The Plants of Michigan - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel The Plants of Michigan Part 71 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
4a. Umbel sessile (4-8 dm. high; flowers green, summer) =Green Milkweed, Acerates viridiflora.=
4b. Umbel peduncled --5.
5a. Leaves linear or narrowly linear-lanceolate (4-8 dm. high; flowers greenish-white, summer) =Green Milkweed, Acerates floridana.=
5b. Leaves lanceolate or broader (flowers in summer) --6.
6a. Leaves p.u.b.escent beneath --7.
6b. Leaves glabrous or nearly so --10.
7a. Flowers brilliant orange (3-6 dm. high) =b.u.t.terfly Weed, Asclepias tuberosa.=
7b. Flowers red or purple --8.
8a. Reflexed lobes of corolla merely purple-tinged (1-2 m. high) =Milkweed, Asclepias syriaca.=
8b. Reflexed lobes of corolla bright-red or purple --9.
9a. The erect hoods of each flower about 5 mm. long (7-12 dm. high) =Milkweed, Asclepias purpurascens.=
9b. The erect hoods of each flower about 3 mm. long (6-10 dm. high) =Swamp Milkweed, Asclepias incarnata var. pulchra.=
10a. Leaves broadly rounded and almost sessile at base (flowers purplish) --11.
10b. Leaves narrowed at the base, distinctly petioled (8-15 dm.
high) --12.
11a. Umbel solitary, terminal and erect on a long peduncle (4-8 dm.
high) =Milkweed, Asclepias amplexicaulis.=
11b. Umbels terminal or lateral, bent toward one side (7-12 dm. high) =Milkweed, Asclepias sullivantii.=
12a. Corolla (not hoods) red (1-2 m. high) =Swamp Milkweed, Asclepias incarnata.=
12b. Corolla (not hoods) greenish (8-15 dm. high) =Milkweed, Asclepias exaltata.=
CONVOLVULACEAE, the Morning Glory Family
Twining or trailing herbs (except one species), with regular flowers; sepals 5; corolla 5-angled or 5-lobed; stamens 5, attached to the corolla; ovary superior, 2-3-celled.
1a. Plants with green foliage and conspicuous flowers (summer) --2.
1b. Leafless brown or yellow plants, with very small flowers (Dodder) --7.
2a. Style divided at the top into linear or oblong stigmas (flowers white or pink) (Bindweed) --3.
2b. Style not divided at the top; stigmas sessile, capitate (Morning Glory) --6.
3a. Stem erect; leaves rounded or somewhat cordate at base, not hastate or sagittate (1-3 dm. high) =Bindweed, Convolvulus spithamaeus.=
3b. Stem trailing or twining; leaves sagittate or hastate --4.
4a. Calyx almost concealed by two large heart-shape bracts --5.
4b. Bracts at base of calyx none =Bindweed, Convolvulus arvensis.=
5a. Leaves triangular-hastate, with sharp basal lobes =Bindweed, Convolvulus sepium.=
5b. Leaves oblong-ovate, the basal lobes obtuse =Bindweed, Convolvulus sepium var. p.u.b.escens.=
6a. Stem smooth or nearly so; ovary 2-celled (flowers white) =Wild Potato Vine, Ipomoea pandurata.=
6b. Stem with reflexed hairs; ovary 3-celled (flowers of various colors) =Morning Glory, Ipomoea purpurea.=
7a. Introduced weed, growing as a parasite on clover =Dodder, Cuscuta epithymum.=
7b. Native species, on various shrubs and herbs --8.
8a. Flowers sessile --9.
8b. Flowers distinctly pedicelled --12.
9a. Sepals united below into a gamosepalous calyx --10.
9b. Sepals separate from each other --11.
10a. Calyx-lobes obtuse =Dodder, Cuscuta arvensis.=
10b. Calyx-lobes acute =Dodder, Cuscuta obtusiflora.=
11a. Flowers in dense rope-like twists on various species of herbs =Dodder, Cuscuta paradoxa.=
11b. Flowers in dense cl.u.s.ters on various species of shrubs =Dodder, Cuscuta compacta.=
12a. Tips of the petals inflexed =Dodder, Cuscuta coryli.=
12b. Tips of the petals erect or spreading --13.
13a. Capsule depressed at the summit =Dodder, Cuscuta cephalanthi.=
13b. Capsule pointed at the summit =Dodder, Cuscuta gronovii.=