ADDISONIA COLORED ILLUSTRATIONS AND POPULAR DESCRIPTIONS OF PLANTS V10

122 82 0
ADDISONIA COLORED ILLUSTRATIONS AND POPULAR DESCRIPTIONS OF PLANTS V10

Đang tải... (xem toàn văn)

Tài liệu hạn chế xem trước, để xem đầy đủ mời bạn chọn Tải xuống

Thông tin tài liệu

ADDISONIA COLORED ILLUSTRATIONS AND POPULAR DESCRIPTION OF PLANTS Volume 10 1925 PUBLISHED BY THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN (ADDISON BROWN FUND) THE SCIENCE PRESS PRINTING COMPANY LANCASTER PA CONTENTS Part JUNS 1925 29, PLATE 321 322 323 page; Dionaea muscipula Puschkinia scilloides Primula Sieboldii 324 325 326 Begonia sanguinea Pittosporum undulatum Zanthoxylum schinifolium 11 327 Begonia Dregei Sherwoodia galacifolia 13 328 15 Part August 1925 6, Prionitis 329 330 Urena lobata 19 331 Erj^hrina Poeppigiana 21 332 Byrsonima Horneana Tabebuia haemantha 23 27 335 Barbieria pinnata Chamaecrista mirabilis 336 Distictis lactiflora 31 333 334 Barleria 17 25 29 Part Deckmbejr 7, 1925 337 Acokanthera spectabilis 33 338 Mesembryanthemum 35 339 37 340 Hydrocleys nymphoides Dimorphotheca aurantiaca 341 lyouicera fragrantissima 41 342 Maranta Kerchoveana 43 343 Malpighia coccigera Echeveria Whitei 45 344 spectabile 39 47 iii Addisonia iv Part April 8, 1926 345 Dahlia imperialis 49 346 347 Meseinbryanthemum aiireum Mains pulcherrima Scheideckeri 51 348 349 350 Malus glaucescens 55 Stigmaphyllon ciliatum Berberis Thuubergii 57 351 352 53 59 61 Pachylophus marginatus Pitcairnia exscapa Index Taxonomic Index to Volumes to 10 Alphabetic Index to Volumes 65 69 72 to 10 CONTRIBUTORS TO VOLUMES The numerals 63 TO 10 refer to the volume-niiml3er Oakes Ames Liberty ^j ^ Hyde Bailey 10 John Hendley Barnhart Alwin Berger 10 Eugene Pintard Bicknell Kenneth Rowland Boynton 6, 7, 8, 9, Elizabeth Gertrude (Knight) Britton Nathaniel Lord Britton James Alfred Crawford 6, 7, 8, 9, 6, 10 10 Herbert McKenzie Denslow Helen Sykes (Morgenthau) Fox Henry Allan Gleason 7, 8, Clifford Conklin Glover Harvey Monroe Hall Charles Arthur Hollick 7, Avery Howe Marshall Emery Clarence Leonard Kenneth Kent Mackenzie 8, 6, 10 10 George Valentine Nash Ethel Anson (Steel) Peckham 10 Francis Whittier PenneU Joseph Nelson Rose Hester Mary Rusk Per Axel Rydberg John Kunkel Small Edmund Bronk Southwick Arlow Burdette Stout Percy Wilson - 7, 8, 9, 10 8, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 7, i!:.' '' :'!';'-'.">-' ADDISONIA COLORED ILLUSTRATIONS AND POPULAR DESCRIPTIONS OF PLANTS Volume Number 10 MARCH, 1925 PUBLISHED BY THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN fADDISON BROWN FUND) JUNE 29, 1925 ANNOUNCEMENT A bequest made to the New York Botanical Garden by its late President, Judge Addison Brown, established the ADDISON BROWN FUND "the income and accumulations from which shall be applied to the founding and publication, as soon as practicable, and to the maintenance (aided by subscriptions therefor), of a high-class magazine bearing my name, devoted exclusely to the illustration b}'^ colored plates of the plants of the United States and its territorial possessions, and of other plants flowering in said Garden or conser\'atories; with suitable descriptions in popular language, and any desirable notes and synonymy, and a brief statement its known and uses of the plants illustrated." and publication of the work have been referred preparation to Dr John Hendley Barnhart, Bibliographer, and Mr Kenneth Rowland Boynton, Head Gardener, Addisonia is published as a quarterly magazine, in March, June, Each part consists of eight colored September, and December of the properties The The subscription price is plates with accompanying letterpress $10 annually, four parts constituting a volume The parts will not be sold separately Address: THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN