SCHROPHULARINEA. XI. 
Barclays Maurandya. Fl. Year. Clt. 1825. Sh. climbing. 
2 M. SEMPERFLÒRENS (Ort. nov. gen. hort. madr. dec. 11. p. 
21.) leaves for the most part cordate-hastate; calycine seg- 
ments lanceolate-subulate, glabrous. h. o. G. Native of 
Mexico. Jacq. hort. scheenbr. 3. p. 20. t. 288. Curt. bot. 
mag. 460. Chav. antirrh. p. 78. M. scándens, Pers. ench. 2. 
p. 160.  Ustéria scandens, Cav. icon. 2. p. 15. t. 116, Andr. 
bot. rep. t. 63. Plant quite glabrous. Margins of calycine 
segments rather scarious. Corolla 14 inch long, pale violet 
or reddish, with emarginate lobes; tube variously furrowed ; 
limb violaceous, or purplish-violet ; plicæ white, occupying the 
place of the palate. Filaments rather villous at the base. Cap- 
sule about equal in length to the calyx. 
Ever-flowering Maurandya. Fl. Year. Clt. 1796. Shrub 
climbing. : 
§ 2. Palate prominent in the throat of the corolla. 
3 M. AxTIRRHINIFLÓRA (Willd. hort. berol. 2. t. 83. Chav. 
antirrh. p. 78.) leaves for the most part triangularly hastate ; 
calycine segments long, triangular, acute, quite glabrous. h. 
RA Native of Mexico, among bushes between Salamanca 
and the valley of St. Jago, at the altitude of 930 hexapods. 
Sims, bot. mag. 1643. H. B. et Kunth, nov. gen. amer. 2. p. 
291. M. personàta, Sesse, mss. Lag. elench. hort. matr. 
1805. nov. gen. 19. Ustéria antirrhiniflora, Poir. suppl. 5. p. 
105. Plant quite glabrous. The side lobes of leaves or auri- 
cles acute, sometimes unidentate towards the petioles. Co- 
rola hardly an inch long, bluish, glabrous, with quite entire 
lobes; palate straw-coloured, furnished with short hairs, and 
marked by brown lines. Capsule shorter than the calycine seg- 
ments ; one of the cells often smaller than the other. 
Snapdragon-flowered Maurandya. Fl. Year. 
Shrub climbing. 
Cult. This, like the next genus, is composed of elegant, 
climbing, evergreen, ever-flowering, herbaceous, or suffruticose 
plants; for which the species are very generally cultivated in 
gardens. A light rich soil suits them best; and they are rea- 
dily increased by seeds, which generally ripen in abundance; or 
by young cuttings, which strike root readily under a hand-glass. 
All the species do very well during summer, and flower freely 
planted against a wall in the open air, or at the bottom of trellis- 
work, to which they should be trained; but in winter they re- 
quire the protection of a greenhouse. 
Clt. 1814. 
XI. LOPHOSPE'RMUM (from dooc, lophos, a crest ; and 
evtpua, sperma, a seed ; in reference to the seed being furnished 
with a crest-like wing, which is emarginate at both ends.) D. 
Don, in. Lin. trans. 15. p. 349. Chav. antirrh. p. 75. t. 1. 
Sweet, fl. gard. n. s. t. 68. and 75,—Besléria species, Sesse et 
Mocino, mss. 
