Part 127 (1/2)
A. MaJUS, L. (LARGE SNAPDRAGON.) A large-flowered perennial, with oblong smooth leaves and a glandular-downy raceme; sepals short; corolla 1--2'
long, purple or white.--Eastward, escaping from gardens. (Adv. from Eu.)
4. SCROPHULaRIA, Tourn. FIGWORT.
Calyx deeply 5-cleft. Corolla with a somewhat globular tube; the 4 upper lobes of the short border erect (the two upper longer), the lower spreading. Stamens 4, declined, with the anther-cells transverse and confluent into one; the fifth stamen a scale-like rudiment at the summit of the tube of the corolla. Capsule many-seeded.--Rank herbs, with mostly opposite leaves, and small greenish-purple or lurid flowers in loose cymes, forming a terminal narrow panicle. (So called because a reputed remedy for _scrofula_.)
1. S. nodsa, L., var. Marilandica, Gray. Smooth perennial (3--5 high), stem 4-sided; leaves ovate, oblong, or the upper lanceolate, ac.u.minate, cut-serrate, rounded or rarely heart-shaped at base.--Damp grounds, N. Eng. to Fla., west to the Rocky Mts. (Eu., Asia, the type.)
5. COLLiNSIA, Nutt.
Calyx deeply 5-cleft. Corolla declined, with the tube saccate or bulging at the base on the upper side, deeply 2-lipped; the upper lip 2-cleft, its lobes partly turned backward, the lower 3-cleft, its middle lobe keeled and sac-like, enclosing the 4 declined stamens and style. Fifth stamen a gland-like rudiment. Capsule 4--many-seeded.--Slender branching annuals or biennials, with opposite leaves, and handsome party-colored flowers in umbel-like cl.u.s.ters, appearing whorled in the axils of the upper leaves. (Dedicated to the late _Zaccheus Collins_, of Philadelphia, an accurate botanist.)
1. C. verna, Nutt. Slender (6--20' high), lower leaves ovate, the upper ovate-lanceolate, clasping by the heart-shaped base, toothed; _whorls about 6-flowered; flowers long-peduncled; corolla (blue and white) twice the length of the calyx_.--Moist soil, western N. Y. to W. Va., Wisc., and Ky. May, June.
2. C. parviflra, Dougl. Small; lower leaves ovate or rounded, the upper oblong-lanceolate, mostly entire; _whorls 2--6-flowered; flowers short-peduncled_; the small (blue) _corolla scarcely exceeding the calyx_.--Sh.o.r.e of L. Superior, N. Mich., and westward.
6. CHELNE, Tourn. TURTLE-HEAD. SNAKE-HEAD.
Calyx of 5 distinct imbricated sepals. Corolla inflated-tubular, with the mouth a little open; upper lip broad and arched, keeled in the middle, notched at the apex; the lower woolly-bearded in the throat, 3-lobed at the apex, the middle lobe smallest. Stamens 4, with woolly filaments and very woolly heart-shaped anthers, and a fifth sterile filament smaller than the others. Seeds many, wing-margined.--Smooth perennials, with upright branching stems, opposite serrate leaves, and large white or purple flowers, which are nearly sessile in spikes or cl.u.s.ters, and closely imbricated with round-ovate concave bracts and bractlets. (Name from ?e????, _a tortoise_, the corolla resembling in shape the head of a reptile.)
1. C. glabra, L. A foot or two (or even 6--7) high; _leaves narrowly to rather broadly lanceolate_ (4--5' long, 4--12” wide), gradually ac.u.minate, serrate with sharp appressed teeth, narrowed at base usually into a very short petiole; _bracts not ciliate; corolla white, or barely tinged with rose._--Wet places, Newf. to Minn., south to Fla. and Tex.