BRONX PARK NEW YORK CITY Subscribers are advised to bind each volume of ADDISONIA as completed^ in order to avoid possible loss or misplacement of the parts; nearly the whole remainder of the edition of Volumes to has been made up into complete volumes, and but few separate parts can be supplied ADDISONIA PLATE 321 J *\ DIONAEA MUSCIPULA Addisonia (Plate 321) DIONAEA MuSCIPULA Venus-flytrap Native of coastal North and South Carolina Family Dionaeaceae Dionaea muscipida Ellis; I, Mant Venus-fIvYTrap Family 1771 238 Among many American plant novelties that reached England in the eighteenth century the subject of this note wa* the most bizarre A plant with morphological and physiological animal-traps, which work with the precision of man-made mechanical contrivances, was something wholly new to the botanists of those days The generic name is derived from that of Dione-the mother of Venus, also applied to Venus herself, through the symbolic representhe tation of that goddess The present plant or its immediate ancestors must have followed the gradually emerging coast-line from the Tertiary Appalachian biologic refuge, and not being adapted to cooling of the climate, died out in the rear, while the advance guard kept far enough ahead to carry it to its present coastal habitat At present the flytrap is confined geographically to the coastal regions of North Carolina and South Carolina, where it occupies sandy acid bogs and moist open pinelands It thrives just as well, in fact sometimes better, in artificial habitats within its range For example, near roadsides and railroad embankments, where the natural surface of the land where the plant is wont to grow has been re- moved, the more luxuriant and precocious specimens may be found It seems not to be extending its geographic range Having become accustomed to a certain, in a way a limited, type of habitat, like some of our other Coastal Plain plants Elliottia, Frariklinia, — — Torreya the Croomia, flytrap may be considered as belonging to a vanishing type of vegetation The Venus-flytrap was discovered by John Bartram in or before 1765, and sent to England John Ellis in a letter to Linnaeus said, "miraculum naturale, folia biloba, radicalia, ciliata, conduplicanda, William Bartram, son of John, sensibilia, insecta incarcerantia." in traveling in 1777 northward on the Carolina coast upon observ- ing an abundance of this plant, records that "This wonderful plant seems to be distinguished in the creation, by the Author of nature, with faculties eminently superior to every other vegetable production; specimens of it were communicated to the curious of the old world by John Bartram, in the introduction to his " • • • Addisonia "Travels," Bartram waxing eloquent in regard to the flytrap wrote, "But admirable are the properties of the extraordinary Dionaea muscipula! A great extent of each side of that serpentine rivulet is occupied by those sportive vegetables let us advance to the spot in which nature has seated them Astonishing production! see the — incarnate lobes expanding, how gay and sportive they appear! ready on the spring to entrap incautious insects! what artifice! there behold one of the leaves just closed upon a struggling fly; another has gotten a worm; its hold rous vegetable!" is sure, its prey can never escape —carnivo- This plant furnished a favorite theme in connection with studies on insectivorous plants about the middle of the last centurySuf say here that the outstanding features of the fl3i;rap are the three irritable cilia on the faces of each leaf -lobe which transmit the stimulus that causes the paired lobes to snap shut on a victim and fice it to eyelash-like cilia of the lobes which close together like the fingers when one's hands are folded, thus making