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10. MELILTUS, Tourn. MELILOT. SWEET CLOVER.
Flowers much as in Trifolium, but in spike-like racemes, small; corolla deciduous, free from the stamen-tube. Pod ovoid, coriaceous, wrinkled, longer than the calyx, scarcely dehiscent, 1--2-seeded.--Annual or biennial herbs, fragrant in drying, with pinnately 3-foliolate leaves, leaflets toothed. (Name from ???, _honey_, and ??t??, some leguminous plant.)
M. OFFICINaLIS, Willd. (YELLOW MELILOT.) Upright (2--4 high); leaflets obovate-oblong, obtuse; _corolla yellow_; the petals nearly of equal length.--Waste or cultivated grounds. (Adv. from Eu.)
M. aLBA, Lam. (WHITE M.) Leaflets truncate; _corolla white_; the standard longer than the other petals.--In similar places. (Adv. from Eu.)
11. MEDICaGO, Tourn. MEd.i.c.k.
Flowers nearly as in Melilotus. Pod 1--several-seeded, scythe-shaped, incurved, or variously coiled.--Leaves pinnately 3-foliolate; leaflets toothed; stipules often cut. (??d???, the name of Lucerne, because it came to the Greeks from Media.)
M. SATVA, L. (LUCERNE. ALFALFA.) Upright, smooth, perennial; leaflets obovate-oblong, toothed; _flowers (purple) racemed_; pods spirally twisted.--Cultivated for green fodder; spontaneous from Ma.s.s. to Minn.
and Kan. (Adv. from Eu.)
M. LUPULNA, L. (BLACK MEd.i.c.k. NONESUCH.) Proc.u.mbent, p.u.b.escent, annual; leaflets wedge-obovate, toothed at the apex; _flowers in short spikes_ (yellow); _pods kidney-form_, 1-seeded.--Waste places, N. Eng. to Fla., west to Mich., Iowa, and Mo. (Adv. from Eu.)
M. MACULaTA, Willd. (SPOTTED MEd.i.c.k.) Spreading or proc.u.mbent annual, somewhat p.u.b.escent; leaflets obcordate, with a purple spot, minutely toothed; _peduncles 3--5-flowered_; flowers yellow; _pods compactly spiral_, of 2 or 3 turns, compressed, _furrowed on the thick edge_, and fringed with a double row of curved p.r.i.c.kles.--N. Brunswick to Ma.s.s.
(Adv. from Eu.)
M. DENTICULaTA, Willd. Nearly glabrous; _pods loosely spiral, deeply reticulated_, and with a _thin keeled edge_; otherwise like the last, and with the same range. (Adv. from Eu.)
12. HOSaCKIA, Douglas.
Calyx-teeth nearly equal. Petals free from the diadelphous stamens; standard ovate or roundish, its claw often remote from the others; wings obovate or oblong; keel incurved. Pod linear, compressed or somewhat terete, sessile, several-seeded.--Herbs, with pinnate leaves (in ours 1--3-foliolate, with gland-like stipules), and small yellow or reddish flowers in umbels (ours solitary) upon axillary leafy-bracteate peduncles. (Named for _Dr. David Hosack_, of New York.)
1. H. Purs.h.i.+ana, Benth. Annual, more or less silky-villous or glabrous, often 1 high or more; leaves nearly sessile, the 1--3 leaflets ovate to lanceolate (3--9" long); peduncles often short, bracteate with a single leaflet.--N. C.; S. W. Minn. to Ark., and west to the Pacific. Very variable.
13. PSORaLEA, L.
Calyx 5-cleft, persistent, the lower lobe longest. Stamens diadelphous or sometimes monadelphous. Pod seldom longer than the calyx, thick, often wrinkled, indehiscent, 1-seeded.--Perennial herbs, usually sprinkled all over or roughened (especially the calyx, pods, etc.) with glandular dots or points. Leaves mostly 3--5-foliolate. Flowers spiked or racemed, white or mostly blue-purplish. Root sometimes tuberous and farinaceous. (Name, ???a????, _scurfy_, from the glands or dots.)
[*] _Leaves pinnately 3-foliolate._
1. P. On.o.brychis, Nutt. Nearly smooth and free from glands, _erect_ (3--5 high); _leaflets lanceolate-ovate, taper-pointed_ (3' long); _stipules and bracts awl-shaped_; racemes elongated; peduncle shorter than the leaves; pods roughened and wrinkled.--River-banks, Ohio to Ill.
and Mo.; also south and east to S. C. July.
2. P. stipulata, Torr. & Gray. Nearly smooth and glandless; _stems diffuse; leaflets ovate-elliptical_, reticulated; _stipules ovate; flowers in heads_ on rather short peduncles; _bracts broadly ovate, sharp-pointed_.--Rocks, S. Ind. and Ky. June, July.
3. P. melilotodes, Michx. Somewhat p.u.b.escent, more or less glandular; _stems erect_ (1--2 high), slender; _leaflets lanceolate or narrowly oblong; spikes oblong_, long-peduncled; _stipules awl-shaped_; bracts ovate or lanceolate, taper-pointed; pods strongly wrinkled transversely.--Dry soil, Fla. to Tenn., S. Ind. and Kan. June.
[*][*] _Leaves palmately 3--5-foliolate; roots not tuberous._
4. P. tenuiflra, Pursh. Slender, erect, much branched and bushy (2--4 high), _minutely h.o.a.ry-p.u.b.escent_ when young; leaflets varying from linear to obovate-oblong (--1' long), glandular-dotted; _flowers_ (2--3" long) _in loose racemes_; lobes of the calyx and bracts ovate, acute; pod glandular. (P. floribunda, _Nutt._)--Prairies, Minn. to Ill., Tex., and westward. June--Sept.
