Part 209 (1/2)

[*][*] _Glumes and palet awnless and soft in texture; reed-like perennials_.

5. E. mollis, Trin. Culm (3 high) velvety at top; spike thick, erect (8' long); spikelets 2 or 3 at each joint, 5--8-flowered; the lanceolate pointed 5--7-nerved glumes (1' long) and the pointed flowers soft-villous; rhachis of the spikelets separating into joints.--Sh.o.r.e of the Great Lakes, Maine, and northward. (Near E. arenarius.)

[*][*][*] _Empty glumes very narrow, and all very long-awned; spike disarticulating at maturity._

6. E. Sitanion, Schultes. Low (--2 high), stout; spike 1--4' long, the peduncle slightly exserted; the spreading scabrous awns 2--3'

long.--Central Minn. to Kan., and westward.

76. ASPReLLA, Willd. BOTTLE-BRUSH GRa.s.s. (Pl. 11.)

Spikelets 2--3 or sometimes solitary on each joint of the rhachis of a terminal spike, raised on a very short callous pedicel, loosely 2--4-flowered (when solitary flatwise on the rhachis). Glumes none! or small, awn-like, and deciduous. Otherwise nearly as in Elymus. (Name a diminutive of _asper_, rough or p.r.i.c.kly.)

1. A. Hstrix, Willd. Perennial; culms 3--4 high; leaves and sheaths smoothish; spike loose (3--6' long); the spreading spikelets 2--3 together, early deciduous; flowers smoothish or often rough-hairy, tipped with an awn thrice their length (1' long). (Gymnostichum Hystrix, _Schreb._)--Moist woodlands. July, Aug.

77. ARUNDINaRIA, Michx. CANE. (Pl. 11.)

Spikelets flattened, 5--14-flowered; the flowers somewhat separated on the jointed rhachis. Empty glumes very small, membranaceous, the upper one larger. Flowering glumes and palet herbaceous or somewhat membranaceous, the glume convex on the back, many-nerved, tapering into a mucronate point or bristle. Squamulae 3, longer than the ovary. Stamens 3. Grain oblong, free.--Arborescent or shrubby gra.s.ses, simple or with fascicled branches, and with large spikelets in panicles or racemes; blade of the leaf jointed upon the sheath; flowers polygamous. (Name from _arundo_, a reed.)

1. A. macrosperma, Michx. (LARGE CANE.) (Pl. 11, fig. 1, 2.) Culms arborescent, 10--40 high and --3' thick at base, rigid, simple the first year, branching the second, afterwards at indefinite periods fruiting, and soon after decaying; leaves lanceolate (1--2' wide), smoothish or p.u.b.escent, the sheath ciliate on one margin, stoutly fimbriate each side of the base of the leaf; panicle lateral, composed of few simple racemes; spikelets 1--3' long, purplish or pale, erect; flowering glume lanceolate, acute or ac.u.minate, glabrous or p.u.b.escent, fringed (5--12” long).--River-banks, S. Va.(?), Ky., and southward, forming cane-brakes. April.

Var. suffruticsa, Munro. (SWITCH CANE. SMALL CANE.) Lower and more slender (2--10 high), often growing in water; leaves 4”--1' broad; spikelets solitary or in a simple raceme at the summit of the branches, or frequently on leafless radical culms. (A. tecta, _Muhl._)--Swamps and moist soil, Md., S. Ind. to S. E. Mo., and southward. Sometimes fruiting several years in succession.

SERIES II.

CRYPTOGAMOUS OR FLOWERLESS PLANTS.

Vegetables dest.i.tute of proper flowers (i.e. having no stamens nor pistils), and producing instead of seeds minute one-celled germinating bodies called _spores_, in which there is no embryo or rudimentary plantlet.

CLa.s.s III. ACROGENS.

Cryptogamous plants with a distinct axis or stem, growing from the apex, and commonly not with later increase in diameter, usually furnished with distinct leaves; reproduction by antheridia and archegonia, sometimes also by gemmation.

SUBCLa.s.s I. VASCULAR ACROGENS, OR PTERIDOPHYTES.[1]

[Footnote 1: The orders of this Subcla.s.s have been elaborated anew for this edition by Prof. DANIEL C. EATON of Yale University.]

Stems containing woody fibre and vessels (especially scalariform or spiral ducts). Antheridia or archegonia, or both, formed on a minute prothallus which is developed from the spore on germination, the archegonium containing a nucleus, which after fertilization becomes an oospore and at length grows into the conspicuous spore-bearing plant.

ORDER 130. EQUISETaCEae. (HORSETAIL FAMILY.)

_Rush-like, often branching plants, with jointed and mostly hollow stems from running rootstocks, having sheaths at the joints, and, when fertile, terminated by the conical or spike-like fructification composed of s.h.i.+eld-shaped stalked scales bearing the spore-cases beneath._--A single genus.

1. EQUISeTUM, L. HORSETAIL. SCOURING RUSH. (Pl. 21)

Spore-cases (_sporangia, thecae_) 6 or 7, adhering to the under side of the angled s.h.i.+eld-shaped scales of the spike, 1-celled, opening down the inner side and discharging the numerous loose spores. To the base of each spore are attached 4 thread-like and club-shaped elastic filaments, which roll up closely around the spore when moist, and uncoil when dry.--Rootstocks perennial, wide-creeping, hard and blackish, jointed, often branched and sometimes bearing small tubers. Stems erect, cylindrical, hollow, jointed; the surface striated or grooved with alternate ridges and furrows, the cuticle in most species containing silica in the form of minute granules, rosettes, or tubercles; the joints containing besides the central air-cavity a circle of smaller hollows beneath the furrows and a set of still smaller ones beneath the ridges; the nodes closed and solid, each bearing instead of leaves a sheath which is divided into teeth corresponding in number and position to the princ.i.p.al ridges of the stem; stomata in the furrows, each with two pairs of guard-cells, of which the outer pair is marked with radiating lines of silica. Branches, when present, in whorls from the base of the sheath, like the stem, but without the central air-cavity.

Prothallus green, formed upon the ground, often variously lobed, usually dicious. (The ancient name, from _equus_, horse, and _seta_, bristle.)