sure the victim is securely held The Venus-flytrap is a partly succulent perennial scapose herb with fibrous roots The leaves are borne in a basal rosette, their bases imbricate and forming a bulb-like structure about the end of The petiole has the rootstock; they are one to six inches long lateral wings and is thus obovate to cuneate or spatulate, reticulateveined, toothed, undulate or entire, and truncate or obcordate at This structure abruptly contracts to a short stalk which the apex expands into the blade, consisting of two lateral semicircular wings or lobes; these are hinged, as it were, on a stout midrib from which The scape is three to fifteen the pinnate veins extend to the cilia inches tall, glabrous, simple or with a branch near the top The flowers are borne on slender pedicels one half to one inch long, in a terminal umbel-like cyme, which is subtended by narrow or broad The calyx is composed of five ovate or elliptic-ovate perbracts The corolla comprises five whitish or sistent bright green sepals greenish-white veined marcescent petals, borne on the edge of a dilated receptacle; these are cuneate or obovate-cuneate, usually about a half inch long, truncate or emarginate at the somewhat The androecium consists of ten or more stamens, erose apex usually about fifteen, borne between the corolla and the gynoecium The filaments are filiform, united at the base, and marcescent; the anthers are ellipsoid, with the obscure connective attached to the The gynoecium is sessile on the recepfilament above the base tacle It consists of a depressed one-celled ovary, a columnar style and five fimbriate stigmas The capsule is of a broadly ovoid type, membranous, somewhat irregularly five-valved, early decaying, except the basal part with the broad flat placenta upon which the seeds are borne The seeds are numerous, obovoid, black, smooth, and shining John K Small Explanation of Plate 3.- Petals X Fig Fig 1.— liant, 4.— Gj-noecium X 4, in flower Fig 2.— Calj'x, x Fig 62 Addisoxia compared above grow in dry canyons, dry creek-beds, banks of streams, aud slopes of volcanoes The center of distribution for P niarginatus is northern Nevada and Utah and southern Idaho with occasional occurrences in Washington, Oregon, northern California, and Like all regions : of the genus, the species on bluffs, in northern Arizona, The range of P hirsiitus is more southern centers in Arizona, New Mexico, southern Utah, Colorado, Nevada with occasional occurrences in Idaho The hairy-margined mountain-primrose is It and a perennial beginning to flower the second j-ear, at first stemless but in age developing a short caudex the leaves are elongate, four to six inches long, or occasionalh' reaching ten inches, lanceolate to oblong, tapering into a long somewhat winged petiole, softly pubescent with straight white hairs confined chiefly to the margins and veins of the under surface flower-buds nodding flower-tube long and slender, sometimes eight inches long petals broad, two inches long or less fruit ; ; ; ; narrowly oblong, two ; inches long, pilose, the ridges slightly tuberculate J N Rose E C Leonard Explanation of Plate Fig —Flower and leaf Fig 2.— L,eaf Fig 3.— Fruit ADDISONIA PLATE 352 \' A|£Lat/7n_ PITCAIRNIA EXSCAPA Addisonia 63 (Plate 352) PITCAIRNIA EXSCAPA Stemless Pitcairnia Native of Ecuador and Colombia Family Bromeliaceae Pitcairnia exseapa Hook Bot Mag Pineappi^e Family pi 4591 1851 ntcairnia hcterophylla exscapa Mez, in DC Monog- Phan 9: 375 1896 On the western declivities of the Andes, usually between the altitudes of 3000 and 7000 feet, are to be found many interesting as well as ornamental species of Pitcairnia prized in tivated are still It Some of these are much European conservatories, where they have long been culOthers are known only