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2. 7. Casuarinaceae Casuarina equisetifolia L. - Leaves reduced to scales forming a collar at joints of branchlets; male flowers at tip of branchlets, female flowers at base of branchlets; fruit a cone. 8. Chenopodiaceae -Flowers perfect, calyx 5, leaves entire or lobed ...........................................Chenopodium leaves mealy.......C. sandwichmeum Moq. deltoid leaves mealy lanceolate.........C. album L. Flowers unisexual (monoecious or dioecious) ............................................Atriplex semibaccatus R. Br. 9. Combretaceae Terminalia catappa L. A small to large tree with branches which are horizontal and arranged in tiers bearing large rosettes of thick, shiny, blunt, short-stemmed leaves. 6-12" long; fruit l-2" long, green to yellow; wood reddish. 10. Compositae (ld) A. Herbs......B. B. Flower heads with each floret rayed having a strap shaped extension of the corolla); leaves alternate; stem leafy, basal leaves, long stemmed, with a few deep lobes ...................Sonchus oleraceus L. BB. Flower heads with outermost florets having rays, inner florets tubular......C. C. Leaves alternate, at least upper ones...D D. Flower bracts overlapping, leaves white wooly or hairy, narrow triangular, flowers yellow or orange........Verbesina DD. Flower bracts in one or two equal rows flowers white........Erigeron CC. Leaves opposite; plants prostrate; flower heads solitary at branch tip, florets yellow; thick leaves...............Lipochaeta integrifolia (Nutt.) Gray CCC. Plants erect; ray florets yellow...Syndrella nodiflora (I) Gaert.
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3. BBB. Florets with all tubular florets E. bracts subtending the head in several rows; flowers white or yellowish... Gnaphalium EE. bracts in one row, flowers red or purple... ............Emilia AA. Shrub, flower heads with outermost florets having rays, inner florets tubular, leaves opposite, oblong, flowers pink or purplish.........Pluchea Glabrous; leaves less than 5 cm long, coarsely dentate; heads pink.........Pluchea indica (L) Less. hairy, leaves over 10 cm long; oblong; heads whitish.. .....................Pluchea odorata (L) Cass. 11. Convolvulaceae A. Flowers funnel-shaped stigmas 2 B. Stigma lobes flat and oval......Jacquemontia BB. Stigma lobes not flat but thick......Convolvulus AA. Flowers funnel-shaped, stigma l......Ipomoea Jacquemontia sandwichensis Gray - perennial herb, prostrate over ground, radiating from thick root, flowers pale blue to white. Convolvulus arvensis L. - perennial with long tap root, leaves small,; flowers white to pink. Ipomoea Twining perennail herb; leaves nonsucculent, hairy; corolla violet fading to pink.....I. indica (Burm.) Merr. Non-twinning perennial herb; leaves succulent, smooth; corolla purplish red.........I. pes-caprae (L.) Sweet. 12. Cyperaceae 13. Euphorbiaceae A. Shrubs and small trees... B. Leaves 8" or more in diameter with 7 or more lobes toothed edges......Ricinus communis L. AA. Herbs and Shrubs....BB BB. Leaves opposite (plant prostrate)......Euphorbia Small herb--Euphorbia prostrate Alt. a small herb with nearly smooth leaves less than 0.3" long
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16. Guttiferae Calophyllum Inophyllum L. A low branching tree to 60 ft., rough gray bark; lvs. 3-8 in., long, leathery, nearly oval; flrs. white, 1 in. across in clusters of 4-15; 4 sepals; 4-8 stamens. Fruit round and green. 17. Hernandiaceae Hernandia ovigera L. A tall evergreen tree becoming butressed at the base; lvs. spirally arranged and the long petiole of each joins the blade well within the leaf margin; unisexual flrs., 2 male flrs. accompany each female flr.; fruit a black, oily nut. 18. Hydrophyllaceae A mat forming herb with a dia. of about 8 in.; lvs. alt., stemless and hairy about 0.33 in. long; flr. tubular, 5- lobed pinkish, 5 stamens. Name sandwichensis Gray. 19. Labiatae A. Creeping plant, hairy; flrs. small, red to purple; lvs. 0.5 to 1 in. ........ Stachys arvensis L. AA. Plant upright at tip of stems; flrs. white with purplish tint, 1 in. long ............ Phyllostegia verebilibis Bitter 20. Lauraceae Cassytha filiformis L. A parasitic vine with slender green, brown, yellow stems and branches. Lvs. are a few minute scales. Flrs. 6 parted with nine stamens; fruit fleshy, round about 0.25 in in dia.. 21. Leguminosae Flowers radially symmetrical, commonly small and massed in heads or spikes; trees and shrubs ............ Subfam. Mimosoideae I. Flowers bilaterally symmetrical, commonly medium to large-sized. Flowers with petals spreading, nearly equal; trees and shrubs ............ Subfam. Caesalpinioideae II. Flowers resembling the sweetpea: one large upper petal, two parallel side petals, two lower petals joined, shrubs and trees but mostly herbs ............ Subfam. Papilionatae III. I. A. Lvs. twice divided; pods opening by two valves when ripe, straight or curved B. Large thornless trees C. Flrs. in small round heads or cylindrical spikes with short stems ............ Acacia BB. Shrubs or small trees D. Flr. heads globular or cylindrical E. Stamens 10 in ea. flr. .... Leucaena L. glauca (L.) Benth. FF. More than 10 in ea. flr.
