HYDROPHYLLEZ. 
1 N. parvirrora (Dougl. mss. ex Benth.-]. c. p. 275.) leaves 
pinnatifid : lobes few, broad, a little toothed; sinuses of calyx 
with short appendages; corolla hardly exceeding the calyx; 
placentas 2-ovulate. ©.H. Native of Columbia, on the west 
coast of America, Douglas and Scouler. Flowers small. Appen- 
dages of calyx usually very short, sometimes hardly evident, 
rarely elongating after florescence. Processes of corolla small, 
narrow. 
Small-flomered Nemophila. Fl.? Clt. 1826. Pl. 1 foot. 
2 N. pepuncura‘ra (Dougl. mss. ex Benth. l. c.) leaves pin- 
natifid ; sinuses of the calyx furnished with short appendages ; 
corolla hardly exceeding the calyx ; placentas 6-ovulate. ©. 
H. Native of North-west America, on the Columbia, Douglas. 
Habit, calyx, and corolla, almost as in N. parviflóra. Leaves 
narrower, on longish petioles; and the lobes more entire and 
distinct. 
Pedunculate Nemophila. | Pl. 1 foot? 
3 N. puacetiorpes (Bart. fl. amer. bor. p. 61.) petioles with- 
out appendages ; corolla exceeding the calyx a little; sinuses of 
the calyx furnished with lanceolate appendages, which equal in 
length one half the calyx; placentas biovulate. ©. or ¢. H. 
Native of North America. Sweet, fl. gard. 1. t. 52. Sims, 
bot. mag. 2373. N. Nuttallii, Coll. bort. rip. append. t. 5. 
Corollas blue. This plant is nearly related to N. parviflora ; 
but differs in the flowers, which are twice the size, and the 
larger or longer appendages of the calyx. 
Phacelia-like Nemophila. Fl. July, Aug. Clt. 1822. Pl. 1 
foot. 
4 N. aurira (Lindl. bot. reg. t. 1601.) petioles auriculately 
dilated at the base ; sinuses of the calyx furnished with elon- 
gated appendages ; corolla twice as long as the calyx ; placentas 
biovulate. ©. H. Native of California, Douglas. Leaves 
while opposite connate at the base; lobes lanceolate, quite 
entire, divaricate, or tending to the base of the leaf. Peduncles 
somewhat racemose at the tops of the branches. Corolla nearly 
an inch in diameter, purple. Benth. l. c. p. 275. 
Eared-petioled Nemophila. Fl. May, Aug. Clt. 1881. 
Pl. prostrate. 
5 N. 1nsi’ents (Dougl. mss. ex Benth. l. c. p. 275. Lindl. 
bot. reg. 1713.) petioles without appendages ; corolla twice as 
long as the calyx; placentas 10-12-ovulate. (2. H. Native 
of California, Douglas. D. Don, in Sweet, fl. gard. n. s. t. 329. 
N. phacelioides, Ker. bot. reg. t. 740.? Herb deep green. 
Leaves with 3-4 lobes on each side, quite entire or cut. Pe- 
duncles longer than the leaves. Corolla blue, with a white centre, 
more than an inch in diameter. Processes of the corolla villous 
at the base. 
Showy Nemophila. Fl. July, Aug. Clt. 1822. Pl. 1 foot. 
6 N. atoma‘ria (Fisch. et Meyer, cat. sem. hort. petrop. p. 
42.) leaves opposite, pinnatifid: lobes 5-9, almost entire; pe- 
duncles axillary, elongated ; corolla rotate, with a very pilose 
. bottom, and obovate segments; placentas about 10-ovulate; 
seeds strophiolate, smooth. (2. H. Native of New Califor- 
nia, about the Russian colony, Ross. Very like N. insignis, 
but the herb is pale green; the flowers white, ornamented with 
violaceous spots. Seeds yellowish, beset with minute scales, as 
in N.insígnis. Corollas nearly an inch in diameter. 
Atom Nemophila. Fl.? Clt. 1836. Pl. 1 foot. 
7 N. Mewzie's (Hook. et Arn. in Beech. voy. pt. bot. p. 
152.) leaves all pinnatifid, scabrous: segments approximate, 
ovate, obtuse, ciliated, somewhat tridentately lobed; peduncles 
twice as long as the leaves, and opposite them ; calyx with lan- 
ceolate segments, and minute appendages to the sinuses. ©. 
H. Native of Chili? Capsule many-seeded. Corollas blue? 
Menzies's Nemophila. PI. 1 foot? 
