Part 19 (1/2)
Involucre simple and 3-leaved, very close to the flower, so as to resemble a calyx; otherwise as in Anemone.--Leaves all radical, heart-shaped and 3-lobed, thickish and persistent through the winter, the new ones appearing later than the flowers, which are single, on hairy scapes. (Name from a fancied resemblance to the liver in the shape of the leaves.)
1. H. triloba, Chaix. Leaves with 3 ovate obtuse or rounded lobes; those of the involucre also obtuse; sepals 6--12, blue, purplish, or nearly white; achenes several, in a small loose head, ovate-oblong, pointed, hairy.--Woods; common from the Atlantic to Mo., Minn., and northward, flowering soon after the snow leaves the ground in spring. (Eu.)
2. H. acutiloba, DC. Leaves with 3 ovate and pointed lobes, or sometimes 5-lobed; those of the involucre acute or acutish.--Pa.s.ses into the other and has the same range.
4. ANEMONeLLA, s.p.a.ch.
Involucre compound, at the base of an umbel of flowers. Sepals 5--10, white and conspicuous. Petals none. Achenes 4--15, ovoid, terete, strongly 8--10-ribbed, sessile. Stigma terminal, broad and depressed.--Low glabrous perennial; leaves all radical, compound.
1. A. thalictrodes, s.p.a.ch. (RUE-ANEMONE.) Stem and slender petiole of radical leaf (a span high) rising from a cl.u.s.ter of thickened tuberous roots; leaves 2--3-ternately compound; leaflets roundish, somewhat 3-lobed at the end, cordate at the base, long-petiolulate, those of the 2--3-leaved 1--2-ternate involucre similar; flowers several in an umbel; sepals oval (' long, rarely pinkish), not early deciduous. (Thalictrum anemonoides, _Michx._)--Woods, common, flowering in early spring with Anemone nemorosa, and considerably resembling it. Rarely the sepals are 3-lobed like the leaflets.
5. THALiCTRUM, Tourn. MEADOW-RUE.
Sepals 4--5, petal-like or greenish, usually caducous. Petals none.
Achenes 4--15, grooved or ribbed, or else inflated. Stigma unilateral.
Seed suspended.--Perennials, with alternate 2--3-ternately compound leaves, the divisions and the leaflets stalked; petioles dilated at base. Flowers in corymbs or panicles, often polygamous or dicious.
(Derivation obscure.)
[*] _Flowers dicious or sometimes polygamous, in ample panicles; filaments slender; stigmas elongated, linear or subulate; achenes sessile or short-stipitate, ovoid, pointed, strongly several-angled and grooved._
1. T. diic.u.m, L. (EARLY MEADOW-RUE.) Smooth and pale or glaucous, 1--2 high; leaves (2--3) all with general petioles; leaflets drooping, rounded and 3--7-lobed; flowers purplish and greenish, dicious; the yellowish anthers linear, mucronate, drooping on fine capillary filaments.--Rocky woods, etc.; common. April, May.
2. T. polgamum, Muhl. (TALL M.) Smooth, not glandular, 4--8 high; stem-leaves sessile; leaflets rather firm, roundish to oblong, commonly with mucronate lobes or tips, sometimes p.u.b.erulent beneath; panicles very compound; flowers white, the fertile ones with some stamens; anthers not drooping, small, oblong, blunt, the mostly white filaments decidedly thickened upwards. (T. Cornuti, _Man._, not _L._)--Wet meadows and along rivulets, N. Eng. to Ohio and southward; common. July--Sept.
3. T. purpurascens, L. (PURPLISH M.) Stem (2--4 high) usually purplish; stem-leaves sessile or nearly so; leaflets more veiny and reticulated beneath, with or without gland-tipped or glandless hairs or waxy atoms; panicles compound; flowers (sepals, filaments, etc.) greenish and purplish, dicious; anthers linear or oblong-linear, mucronulate, drooping on capillary filaments occasionally broadened at the summit.--Dry uplands and rocky hills, S. New Eng. to Minn., and southward. May, June.
[*][*] _Flowers all perfect, corymbed; the filaments strongly club-shaped or inflated under the small and short anther; stigma short; achenes gibbous, long-stipitate._
4. T. clavatum, DC. Size and appearance of n. 1; leaves only twice ternate; flowers white, fewer; achenes 5--10, flat, somewhat crescent-shaped, tapering into the slender stipe.--Mountains of Va. and southward. June.
6. TRAUTVETTeRIA, Fisch. & Mey. FALSE BUGBANE.
Sepals 3--5, usually 4, concave, petal-like, very caducous. Petals none.
Achenes numerous, capitate, membranaceous, compressed-4-angled and inflated. Seed erect.--A perennial herb, with alternate palmately-lobed leaves, and corymbose white flowers. (For _Prof. Trautvetter_, a Russian botanist.)
1. T. palmata, Fisch. & Mey. Stems 2--3 high; root-leaves large, 5--11-lobed, the lobes toothed and cut.--Moist ground along streamlets, Md. to S. Ind., and south to Ga.
7. ADNIS, Dill.
Sepals and petals (5--16) flat, unappendaged, deciduous. Achenes numerous, in a head, rugose-reticulated. Seed suspended.--Herbs with finely dissected alternate leaves and showy flowers. (?d????, a favorite of Venus, after his death changed into a flower.)
A. AUTUMNaLIS, L. A low leafy annual, with scarlet or crimson flowers, darker in the centre.--Sparingly naturalized from Europe.
8. MYOSuRUS, Dill. MOUSE-TAIL.
Sepals 5, spurred at the base. Petals 5, small and narrow, raised on a slender claw, at the summit of which is a nectariferous hollow. Stamens 5--20. Achenes numerous, somewhat 3-sided, crowded on a very long and slender spike-like receptacle (whence the name, from ??, _a mouse_, and ????, _a tail_), the seed suspended.--Little annuals, with tufted narrowly linear-spatulate root-leaves, and naked 1-flowered scapes.
Flowers small, greenish.