Aug. - Sept. — Spike often somewhat compound ! (Eu.) 



8. P. lonchites, Tuckerman. Stem often branching below ; floating 

 leaves thinnish, lance-oblong or long-elliptical, often acute, long-pelioled, 17 -23- 

 nerved; submersed leaves very long (3'- 12', by 2" -12" wide), lanceolate and 

 lance-linear, 7-15-nerved, coarsely reticulated ; peduncles somewhat thickened 

 upwards ; fruit obliquely obovate, obscurely 3-keeled when fresh and distinctly 

 so when dry, the middle one winged above and sometimes with 3-5 shallow 

 indentations ; the rounded slightly curved face surmounted by the short style ; 

 nutlet with the sides scarcely impressed ; upper part of the embryo circuLirly 

 incurved. (P. Americanus, Chamisso?) — Rivers and ponds, New England to 

 Illinois. Aug., Sept. — More slender than the very similar P. fluitans of 

 Europe, its leaves longer petioled, the floating ones more abrupt at the base ; 

 stipules not bicarinate. Chamisso's name of this and No. 3 merely provisional. 



9. P. pulcher, Tuckerman. Stem simple, black-spotted ; leaves of three 

 kinds ; floating ones becoming very large (4^' by 3±') roundish-ovate and cordate 

 or ovate-oblong, 25 -37 -nerved; all alternate; tipper submersed ones (3-5) usually 

 lanceolate, acute at the base and very long-acuminate, 10-15-nerved, very thin, 

 cellular each side of the midrib, undulate, short-petioled ; lowest (2-4 near the 

 base of the stem) thicker, plane, oval or oblong with a rounded base, or spatulate- 

 oblong, on longer petioles ; stipules rather short and obtuse ; peduncles thicker 

 than the stem ; fruit with a rounded back and angular face, pointed with the 



