lxii 
CLASSIFICATIONS OF ORDERS AND GENERA. 
35. Cornese. Petals 5, valvate. Stamens 5. Style t. Ovary l-£- 
celled. Fruit ovoid, 1-2-celled. — Shrubs or trees. Leaves simple (p. 104). 
36. Locanthacese. Petals 4 or 5, often united into a tube. Stamens 
4 or 5, inserted on the petals or free. Ovary 1-celled. Style 1. Parasitical 
herbs or shrubs. Leaves opposite or alternate (p. 106). 
Tupeia is dioecious, and Viscum leafless. 
Subclass IV. Corolliflorse or Monopetalse, Flowers with both 
calyx and corolla. Petals combined into a lobed corolla. Stamens inserted 
on the tube of the corolla. 
Exceptions : Corolla absent in Jasminea. 
Petals free or almost free in some Campanulacea and Myrsinea. 
Stamens epigynous in Stylidiea, some Campanulacea and Ericea ; hypogynous in some 
Jasminea . 
§ 1. Corolla epigynous , bearing the stamens. ( See Ericese in § 2.) 
37. Caprifoliacese. Flowers panicled or solitary. Anthers free. 
Ovary 2-celled. Leaves opposite or alternate, exstipulate (p. 109). 
38. Rubiacese. Flowers panicled capitate or solitary. Anthers free. 
Ovary 2-celled. Leaves opposite and stipulate, or vvhorled and exstipulate 
( P . no). 
39. Composite. Flowers collected in involucrate heads. Anthers 
combined. Ovary 1-celled ; ovule erect. — Herbs shrubs or trees. Leaves 
usually alternate or radical (p. 121). 
§ 2. Corolla epigynous. Stamens epigynous , or inserted at the very base of the 
corolla. 
Stamens on the tube of the corolla in some Ericece. 
40. Stylidiese. Stamens 2, united with the style into one column, 
bearing the anthers at its top. — Herbs, usually small (p. 166). 
41. Campanulacese. Stamens 5, all free or more or less united in 
a tube sheathing the style. Anthers 2-celled, opening by 2 slits.— Herbs 
(p. 169). 
42. Ericese. Stamens 5 or 10, all free, hypogynous or epipetalous. An- 
thers 1-celled, or, if 2-celled, opening by terminal pores. — Small shrubs, 
rarely trees (p. 173). 
§ 3. Corolla hypogynous. 
a. Stamens either opposite the corolla-lobes or more than their number. Corolla 
regular. 
43. Myrsinese. Stamens opposite the corolla lobes, which are almost 
free in the New Zealand genus. Ovary and ovules as in Primulacece. Fruit 
an indehiscent berry.— Shrubs. Leaves with pellucid dots (p. 183). 
44. Primnlaceae. Stamens opposite the corolla-lobes. Ovary 1-celled ; 
ovules numerous, on a free central placenta. Fruit capsular. — Herbs. Leaves 
without pellucid dots (p. 185). 
45. Sapotese. Stamens opposite the corolla-lobes, or more numerous. 
Ovary 2- or more celled. — Shrubs or trees. Leaves without pellucid dots 
(p. 185). 