III. Nrwopnira. 
IV. Evroca. 395 
Cult. These are all pretty plants, and worth cultivating. 
The seeds may be reared on a hot-bed, if the plants are wanted 
to flower early ; but if otherwise, they may be sown in the open 
ground. They delight in a moist, shady situation, and peat or 
vegetable soil. 
IV. EU'TOCA (from evroxoc, eutocos, fruitful ; in reference 
to the number of seeds in each capsule.) R. Br. in append. 
to Frankl. trav. ed. 2. p. 51. t. 27. Dougl. in bot. reg. t. 
1180. Benth. in Lin. trans. 17. p. 276.—Phacélia species, 
Pursh. l 
Lin. syst. Pentándria, Monogynia. Corolla deciduous. 
Ovarium ovoid-globose, hispid from pili. Placentas linear, 
adnate by the back to the parietes of the ovarium, 4 to many- 
ovulate. Capsule half 2-celled, from the dissepiment being 
incomplete.— Annual herbs, usually erect, with the habit of 
Phacèlia, rarely diffuse or divaricate. Flowers racemose, dense 
and sessile, or loose and pedunculate. Cymes unilateral, sim- 
ple or dichotomous. f 
1 E. Dovora'sir (Benth. in Lin. trans. 17. p. 276.) diffuse; 
leaves all pinnatifid: with ovate, almost entire lobes; placentas 
12-20-ovulate. ©. H. Native of California, Douglas. Leaves 
nearly all radical, hispid ; with 4-6 lobes on each side. Flori- 
ferous stems ascending, furnished with a few leaves at the base, 
naked and many-flowered at the apex.  Peduncles elongated. 
Flowers as large as Nemóphila insignis, to which plant the habit 
is referrible. 
Douglas's Eutoca. Pl. 1 foot. 
2 E. Cuminen (Benth. in Lin. trans. 17. p. 276.) erect, 
clothed with scabrous pubescence; leaves elongated, pinnate : 
lobes or leaflets oblong, obtuse, cut a little; placentas 6-8- 
ovulate. ©.H. Native of the Andes of Chili. The corolla 
appears to be shorter than the calyx. Very nearly allied to E. 
brachyloba. 
Cuming’s Eutoca. PI. 1 foot? 
3 E. snaAcHv/LoBA (Benth. l. c. p. 277.) erect, beset with 
scabrous pubescence ; leaves long, pinnatifid: lobes ovate, 
obtuse, a little cut ; placentas 6-8-ovulate. ©. H. Native of 
California, Douglas. Leaves petiolate, 2-3 inches long, with 6 
lobes on each side. Pedicels short. Racemes dichotomous, 
almost as in Phacélia circinata. 
Short-lobed-leaved Eutoca. Pl, ! foot ? 
4 E. Mexica'na (Benth. |. c.) diffuse; leaves ovate-oblong, 
deeply pinnatifid: lobes ovate or oblong, glabrous on both 
surfaces ; placentas, 6-8-ovulate. ©. H. Native of Mexico, 
in the neighbourhood of the mines of Tlalpuxahua, and be- 
tween that place and the city of Mexico, G. J. Graham. 
Racemes elongated, simple. Flowers pedicellate, twice as large 
as those of E. parviflora, to which the present species is nearly 
allied; the filaments are pilose as in it, and the processes of 
the corolla are wanting. 
Mexican Eutoca. Pl. diffuse. 
5 E. rAnviFLORA (R. Br. append. to Frankl. trav. ed, 2d. p. 51, 
Benth. 1. c.) diffuse; leaves pinnatifid or trifid: the superior 
ones sometimes undivided, and the lobes of the lower ones 
are ovate, or oblong, quite entire, hispid on both surfaces; 
placentas 6 -8-ovulate. ©. H, Native of Pennsylvania, Schwein- 
itz; Alleghanies, Drummond ; on rocks near Harper's Ferry 
on the Potomac, Pursh. Phacélia parviflóra, Pursh, fl. amer. 
sept. 1. p. 140. Polemónium dübium, Willd. spec. 1. p. 887. 
—Polemonium, foliis inferioribus hastatis, superioribus lance- 
olatis, Gron. virg. p. 29.—Plukn. alm. t. 245. f. 5. Flowers 
small, pale blue. 
Small-flowered Eutoca. Fl. May. Clt. 1826. Pl. 1 foot? 
6 E. LoaAsxróLiA (Benth. in Lin. trans. 17. p. 277.) erect, 
3 E 2 
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