as names in herbaria, while others undescribed has been my Some Ecuador good fortune of them love many of these in Peru and grow among rocks, especially to see to on the sides of a cliff, while others are epiphytic, growing in the crotches of tree-branches, sometimes in the dense rain-forests and sometimes along the border of some arid belt where they find a definite dry and wet season Two or three of the species which I collected in Ecuador in 1918 definitely belong to the latter zone for they were found dormant or When the rains begin they rapidlj' send and these are soon followed by In nature the flowers always come first, but in the green leaves greenhouse plants like the one from which our illustration was made In the leaves may persist until the flowers appear the next season just coming into flower forth beautiful clusters of flowers growing these plants it is better to dry them oft' after the leaves have matured and hold them in this way until time to flower them again In their dormant state several of these species seem much alike, but when in flower they are easily distinguished The subject of our illustration belongs to the subgenus cairnia, of which Baker recognizes but two Ccphalopit- species, both Mexican, but one, according to him, extending into northern South America His South American representative of P heterop/iylla, at least a part It was collected by J N Rose of it, is the plant here illustrated and George Rose above Huigra, Ecuador, in 1918 {no 22155), and has flowered each spring since in the New York Botanical Garden and in the Cactus house of the United States Department of Agri- culture at Washington Addisonia 64 The stemless pitcairnia has leaves of two kinds, the outer ones with broad papery bases terminated by long, purple, spine-margined The flowers the inner leaves are linear, elongate and entire are sometimes two and one half inches long, eight to twelve in a head, bright scarlet the bracts which subtend the flowers are ovate, The style and stamens are as long as or longer than green, acute the petals the stigma-lobes and the upper part of the style red tips ; ; ; J : | j | N Rose j Explanation of Plate Fig 1.— Plant Fig 2.— Petal INDEX Bold-face type is used for the Latin names of plants illustrated; small capitals for Latin names of families illustrated and for the names of the authors of the text; italics for other Latin names, including synonyms AcANTHACEAE: Barleria Berberis Thunbergii, 59, plate 350 vulgaris, 59 Berger, Alwin: Mesembryanthemum aureum, 51 Bignonia haemantha, 25 lacti flora, 31 odorata', 31 rigescens, 31 Prionitis, pi 339 Acanthus family, 17 Acokanthera, 33 spectabilis, 33, flate S37 Allamanda, 33 Amazonvine, Fringed, 57 Amsonia, 33 Apocynaceae: AcoTcanthera lis, pi spectabi- 337 BiGNONiACEAE Distictis lactiflora, pi 336; Tabebuia haemantJia, pi 333 : Apple, American crab, 55 Bois immortelle, 21 Box, Victorian, 's crab, 53 crab, 53 Siberian crab, 55 Apple family, 53, 55 Scheidecker Showy BoYNTON, Kenneth Rowland: AcoTcanthera spectabilis, 33 Begonia Dregei, 13 ; Begonia sanguinea, ; Berberis Thunbergii, 59; Dimorphotheca aurantiaca, 39; Hydrocleys ; Arrowroot, 43 Kerchove's, 43 Arrowroot family, 43 nymphoides, 37; Lonicera fragrantissima, 41; Malpighia coccigera, 45 Malus glaucescens, 55 Malus pulcherrima ScheidecTceri, 53; Maranta Kerchoveana, 43 Mesembry- Banisteria ciliata, 57 Barbados-cherry, Box-leaved, 45 Barbados-cherry family, 23, 45, 57 Barberry, Common, 59 European, 59 Japanese, 59 Barberry family, 59 Barbleria, 27 plnnata, 27, plate 334 polyphylla, 27 Barleria, 17 ; ; anthemum boldii, 35; PittoSie- ; Stigmaphyllon subulatum, 57; Zanthoxylum schinifolium, 11 Britton, Nathaniel Lord: Barbieria pinnata, 27; Barleria Prionitis, 17; Byrsonima Eorneana, 23; Chamaecrista