. A manual of weeds : with descriptions of all the most pernicious and troublesome plants in the United States and Canada, their habits of growth and distribution, with methods of control . Weeds. CARYOPHYLLACEAE {PINK FAMILY) 145 fragrance, and open in the daytime; petals deeply notched, red, or often nearly white; calyx on stamina te plants tubular but on fertile plants becoming nearly globular, the teeth short and acute. Capsules large, one-celled, many-seeded. (Fig. 96.) Means of control the same as for White Cockle. WHITE COCKLE Lychnis alba, Mill (Lychnis vespertlna, Sib.) Other English


. A manual of weeds : with descriptions of all the most pernicious and troublesome plants in the United States and Canada, their habits of growth and distribution, with methods of control . Weeds. CARYOPHYLLACEAE {PINK FAMILY) 145 fragrance, and open in the daytime; petals deeply notched, red, or often nearly white; calyx on stamina te plants tubular but on fertile plants becoming nearly globular, the teeth short and acute. Capsules large, one-celled, many-seeded. (Fig. 96.) Means of control the same as for White Cockle. WHITE COCKLE Lychnis alba, Mill (Lychnis vespertlna, Sib.) Other English names: Evening Lychnis, White Campion. Introduced. Biennial. Propagates by seeds. Time of bloom: Late June to September. Seed-time: August to October. Range: Eastern and middle United States and Canada. Habitat: Grain fields, meadows, and waste places. This plant develops a thick, fleshy root, from which it sends up several slender, branching stems, one to two feet in height, somewhat hairy and viscid. Leaves long ovate to lance-shaped, the lower ones tapering to margined petioles, the upper ones smaller, acute, and ses- sile. Flowers in loose panicles, usually dioecious, numerous, white or often tinged with pink, fragrant, each about an inch broad, opening in the evening and closing after sunrise the next day; each of the five petals is deeply notched at the outer edge, and at the inner point is a pair of white, scale-like bracts, narrowing the throat of the flower which is fertilized by long-tongued, night-flying moths. Sterile flowers have usually ten stamens. Calyx of the fertile flowers much inflated, crimson-tinged along the hairy ribs. Styles five. Capsules one-. Fig. 97. — White Cockle (Lychnis alba). X §.. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Georgia, Ada Eljiva, 1859-1921. New York :


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectweeds, bookyear1919