The Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel The Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States Part 104 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
2. L. integriflia, Bigel. Less leafy, 3--4 high, loosely branched above or heads loosely panicled; leaves undivided, oblong-lanceolate, pointed, denticulate or entire; flowers yellow or purplish. (L.
Canadensis, var. integrifolia, _Torr. & Gray_.)--N. Eng. to Ill., and southward.
3. L. hirsuta, Muhl. Rather few-leaved, 2--3 high, commonly hirsute at base; leaves hirsute both sides or only on the midrib, mostly runcinate-pinnatifid; heads in a loose open panicle; achenes oblong-oval, about as long as the beak; flowers yellow-purple, rarely whitish. (L. Canadensis, var. sanguinea, _Torr. & Gray_.)--E. Ma.s.s. to Minn., and southward.
4. L. Ludoviciana, DC. Glabrous, leafy, 2--5 high; leaves oblong, sinuate-pinnatifid and spinulosely dentate, ciliate; heads in an open panicle; involucre more imbricate; flowers yellow.--Minn., Iowa, and southwestward.
-- 2. LACTUCaSTRUM. _Achenes flat, lanceolate-oblong, tapering to a short slender beak; perennial; flowers blue._
5. L. pulch.e.l.la, DC. Pale or glaucous; stem simple, 1--2 high; leaves sessile, oblong- or linear-lanceolate, entire, or the lower runcinate-pinnatifid; heads few and large, racemose, erect on scaly-bracted peduncles; involucral scales imbricated in 3 or 4 ranks.
(Mulgedium, _Nutt._)--Upper Mich. to Minn.; common on the plains westward.
-- 3. MULGeDIUM. _Achenes thickish, oblong, contracted into a short thick beak or neck; annual or biennial; flowers chiefly blue._
6. L. ac.u.minata, Gray. Tall biennial (3--7 high), with many small heads in a loose panicle, on diverging peduncles; leaves ovate to oblong-lanceolate, pointed, sharply and sometimes doubly serrate, sometimes hairy on the midrib beneath, contracted into a winged petiole, the lowest occasionally sinuate or cleft at base, and the cauline sagittate or hastate; achenes beakless; pappus white. (Mulgedium, _DC._)--Borders of woods, N. Y. to Ill. and Fla.
7. L. Floridana, Gaertn. Leaves all lyrate or runcinate, the upper often with a heart-shaped clasping base; panicle larger; achenes distinctly beaked; otherwise as n. 7.--Rich soil, Penn. to Ill., and southward.
8. L. leucophae'a, Gray. Nearly smooth biennial; stem tall (3--12 high), very leafy; leaves irregularly pinnatifid, sometimes runcinate, coa.r.s.ely toothed, the upper cauline sessile and auriculate, sometimes clasping; heads in a large and dense compound panicle; flowers bluish to cream-color; achene short-beaked; pappus tawny. (Mulgedium, _DC._)--Low grounds; rather common.--Var. INTEGRIFLIA, Gray. Leaves undivided, or the lower sinuate-pinnatifid. Ohio to Ill.
98. SoNCHUS, L. SOW-THISTLE.
Heads many-flowered, becoming tumid at base. Involucre more or less imbricated. Achenes obcompressed, ribbed or striate, not beaked; pappus copious, of very white exceedingly soft and fine bristles mainly falling together.--Leafy-stemmed coa.r.s.e weeds, chiefly smooth and glaucous, with corymbed or umbellate heads of yellow flowers; produced in summer and autumn. (The ancient Greek name.)
[*] _Annual (1--5 high); flowers pale yellow._
S. OLERaCEUS, L. (COMMON SOW-THISTLE.) Stem-leaves runcinate-pinnatifid, or rarely undivided, slightly toothed with soft spiny teeth, clasping by a heart-shaped base, the auricles acute; involucre downy when young; achenes striate, also wrinkled transversely.--Waste places in manured soil and around dwellings. (Nat. from Eu.)
S. aSPER, Vill. (SPINY-LEAVED S.) Stem leaves less divided and more spiny-toothed, the auricles of the clasping base rounded; achenes margined, 3-nerved on each side, smooth.--With and like the last. (Nat.
from Eu.)