mirabilis, 29; Distictis lacti- 31; Erythrina Poeppigiana, 21;Tabebuia haemantha, 25; Urena flora, Sher- lob at a, 19 Bromeliaceae : Pitcairnia exscapa, 352 Bucare, 21 Blood-red, Drege's, 13 pi Bush-honeysuckle, Fragrant, 41 Begonia, Dregei, 13, plate 327 sanguinea, 7, plate 324 Butomaceae Hydrocleys nymphoides, : pi socotrina, 13 339 Butomus, 37 Butterfly-vine, 57 Begonia family, 7, 13 Begoniaceae: Begonia Dregei, pi 327 ; Begonia sanguinea, pi 324 Bejuco de Paralejo, 57 Berberidaceae Berberis Thunbergii, Byrsonima, Mrs Home's, 23 Byrsonima, 23 cuneata, 23 23, plate 332 ophiticola, 23 Horneana, : pi spectabile, sporum undulatum, 9; Primula Prionitis, 17, plate 329 Barn:hart, John Hendley: woodia galacifolia, 15 Begonia, ; 350 65 Addi.sonia 66 Fabaceve: Cadillo, 19 Caksalpiniaceae: Chamaccrista mira- Barhicria pinnata, pi 334 ; Erythrina Poeppigiana, pi S31 Fig-marigold, Golden, 51 Showy, 35 bil's, pi ."^35 Calathea, 43 Leitzci, 43 Flowering-rush family, 37 Fly-honeysuckle, 41 Icopardina, 43 Luccyana, 43 Franldinia, ornata, 43 Princeps, 43 zehrina, 43 Calendula, 39 Galacaceae: Sherwoodia pi Cape-marijjold, Golden, 39 Caprifoliaceae Lonicera fragrantissima, pi 341 Cardxjaceae: Dahlia impcrialis, pi 345; Dimorphotheca aurantiaca, pi 340 : Carissa, 33 Honeysuckle, 41 Honeysuckle family, 41 Howe, Marshall Avert: Dahlia perialis, Carpet \vced family, 35, 51 Cassia vurabilis, 27 HydrocJeis, 37 Ccphalopitcairnia, 64 Commersonii, 37 Eumholdtii, 37 335 nymphoides, Cotyledon, 47 53, 55 Crasstjlaceae: Echeveria WMtei, 344 Croomia, 37, plate pi Emery Clarence, and Eose, Joseph Nelson: Pachylophus mar- Leonard, ginatus, 61 Dahlia, Imperial, 49 Tree, 50 Liana fragrante, 31 Dahlia excelsa, 49 Lily family, Limnocharis, 37 excelsa anemonaeflora, 49 Imperialis, 49, plate 345 Lonicera LiLLiCEAE: Puschlcinia 322 : Morrowi, 41 StandisMi, 41 plate 321 Dionaea muscipula, pi Malaceae: Malus glaucescens, pi 348 ; Mains pidcherrima ScheidecTc- gnaplialantlia, 31 lactifolia, 31, plate pi caprifolioides, 41 fragrantissima, 41, plate 341 gracilipes, 41 aurantiaca, 39, plate 340 Dionae^vceae 321 Distlctis, 31 scilloides, HumhoMtii, 37 Maxoni, 49 Dimorphotheca, 39 1, 339 lee -plant, 35 Crab apple, Dionaea muscipula im- 49 Hydro cleys, 37 Chamaecrista miraMlis, 29, plate Clitoria polyphylla, 27 galacifolia, 328 Galactia pinnata, 27 Galax family, 15 Golden-vine, 45, 57 336 rhynchocarpa, 31 rigcscens, 31 Dogbane family, 33 Echeverin, White's, 47 Echeveria, 47 Whitei, 47, plate 344 Elliottia, Enredadera, 27 Erythrina, 21 micropteryx, 21 Poeppigiana, 21, plate 331 Evening-primrose family, CI eri, pi 347 Mallow family, 19 Malpighia coccifera, 45 coccigera, 45, plate 543 coccigera, 57 coccigyra, 45 glabra, 45 Malpigliia family, see Barbados-cherry family Malpighiaceae: Byrsonima Some- ana, pi 332; Malpighia coccigera, pi 343 ; Stigmaphyllon ciliatum, pi 349 67 Addisonia Primula Malus Sieholdii, 5, plate 323 angustifolia, 55 taccata, 55 coronaria, 55 Primulaceae: Primula glaucescens, 55, plate 348 Halliana, 53 NiedzwetzTcyana, 53 pulcherrima, 53 pulcherrima Scheideckeri, plate 347 Scheideclceri, 53 Malvaceae: Vrena Maranta, 43 Prionitis, 17 Puschkinia, hyacinthoides, libanotica, 3, 53, 330 lol>ata, pi arundinacea, 43 Kerchoveana, 43, plate 342 Van-denSeckeri, 43 Maeantaceae Maranta Kerchoveana, pi 342 : Mesembryanthemum, 51 Bolusii, 35 cordifolium, 35 crystallinum, 35 felinum, 35 spectaMle, 35, plate 338 tigrinum, 35 Mountain -primrose Hairy-margined, 61 Oenothera marginata, 61 Pachylophus tus, pi 351 Oncidium, 45 : scilloides, 3, plate sicula, 322 Pyrus atrosanguinea, 53 coronaria, 55 florihunda Scheideclceri, 53 glaucescens, 55 pulcherrima, 53 pulcherrima Soheidecheri, 53 Scheideclceri, 53 Eoble Colorado, 25 Eose, Joseph Nelson: aureum, 51, plate 346 Onagraceae Sie'boldii, pi 