||Sar`ra*ce"ni*a (?), n. [NL. So named
after a Dr. Sarrazin of Quebec.] (Bot.) A genus of
American perennial herbs growing in bogs; the American pitcher
plant.
&fist; They have hollow pitcher-shaped or tubular leaves, and
solitary flowers with an umbrella-shaped style. Sarracenia
purpurea, the sidesaddle flower, is common at the North; S.
flava, rubra, Drummondii, variolaris, and
psittacina are Southern species. All are insectivorous,
catching and drowning insects in their curious leaves. See
Illust. of Sidesaddle flower, under Sidesaddle.
||Sar`ra*ce"ni*a (?), n. [NL. So named
after a Dr. Sarrazin of Quebec.] (Bot.) A genus of
American perennial herbs growing in bogs; the American pitcher
plant.
&fist; They have hollow pitcher-shaped or tubular leaves, and
solitary flowers with an umbrella-shaped style. Sarracenia
purpurea, the sidesaddle flower, is common at the North; S.
flava, rubra, Drummondii, variolaris, and
psittacina are Southern species. All are insectivorous,
catching and drowning insects in their curious leaves. See
Illust. of Sidesaddle flower, under Sidesaddle.