[*][*] _Perennial, with creeping rootstocks; flowers bright yellow, in large heads._
S. ARVeNSIS, L. (FIELD S.) Leaves runcinate-pinnatifid, spiny-toothed, clasping by a heart-shaped base; peduncles and involucre bristly; achenes transversely wrinkled on the ribs.--Roadsides, etc., N. Eng. and N. Y.; becoming more common. (Nat. from Eu.)
ORDER 56. LOBELIaCEae. (LOBELIA FAMILY.)
_Herbs with acrid milky juice, alternate leaves, and scattered flowers, an irregular monopetalous 5-lobed corolla, the 5 stamens free from the corolla, and united into a tube commonly by their filaments and always by their anthers._--Calyx-tube adherent to the many-seeded pod. Style 1; stigma often fringed. Seeds anatropous, with a small straight embryo, in copious alb.u.men.--Nearly pa.s.sing into the following order.
1. LOBeLIA, L.
Calyx 5-cleft, with a short tube. Corolla with a straight tube, split down on the (apparently) upper side, somewhat 2-lipped; the upper lip of 2 rather erect lobes, the lower lip spreading and 3-cleft. Two of the anthers in our species bearded at the top. Pod 2-celled, many-seeded, opening at the top.--Flowers axillary or chiefly in bracted racemes, in summer and early autumn. (Dedicated to _Matthias De l'Obel_, an early Flemish herbalist.)
[*] _Flowers deep red, large; stem simple._
1. L. cardinalis, L. (CARDINAL-FLOWER.) Tall (2--4 high), smoothish; leaves oblong-lanceolate, slightly toothed; raceme elongated, rather 1-sided; the pedicels much shorter than the leaf-like bracts.--Low grounds, common.--Perennial by offsets, with large and very showy intensely red flowers, varying rarely to rose-color or even white.
Hybrids with the next species also occur.
[*][*] _Flowers blue, or blue variegated with white._
[+] _Flowers rather large (corolla-tube 5--6" long), spicate-racemose; stems leafy, 1--3 high; perennial._
[++] _Leaves ovate to lanceolate, numerous; lip of corolla glabrous._
2. L. syphilitica, L. (GREAT LOBELIA.) _Somewhat hairy; leaves thin, acute at both ends_ (2--6' long), irregularly serrate; flowers (nearly 1' long) pedicelled, longer than the leafy bracts; calyx hirsute, the _sinuses with conspicuous deflexed auricles_, the short _tube hemispherical_.--Low grounds, common.--Flowers light blue, rarely white.
3. L. p.u.b.erula, Michx. _Finely soft-p.u.b.escent; leaves thickish, obtuse_ (1--2' long), with small glandular teeth; spike rather 1-sided; bracts ovate; _sinuses of the calyx with short and rounded or often inconspicuous auricles, the hairy tube top-shaped_.--Moist sandy grounds, N. J. to Iowa, and south to Tex. and Fla.--Corolla bright blue, ' long.
4. L. am'na, Michx. _Glabrous_ or nearly so; raceme virgate; leaves narrower; bracts lanceolate or linear, often glandular-denticulate; calyx-lobes long and very slender, usually without auricles, the tube glabrous.--S. Atlantic States, in swamps.--Var. GLANDULiFERA, Gray; a slender form with secund raceme, oval to lance-oblong obtuse gland-toothed leaves, and the bracts and calyx-teeth beset with slender gland-tipped teeth. S. Va. and southward.
[++][++] _Leaves long and narrow, spa.r.s.e above; lip of corolla p.u.b.escent at base._
5. L. glandulsa, Walt. Glabrous, or sparingly p.u.b.escent; leaves, bracts, and usually the lobes of the calyx, strongly glandular-toothed; calyx-tube densely hispid, rarely spa.r.s.ely so or smoothish, the sinuses not auriculate.--Pine-barren swamps, S. Va. to Fla.
[+][+] _Flowers smaller (corolla-tube not more than 2--3" long)._
[++] _Stem leafy, mostly simple, continued into an elongated virgate spike-like raceme; leaves lanceolate to obovate, barely denticulate or repand._
6. L. leptostachys, A. DC. Smooth above; leaves obtuse, denticulate, oblong-lanceolate, the upper gradually reduced to awl-shaped bracts; calyx-lobes nearly equalling the corolla, with 10 _reflexed awl-shaped appendages as long as the hemispherical tube_.--Sandy soil, Ohio to Ill.
and Mo.; also Va. to Ga.