323 Whitei, 47 ; Echeveria Pitcairnia exscapa, 63 Eose, Joseph Nelson, and Leonard, Emery Clarence: Pachylophus marginatus, 61 Eue family, 11 Eittaceae: Zanthoxylum schinifolium, pi 326 Senna family, 29 Sherwoodia, 16 margina- Orpine family, 47 galacifolia, 15, plate 328 Shortia, 15 Shortia, 15, 16 galacifolia, 15 Pachylophus, 61 caulescens, 61 hirsutus, 61 marginatus, 61, plate 351 Partridge-pea, Porto Eico, 29 Pea family, 21, 27 Peckham, Ethel Anson Steel: Fusch- Small, John Kunkel: Dionaea muscipula, Spathodea portoricensis, 25 Squill, Striped, Stigmaphyllon, 57 ciliatum, 45 ciliatum, 57, plate 349 Stratiotes nymphoides, 37 Jiinia scilloidcs, Pineapple family, 63 Pitcairnia, Stemless, 63 Pitcairnla, 63 exscapa, 63, plate 352 heterophylla, 64 heterophylla exscapa, 63 Pittosporaceae tum, pi 325 Pittosporum, : Fittosporvm undula- crassifolium, phillyrioides, Ealphii, Tahebuia, 25 haemantha, 25, pZafe 3S3 Tabernaemontana, 33 Tecoma haemantha, 25 Tetragoniaceae Mesemiryanthemum aureum, pi 346; Mesembryanthemum spectdbile, pi 338 Thistle family, 39, 49 Thryallis, 45 Tiger 's-claws, 35 : Tobira, Torreya, undulatum, 9, plate 325 Pittosporum family, Toxicophloea spectabilis, 33 31 Trumpet-creeper family, 25, Pot-marigold, 39 Primrose, Siebold's, Primrose family, TJrena, 19 lobata, 19, plate 330 Addtsonia 6S Venus-flytrap, Venus-flvtrap family, Vinca, 33 Wintcrsweet, 33 Zanthoxylum, 11 Bungci, 11 Water-poppy, 37 schinifolium, 11, plate SS6 TAXONOMIC INDEX TO VOLUMES The numerals refer 10 to the plate-numbers Plnaceae: Pinus densiflora, 206 Pinus rigida, 311 Betulaceae: Alnua rugosa, 237 TJrticaceae: Butomaceae: Helxine Proteaceae: Hydrocleis nymphoides, 339 Araceae: Soleirolii, 297 Stenocarpus sinuatus, 281 Polygonaceae: Aconogonum polystachyum, 235 Tetragoniaceae: Mesembryanthemum aureimi, 346 Aglaonema marantifolium, 302 Amorphophallus bulbifer, 241 Anthurium scandens, 236 Bromeliaceae: Mesembryanthemum Billbeigia Saimdersii, 228 Pitcairnia exscapa, 352 spectabile, 338 Banunculaceae: Commelinaceae: Syndesmon Tradescantia virginiana, 232 thalictroides, 284 Berberidaceae: Llliaceae: Berberis Thunbergii, 350 Erythronium grandiflorum, 300 Lilium canadense, 255 Lilium candidum, 250 Lilium croceimi, 256 Lilium Parryi, 249 Lilium speciosum, 252 Lilium superbum, 254 Lilium tigrinum, 251 Lilium -warleyense, 253 Puschkinia scilloides, 322 Quamasia esculenta, 239 Convallariaceae Unifolium canadense, 301 Amaryllidaceae Alstroemeria aurantiaca, 273 Eucrosia Morleyana, 226 Eimyonia longijflora, 244 Taccaceae: Sehizocapsa plantaginea, 262 Menispermaceae Menispermum canadense, 277 : Magnoliaceae: Magnolia stellata, 211 Dionaeaceae: Dionaea museipula, 321 Crassulaceae: Byrnesia Weinbergii, 243 Dudleya arizonica, 274 Echeveria Whitei, 344 Graptopetalum paehyphyllum, 247 Graptopetalum Eusbyi, 304 Lenophyllum texanimi, 267 Sedum diffusum, 270 Saxlfragaceae: Bergenia crassifolia, 214 Bergenia ligulata, 207 Hydrangeaceae: Deutzia scabra Watereri, 264 : : Irldaceae: Iris Iris Iris Iris Iris Iris Iris Iris TO Pittosporaceae: Carolina, 313 cristata, 320 foliosa, 315 Pittosporum undulatum, 325 Hamamelidaceae Hamamelis mollis, 229 Hamamelis vernalis, 261 : hexagona, 314 Kimballiae, 318 lacustris, 319 savannarum, 317 versicolor, 316 Grossularlaceae: Ribes cereum, 260 Bosaceae: Rosa palustris, 275 Stephanandra incisa, 288 Malaceae: Marantaceae: Maranta Kerchoveana, 342 Orchldaceae: Calanthe vestita Eegnieri, 269 Eria gigantea, 213 Isotria verticillata, 305 Polystachya minuta, 234 Sarcopodium Lyomi, 265 Aria latifolia, 225 Mains glaucescens, 348 Mains ioensis plena, 208 Mains Niedzwetzkyana, 204 Mains pulcherrima Scheideckeri, 347 69 Addisonia 70 Mlmosaceae: Acacia armata, 199 Acacia leprosa, 196 Acacia liueata, 200 Acacia longifolia floribunda, 19S Acacia Nabounandi, 