. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches. Gardening. 1178 OSMORHIZA glabrous or bristly; carpel slightly flattened dorsally or not at all; styles long or short; seed-face from slightly concave to deeply sulcate. Coulter and Rose, Monograph of North American Umbellifera?, 1900. The generic name is also spelled Osmorrhisa. A. I'r. with prominent caudate attenuation
. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches. Gardening. 1178 OSMORHIZA glabrous or bristly; carpel slightly flattened dorsally or not at all; styles long or short; seed-face from slightly concave to deeply sulcate. Coulter and Rose, Monograph of North American Umbellifera?, 1900. The generic name is also spelled Osmorrhisa. A. I'r. with prominent caudate attenuation {2-4 lines long) at base, very bristly. B. Style a line or more long. longistylis, DC. Stout, glabrous or slightly pubes- cent. Canada to Va. and west to Dakota. 2:530.â Roots with a stronger smell and taste of anise than O. brevistylis. Brotherton says it is a much prettier plant than the next, with larger umbels. BB. Style half a line or less long. c. Lfts. SS in. long: rays stout, 1-2 in. long. brevistylis, DC. Rather stout, villous-pubescent: h-s. 2-3-temate: style and stylopodium half a line long. Canada to 2:530. CO. Lfts. %-2iH. long: rays slender, 2-4 in. long. nikda, Torr. Rather slender, somewhat pubescent or AA. Fr. without caudate attenuation at base. oocidentilis, Torr. (Myrrliis Occident Alls, Benth. & Hook.). Rather stout, puberulent or pubescent: Ivs. 2-3-ternate; lfts. lH-4 in. long: umbel 5-12-rayed: rays 1-5 in. long: stylopodium and style ii-1 line long. Calif, to Wash., east to Montana. t^^ ]y^ OSMUNDA (from Osmitnder, aname of a Saxon god). Osmund()<â <â <£. A small genus of showy native ferns, with ratlu-r coarse foliage, but highly ornamental from their clustered habit. The sporangia are formed in panicles borne on the veins of reduced Ivs., provided with a rudimentary transverse ring and opening verti- cally. A. I/t's. fully bipinnate. regilis, Linn. Royal Fern. Growing in clumps 2-5 ft. hi^h, some of the leaves bearin
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