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Acacia farnesiana (L.) Willd. DD. Flr. heads globular or nearly so F. Flrs. inconspicuous; stamen 2x long as petals (white) .... Desmanthus virgatus (L.) Willd. AA. Lvs. twice divided, pods not opening when ripe B. Trees and shrubs; pods less than one ft. in length, thick... C. Flrs. in cylindrical spikes, young branched thorny Prosopis P. chilensis (Mol.) Stuntz II. Unarmed shrubs or small trees; lvs. once divided, leaflets 6 plus; flrs. conspicuous with 5 yellow, white or pink petals.... Cassia Leaflets 8-10, 1.5-3.5 in. long ... C. occidentalis L. Leaflets 16-32, flr. orange yellow ... C. glauca Lam. III: Herb, lvs. compound Pods develop above the ground A. Pods with several joints, flat, leaflets 3 (1-5) ... Desmodium D. uncinatum (Jacq.) DC. D. triflorum (L.) DC. AA. Pods not breaking into joints B. Lvs. entire, herbaceous shrubs, pods swollen ... Crotalaria C. incana L. C. mucronata Desv. BB. Lvs. compound C. Leaflets two or more, pinnate ...... Sesbania S. tomentosa H.& A. CC. Leaflets 3 End leaflet stalked Leaflets toothed; pods not opening, very small, herb Pod straight, kidney shaped to spiral Medicago Medicago lupulana L. Leaflets not toothed, pods opening Petals unequal Prickly shrubs; flrs. red; small tree Erythrina indica Lamarck Petals nearly equal Pods broad flattened; leaflets broad; calyx with two upper lobes joined or two parted, the two lower lobes very small; herb Cenavalia Cnavalia microcarpa (DC.) Piper 22. Lythraceae Perphisa acidula Forst. [illegible] shrub with white solitary flrs., brown fruiting
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July 24, 1969 Dear Jane: The enclosed summary was compiled from Bob Long's field notes and from the botany files in your office. It was made in anticipation of your Honolulu visit. A copy will be sent to Dick Grossin. I learned very quickly that the botany material must be used with caution because of inconsistencies galore. A good example of this is Hull Island. In his listing of vascular plants for Hull Bob listed 23 species and annotated them. Then, however, in the general descriptive narrative for Hull he mentions 8 additional species that have occurred at one time or another. This apparently was just carelessness or haste perhaps. A person using only the list of vascular plants and assuming it was complete would leave of one-quarter of the plants collected from the island. This can be corrected if one has both the list and the narrative but what do you do if you only have the list - you're up the creek, then. For Gardner Island I found three additional species mentioned in the literature - none mentioned in either the list or in the narrative. I'd be out of luck if I hadn't been on these islands. This list shows we lack quite a bit of material particularly field notes and collection notes but also a number of the island histories (if they were in fact written). If you will notice in the column "Field Numbers Used" all those preceded by "ca." are approximations I figured out by checking his annotated lists of vascular plants and recording highest and lowest catalog numbers. We have no complete list of soil samples he took on the various islands. He also took water samples from many, if not all of the lagoons, and these were checked for salinity - we should know what these were (I have seen a few of these on a listing and Bob uses a salinity occasionally in his narratives). He ran plant quadrat studies on islands other than Howland we should have some idea regarding the results of these. It would also be of some value to know the identification of the various algae he collected - and who has these samples now. ✓ At the present time Roger and I have an interest in any material dealing with Sydney, Gardner, Hull, Birkie, Malden and Starbuck Islands. Nevertheless, it wouldn't hurt for us to get copies of everything out there that looks interesting. We are moving along slowly with the writing. Sydney is about 90% complete at this moment. Histories have been roughed out for Gardner and Malden and the vegetation section and an island description completed for Gardner. I'm now setting up for a description of Malden and then the plants of Malden and Starbuck before writing the history for the later. As I write the history section & plants & physical description Roger knocks out the species accounts. We then switch off and re-write and check for accuracy. Seems to work fairly well. We are constantly getting bogged down with data lapses and spend a good deal of time running down the source of inconsistencies, etc. I have marked those places where we are missing data. I understand that Lamoureux is responsible for writing up reports on vegetation for the Leewards so wouldn't spend much time on this. If you could devote some time to the Phoenix & Line Islands, espec. those 6 mentioned above it would certainly help. The astronauts on Apollo ll just splashed down on the edge of the northern grid which caused a certain amount of commotion around here. We had visions of the thing coming down right in the middle of a feeding flock of Sooty Terns and landing in the water KEKEK in a cloud of bird feathers and then floating around with orange streamers hanging all over it. So much for today's levity. Hope all is progressing well. Look this thing over and see if you can decipher it if not give me a buzz before heading to Hono. Regards, Doug