5. P. argophlla, Pursh. _Silvery silky-white_ all over, erect, divergently branched (1--3 high); leaflets _elliptical-lanceolate; spikes interrupted_; lobes of the calyx and _bracts lanceolate_.--High plains, N. Wisc. to Iowa, Kan., and westward. June.--Flowers 4--5"
long.
6. P. digitata, Nutt. More slender and less h.o.a.ry, 1--2 high; leaflets linear-oblanceolate; bracts of the interrupted spike obcordate; calyx-lobes oblong, acute.--Central Kan. to Col. and Tex.
7. P. lanceolata, Pursh. Glabrous or nearly so, yellowish green, densely punctate; leaflets 3, linear to oblanceolate; flowers small, in very short spikes; calyx 1" long, with short broad teeth.--Central Kan. to the Sask. and westward.
[*][*][*] _Leaves palmately 5-foliolate; root tuberous; spike-like racemes dense._
8. P. esculenta, Pursh. Roughish hairy all over; stem stout (5--15'
high) and erect from a tuberous or turnip-shaped farinaceous root; leaflets obovate- or lanceolate-oblong; spikes oblong, long-peduncled; lobes of the calyx and bracts lanceolate, nearly equalling the corolla (' long).--High plains, Sask. to Wisc., Iowa, and Tex. June. The POMME BLANCHE, or POMME DE PRAIRIE, of the voyageurs.
9. P. hypogae'a, Nutt. Tuber small; nearly acaulescent, h.o.a.ry with appressed hairs; leaflets linear; spikes short-capitate, on peduncles --2' long; calyx narrow, 3--6" long.--Central Kan. to Col. and Tex.
10. P. cuspidata, Pursh. Stout, tall, from a deep-seated tuber, h.o.a.ry with appressed hairs; leaflets usually broadly oblanceolate, obtuse; flowers large, the petals (6--8" long) exceeding the lanceolate-lobed calyx.--Central Kan. to Col. and Tex.
14. AMoRPHA, L. FALSE INDIGO.
Calyx inversely conical, 5-toothed, persistent. Standard (the other petals entirely wanting!) wrapped around the stamens and style.
Stamens 10, monadelphous at the very base, otherwise distinct.
Pod oblong, longer than the calyx, 1--2-seeded, roughened, tardily dehiscent.--Shrubs, with odd-pinnate leaves; the leaflets marked with minute dots, usually stipellate, the midvein excurrent. Flowers violet or purple, crowded in cl.u.s.tered terminal spikes. (Name, ???f??, _deformed_, from the absence of four of the petals.)
[*] _Pods 1-seeded; leaflets small_ (' long or less), _crowded_.
1. A. canescens, Nutt. (LEAD-PLANT.) _Whitened with h.o.a.ry down_ (1--3 high); leaflets 15--25 pairs, oblong-elliptical, becoming smoothish above; spikes usually cl.u.s.tered at the summit.--Sask. to Ind. and Tex., west to the Rocky Mts.; also eastward to Ga.
2. A. microphlla, Pursh. _Nearly glabrous_ throughout, 1 high or less; leaflets rather rigid; spikes usually solitary.--Sask. to Minn. and Iowa, west to the Rocky Mts.
[*][*] _Pods 2-seeded; leaflets larger, scattered._
3. A. fruticsa, L. (FALSE INDIGO.) A tall shrub, rather p.u.b.escent or smoothish, leaflets 8--12 pairs, oblong to broadly elliptical.--River-banks, S. Penn. to Fla., west to Sask., Tex., and the Rocky Mts. Very variable.
15. DaLEA, L.
Calyx 5-cleft or toothed. Corolla imperfectly papilionaceous; petals all on claws; the standard heart-shaped, inserted in the bottom of the calyx; the keel and wings borne on the middle of the monadelphous sheath of filaments, which is cleft down one side. Stamens 10, rarely 9. Pod membranaceous, 1-seeded, indehiscent, enclosed in the persistent calyx.--Mostly herbs, more or less glandular-dotted, with minute stipules; the small flowers in terminal spikes or heads. (Named for _Samuel Dale_, an English botanist.)
[*] _Glabrous; flowers white or rose-color; leaflets 4--20 pairs; annuals._
1. D. alopecurodes, Willd. Erect (1--2 high); leaflets 10--20 pairs, linear-oblong; flowers light rose-color or whitish, in cylindrical spikes; bracts ovate-lanceolate, ac.u.minate, deciduous; calyx very villous, with long slender teeth.--Alluvial soil, Minn. to Ill. and Ala., west to the Rocky Mts.
2. D. laxiflra, Pursh. Erect (1--4 high), branching; leaflets 3--5 pairs, linear, 2--3" long; spikes loosely-flowered; bracts conspicuous, persistent, almost orbicular and very obtuse; petals white; calyx densely villous, the long teeth beautifully plumose.--Iowa and Mo. to Tex., west to Col.
[*][*] _p.u.b.escent; leaflets 3--4 pairs; perennial herbs._
3. D. aurea, Nutt. Stems erect and simple, 1--3 high; leaflets oblong-obovate to linear-oblong, more or less silky-p.u.b.escent; spikes solitary, oblong-ovate, very compact and densely silky; bracts short, rhombic-ovate; petals yellow.--On the plains, Mo. to Tex., and westward.
4. D. lanata, Spreng. Very p.u.b.escent throughout, 1--2 high, branching; leaflets obovate to oblong-obovate, 2--3" long; spikes slender, rather loose, the obovate acute bracts equalling the small short-toothed calyx; petals short, purple.--Central Kan. to Tex., and westward.