197 Acacia pubescens, 194 Acacia pulehella, 19.") Acacia scapuliformis, 193 Caesalpiniaceae: Corcis thinensis, 209 Chamaecrista mirabilis, 335 Fabaceae: Barliicria pinnata, 334 Crotalaria retusa, 248 Ervthrina Poeppigiana, 331 La'thyrus latifolius, 210 Swaiiisona galegifolia, 278 Malpighiaceae Byrsonima Horneana, 332 Malpighia coccigera, 343 Stigmaphyllon ciliatum, 349 Eutaceae: Zanthoxylum schinifolium, 320 : Polygalaceae: Phlebotaenia Cowellii, 280 Euphorbiaceae: Asterandra grandifolia, 309 Brevnia nivosa, 303 Xylophylla Epiphyllanthus, 240 Aceraceae: Acer rubrum, 298 Khamnaceae: Colletia cruciata, 286 Malvaceae: Anoda Urena hastata, 238 lobata, 330 Begoniaceae: Begonia Dregei, 327 Begonia sanguinea, 324 Cactaceae: Echinocereus Eaileyi, 245 Hamatocactus setispinus, 279 Thymelaeaceae: Lagetta Lagetto, 287 Lythraceae: Parsonsia micropetala, 259 Msrrtaceae: Callistemon salignus viridiflorus, 268 Eugenia buxifolia, 257 Melastomataceae : Schizoeeutron clegans, 266 Onagraceae: Lojjezia liirsuta, 242 Galacaceae: Shcrwoodia galacifolia, 328 Msrrsinaceae: Ardisia polycephala, 285 Prinnilaceae: Primula Sicboldii, 323 Stjrracaceae: Styrax japonica, 231 Apocynaceae: Acokanthera 337 spectabilis, Convolvulaceae: Ipomoea Batatas, 306 Polemoniaceae: Phlox "Asia," 272 Verbenaceae: Clerodendron Thomsonae, 212 Verbena eriuoides, 230 Verbena venosa, 258 Lamiaceae: Monarda didyma, 216 Monarda fistulosa, 308 Salvia Pitcheri, 283 Solanaceae; Nicotiana Forgetiana, 227 Nierembergia rivularis, 307 Scropbulariaceae Alonsoa caulialata, 203 Eigne niaceae Biguonia radicans, 276 Distietis lactiflora, 336 Tabebuia haemantha, 333 Gesneriaceae: Triehosporum piilebrum, 246 Acanthaceae: : : Barleria Prionitis, 329 Whitfieldia lateritia, 310 Eubiaceae: Haraelia axillaris, 282 Caprifoliaceae: Lonicera fragrantissima, 341 Viburnum cassinoides, 233 Lobeliaceae: Isotoma longiflora, 299 Carduaceae: Chrysanthemum "California," 292 Chrysanthemum Gold," 295 Clirysanthemum "Christmas ' ' Cranf ordia, ' ' 294 Chrysanthemum "Emma," 296 "Joan EdChrysanthemum wards," 289 Chrysanthemum "Nellie Blake," 293 " Paohylophus marginatus, 351 Cornaceae: Cornus stricta, 263 291 Chrysanthemum "Eena, Chrysanthemum "White Doty," Monotropaceae Hypopitys insignata, 205 Coreopsis pubescens, 202 Coreopsis yerticillata, 271 : Vacciniaceae: Gaylussacia brachyeera, 201 290 Dahlia "Ami Nonin," 218 Dahlia "Dahliadel Century," 217 71 Addtsonia Dahlia Dahlia Dahlia 222 Dahlia Dahlia "Douglas Tucker," 224 impeiialis, 345 "Kiug of the Autumn," "Marguerite Clark," 220 "Miss Nannie B Moor," 221 Dahlia Dahlia "Mme Coissard," 219 223 Dimorphotheca aurantiaca, 340 Helichrysum bracteatum, 215 Kudbeckia triloba, 312 J "W W Eawson," ALPHABETIC INDEX TO VOLUMES The numerals 10 Coreopsis pubescens, 202 Coreopsis verticillata, 271 Cornus stricta, 263 Crotalaria retusa, 248 Dahlia "Ami Nonin," 218 Dahlia "Dahliadel Century," 217 Dahlia * Douglas Tucker, ' ' 224 Dahlia imperialis, 345 Dahlia "King of the Autumn," 222 Dahlia ' ' Marguerite Clark, ' ' 220 Dahlia "Miss Nannie B Moor," 221 Dahlia ' ' Mme J Coissard, ' ' 219 Dahlia "W W Eawson," 223 Deutzia scabra Watereri, 264 Dimorphotheca aurantiaca, 340 Dionaea muscipula, 321 Distictis lactiflora, 336 Dudleya arizonica, 274 ' Echeveria Whitei, 344 Echinocereus Baileyi, 245 Eria gigantea, 213 Erythrina Poeppigiana, 331 Erythronium grandiflorum, 300 Eucrosia Morleyana, 226 Eugenia buxifolia, 257 Barbieria pinnata, 334 Barleria Prionitis, 329 Begonia Dregei, 327 Begonia sanguinea, 324 Berberis Thunbergii, 350 Bergenia crassifolia, 214 Bergenia ligulata, 207 Bignonia radicans, 276 Billbergia Saundersii, 228 Breynia nivosa, 303 Byrnesia Weinbergii, 243 Byrsonima Horneana, 332 Gaylussacia brachycera, 201 Graptopetalum pachyphyllum, 247 Graptopetalum Kusbyi, 304 Hamamelis