7. L. spicata, Lam. Stem slender, _strict_ (1--4 high) from a biennial (?) root, below and the barely denticulate leaves minutely p.u.b.escent; lower and root-leaves obovate or spatulate, the upper reduced to linear or club-shaped bracts; calyx-tube short, obconical or becoming almost hemispherical, _sinuses not appendaged_.--Moist or dry, mostly gravelly or sandy soil, N. New Eng. to Sask., south to Ark. and La. Fl. through summer.--Var. PARVIFLRA, Gray, a small form, with calyx-lobes broadly subulate, and pale corolla but 3" long. Swamps, Lancaster, Penn.
(_Porter_); beginning to flower in June.--Var. HIRTeLLA, Gray; with somewhat scabrous p.u.b.escence, and minutely hirsute-ciliate bracts and calyx-lobes. Chiefly toward and beyond the Mississippi.
[++][++] _Stem leafy, often paniculately branched; flowers loosely racemose; sinuses of calyx not appendaged; annual or biennial._
[=] _Leaves chiefly linear, entire or denticulate; pod not inflated._
8. L. Canbyi, Gray. Stem strict (1--2 high), minutely angled; _pedicels shorter than the bracts and flowers_, minutely roughened under a lens; _bractlets none; calyx-tube top-shaped, acute at base, only half the length of the lobes_ (which, with the linear leaves, are spa.r.s.ely glandular-denticulate), in fruit becoming oblong, covering the whole pod; corolla deep blue (fully 5" long), more or less _bearded in the throat_.--Wet places, N. J., Del., and S. C.
9. L. Kalmii, L. Stem mostly low (4--18' high), minutely angled; _pedicels filiform, not exceeding_ the linear or setaceous _bracts but as long as the flower, minutely 2-bracteolate or 2-glandular above the middle; calyx-tube top-shaped or obovoid_, fully half the length of the lobes, in fruit rather longer than they, covering the whole pod, corolla light blue, 4--5" long.--Wet limestone rocks and banks, N. Eng. to L. Winnipeg, south to Penn., Ind., and Minn.
10. L. Nuttallii, Roem. & Schult. Stem very slender (1--2 high), terete; _pedicels mostly longer than the bract and shorter than the flower_, usually with very minute bractlets near the base; _calyx-tube very short, depressed-hemispherical in fruit_, the globular pod half free; corolla pale blue, barely 3" long.--Sandy swamps, N. J. and Penn.
to Ga.
[=][=] _Leaves ovate or oblong, obtusely toothed; pod inflated, wholly inferior._
11. L. inflata, L. (INDIAN TOBACCO.) Stems paniculately much branched from an annual root, p.u.b.escent with spreading hairs (1--2 high); leaves gradually diminishing into leaf-like bracts, which exceed the lower short-pedicelled flowers; calyx-tube ovoid.--Dry open fields.--Corolla only 1--2" long. Plant poisonous and a noted quack medicine.
[++][++][++] _Stem scape-like, mostly simple, hollow; leaves fleshy; fibrous-rooted perennials, very glabrous, mostly aquatic, with pale blue or whitish flowers._
12. L. paludsa, Nutt. Nearly smooth; stem slender (1--4 high); _leaves flat, scattered near the base, linear-spatulate_ or oblong-linear, glandular-denticulate, mostly tapering into a petiole; lower lip of corolla bearded in the middle; calyx-tube about half the length of the short lobes, hemispherical in fruit.--In water (but foliage emerged), Del. to Fla. and La.
13. L. Dortmanna, L. (WATER LOBELIA.) Very smooth; _scape thickish_ (5--12' high), _few-flowered; leaves all tufted at the root, linear, terete, hollow_, with a part.i.tion lengthwise; lower lip of corolla slightly hairy; calyx-tube about as long as the lobes, in fruit much longer.--Borders of ponds (often immersed), N. Eng. to N. Penn., L. Superior, and northward. (Eu.)