2. C. oblqua, L. Less strict or with spreading branches, 1--2 high; _leaves broadly lanceolate to oblong_ (2--5' long), sometimes laciniately serrate, more veiny and duller, acute or obtuse at base, mostly short-petioled; _bracts ciliolate; corolla deep and bright rose-color_.--S. Ill. to Va. and Fla.
7. PENTSTeMON, Mitch.e.l.l. BEARD-TONGUE.
Calyx 5-parted. Corolla tubular and more or less inflated, or bell-shaped, either decidedly or slightly 2-lipped; the upper lip 2-lobed, and the lower 3-cleft. Stamens 4, declined at the base, ascending above, and a fifth sterile filament usually as long as the others, either naked or bearded. Seeds numerous, wingless.--Perennials, branched from the base, simple above, with opposite leaves, the upper sessile and mostly clasping. Flowers mostly showy, thyrsoid or racemose-panicled. (Name from p??te, _five_, and st???, _stamen_; the fifth stamen being present and conspicuous, although sterile.)
[*] _Viscid or glandular above, more or less p.u.b.escent or glabrous below; leaves often toothed or denticulate._
[+] _Thyrse somewhat open; leaves ovate-lanceolate to linear; corolla 9--12” long, the lower lip usually bearded within._
1. P. p.u.b.escens, Solander. _Stem 1--2 high, viscid-p.u.b.escent_ (at least the inflorescence); _leaves oblong to lanceolate_ (2--4' long), the lowest and radical ovate or oblong, usually denticulate; _thyrse narrow; corolla dull violet or purple_ (or partly whitish), _very moderately dilated, the throat nearly closed by a villous-bearded palate; sterile filament densely bearded_.--Dry or rocky grounds, S. Maine (_Miss Furbish_) to Minn., south to Fla. and Tex.
2. P. laevigatus, Solander. _Stem 2--4 high, mostly glabrous_ except the inflorescence; leaves _firmer_, somewhat glossy, the _cauline ovate- or oblong-lanceolate_ with subcordate clasping base (2--5' long); _thyrse broader; corolla white_ (commonly tinged with purple), _abruptly and broadly inflated, the throat widely open; sterile filament thinly bearded above_.--Moist or rich soil, Penn. to Fla. and westward, where the common form is
Var. Digitalis, Gray. Stem sometimes 5 high; corolla larger and more abruptly inflated, white. (P. Digitalis, _Nutt._)--Penn. to Iowa, Mo., Ark., etc.
3. P. gracilis, Nutt. Glabrous or p.u.b.erulent, viscid-p.u.b.escent above, 1 high or less; stem-leaves mostly linear-lanceolate, the radical spatulate or oblong; corolla tubular-funnel-form or nearly cylindrical with open throat, lilac-purple or whitish.--Minn. to Mo., and westward.
[+][+] _Thyrse raceme-like. All extreme western._
4. P. Cobae'a, Nutt. _Soft-p.u.b.erulent_, 1 high; _leaves ovate or oblong_, or the lower broadly lanceolate and the upper cordate-clasping, _mostly sharply toothed_; thyrse short; _corolla 2' long, broadly ventricose_, dull purple or whitish.--Prairies, Kan. to Tex.
5. P. tubiflrus, Nutt. _Wholly glabrous_ excepting the viscid ovate sepals, 2--3 high; _leaves oblong or ovate-lanceolate, entire or spa.r.s.ely toothed_, the floral shorter than the remote dense cl.u.s.ters of the virgate thyrse; _corolla 9” long, the narrow tube gradually dilated upward_, white or whitish.--Low prairies, Kan. and Ark.
6. P. albidus, Nutt. _Viscid-p.u.b.escent_, 6--10' high; _leaves oblong-lanceolate or narrow_, entire or spa.r.s.ely toothed; _cl.u.s.ters_ of the strict thryse few-flowered, _approximate; sepals lanceolate, densely p.u.b.escent; corolla_ 9” long, _with shorter tube and more dilated throat_.--Plains, Neb. to Dak. and Tex.