mollis, 229 Hamamelis vernalis, 261 Hamatocactus setispinus, 279 Hamelia axillaris, 282 Calanthe vestita Eegnieri, 269 Callistemon salignus viridiflorus, 268 Cercis chinensis, 209 Chamaecrista mirabilis, 335 Chrysanthemum "California," 292 Helichrysum biacteatum, 215 Helxine Soleirolii, 297 Hydrocleys nymphoides, 339 Hypopitys insignata, 205 Chrysanthemum "Christmas Gold," " TO refer to the plate-numbers Acacia armata, 199 Acacia leprosa, 196 Acacia liueata, 200 Acacia longifolia floribunda, 198 Acacia Nabonuandi, 197 Acacia pubescens, 194 Acacia pulchella, 195 Acacia scapuliformis, 193 Acer rubrum, 298 Acokanthera spectabilis, 337 Aconogonum polystachyum, 235 Aglaonema marantifolium, 302 Alnus rugosa, 237 Alonsoa caulialata, 203 Alstroemeria aurantiaca, 273 Amorphophallus bulbifer, 241 Anoda hastata, 238 Anthurium scandens, 236 Ardisia polycephala, 285 Aria latifolia, 225 Asterandra grandifolia, 309 295 Ipomoea Batatas, 306 " Iris Carolina, 313 Iris cristata, 320 Iris foliosa, 315 Iris hexagona, 314 Iris Kimballiae, 318 Iris lacustris, 319 Iris savannarum, 317 294 Cranf ordia, Chrysanthemum Chrysanthemum "Emma," 296 Chrysanthemum "Joan Edwards," 289 Chrysanthemum "Nellie Blake," 293 Chrysanthemum "Eena," 291 Chrysanthemum "White Doty," 290 Clerodendron Thomsonae, 212 CoUetia cruciata, 286 Iris versicolor, Isotoma 73 316 longiflora, 299 Addisonia 74 Isotria verticillata, 30? Lagetta Lagretto, 287 Lathjrus latifolius, 210 Lenophyllum texanum, 267 Lilium canadense, 255 Lilium candidum, 250 Lilium croceum, 256 Lilium Parryi, 249 Lilium speciosum, 252 Lilium superbum, 254 Lilium tigrinum, 251 Lilium warleyense, 253 Lonieera f ragrantissima, 341 Lopezia hirsuta, 242 Polystachya minuta, 234 Primula Sieboldii, 323 Puschkinia scilloides, 32? Quamasia esculenta, 239 Ribes cereum, 260 Rosa palustrig, 275 Rudbeckia triloba, 312 Runyonia longiflora, 244 Salvia Pitcheri, 283 Sarcopodium Lyonii, 265 Schizocapsa plantaginea, 262 Schizocentron elegans, 26fi Sedum 211 Malpigliia coccigera, 343 Malus glaucescens, 348 Malus ioensis plena, 208 Malus Niedzwetzkyana, 204 Malus pulcherrima Scheideckeri, 347 Maranta Kerchoveana, 342 Menispermum canadense, 277 Mesembryanthemum aureum, 346 Mesembryanthemum spectabile, 338 Monarda didyma, 216 Monarda fistulosa, 308 Magnolia stellata, Nicotiana Forgetiana, 227 Nierembergia rivularis, 307 Pachylophus marginatus, 351 Parsonsia micropetala, 259 Phlebotaenia Cowellii, 280 Phlox "Asia," 272 Pinus densiflora, 206 Pinus rigida, 311 Pitcairnia exseapa, 352 Pittosporum undulatum, 325 diffusum, 270 Sherwoodia galacifolia, 328 Stenocarpus sinuatus, 281 Stephanandra incisa, 288 Stigmaphyllon ciliatum, 349 Styrax japonica, 231 Swainsona galegifolia, 278 Syndesmon thalictroides, 284 Tabebuia haemantha, 333 Tradescantia virginiana, 232 Trichosponmi pulchrum, 246 Unifolium canadense, 301 Urena lobata, 330 Verbena erinoides, 230 Verbena venosa, 258 Viburnum cassinoides, 233 Whitfieldia lateritia, 310 Xylophylla Epiphyllanthus, 240 Zanthoxylum schinifolium, 326 ... illustration b}'^ colored plates of the plants of the United States and its territorial possessions, and of other plants flowering in said Garden or conser'atories; with suitable descriptions in popular. .. Wilson - 7, 8, 9, 10 8, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 7, i!:.' '' :'!';'-'.">-' ADDISONIA COLORED ILLUSTRATIONS AND POPULAR DESCRIPTIONS OF PLANTS Volume Number 10 MARCH, 1925 PUBLISHED BY THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL... descriptions in popular language, and any desirable notes and synonymy, and a brief statement its known and uses of the plants illustrated." and publication of the work have been referred preparation

Ngày đăng: 07/11/2018, 22:53

Tài liệu cùng người dùng

  • Đang cập nhật ...

Tài liệu liên quan