Lin. syst.  Didynàmia, Angiospérmia. Calyx 5-parted ; 
segments large, ovate-lanceolate, with a quincuncial zestiva- 
tion. Corolla bilabiate, tubular; tube campanulate, a little 
curved, contracted above the base, elongated, gibbous for- 
ward at the base, dilated at the throat, and furnished with 
2 rows of interwoven yellow hairs; upper lip almost erect; 
lower lip spreading. Stamens 4, didynamous, with a short 
rudiment of a fifth. Filaments of fertile stamens terete, glan- 
dular at top, and clothed with glandular hairs and scales at the 
base; cells of anthers elliptic. Ovarium clothed with long, 
capitate, white hairs. Style glabrous; stima bilamellate. Cap- 
sule globose, covered by the calyx, bursting irregularly under 
the apex. Seeds very numerous, ovate-truncate, tubercled, 
black, fixed to large placentas, girded by a membranous reticulate 
margin, which is emarginate at both base and apex, referrible 
in form to a crest. — Evergreen, perennial, herbaceous, or suffru- 
Lornosrermum. XII. Nemesia. 533 
ticose climbing plants. Stems flexuous; branches alternate, 
Leaves usually alternate, petiolate, lobed. Flowers large, pendu- 
lous, axillary, solitary, showy, on long, twisted, terete pedicels. 
1 L. sca’npEens (D. Don, in Lin. trans. 15. p. 349.) leaves 
cordate, acuminated, deeply serrated, hairy, 5-nerved; pedun- 
cles bractless ; stem herbaceous. h.. G. Native of Mexico. 
Besléria scandens, Sesse et Mocino, mss. Branches clothed with 
soft viscid hairs. Leaves 3-4 inches long, and 2-3 broad. 
Flowers pendulous. Peduncles and calyx hairy. Corolla large, 
showy, purplish-violet. 
Climbing Lophospermum. Clt. 1834. Shrub climbing. 
2 L. ervse’scens (D. Don, in Sweet, fl. gard. n. s. t. 68.) 
branches clothed with articulated, short, viscid hairs; leaves 
cordate, more or less distinctly 5-lobed, downy ; middle lobe 
large: lobes mucronate, crenated or deeply serrated: pedicels 
villous, bractless. R.. G. Native of Mexico, about Jalapa. 
L. scandens, Hook. bot. mag. 3037. and 3038. Sweet, fl. gard. 
n. s. t. 68. Lindl. bot. reg. 1381. Chav. antirrh. p. 75. t. 1. 
but not of D. Don. Leaves large, canescent. Calycine seg- 
ments entire, and sometimes furnished with one or two teeth : 
the 2 outer ones the largest. Corolla large, showy, rose-colour- 
ed, beset with capitate hairs ; tube whitish beneath, marbled in 
various ways inside; lobes of limb generally subemarginate. 
Capsule downy. 
Reddish-flowered Lophospermum. Fl. June, Oct. Clt. 1830. 
Shrub climbing. 
3 L. ATROSANGUI'NEUM (Zucc. abhandl. acad. wiss. 1829, 
1830. p. 305. t. 13.) leaves cordate, acuminated, coarsely and 
dentately serrated; calyx semiquinquefid, spreading; corolla 
tubular; filaments simple. kh. J. G. Native of Mexico. L. 
rhodochiton, D. Don, in Sweet, fl. gard. n. s. t. 250. Rhodo- 
chiton volübile, Zucc. Lindl. bot. reg. t. 1755. Plant clothed 
with shining jointed hairs. Young branches purple. Leaves 
5-nerved, slimy to the touch, purple beneath, about 3 inches 
long, and nearly the same in breadth; petioles purple. Flowers 
pendulous.  Peduncles frequently twisted, finally becoming 
glabrous and shining, as well as the calyx. Calyx spreading, 
pale purple, deciduous to the middle. Corolla funnel-shaped, 
of a dark purple colour, clothed with white glandular hairs; 
throat cylindrical, hardly ventricose; lobes of limb oval, con- 
nivent, obtuse : the lower one the longest. Capsule spherical. 
Red-coated Lophospermum. Fl. May, Aug. Cit. 1832. 
Shrub climbing. 
Cult. For culture and propagation see Maurándya, above. 
XII. NEMESIA (a name applied by Dioscorides to a kind 
of Antirrhinum.) Vent. malm. p. 41. t. 41. Pers. ench. 2. 
p. 159.—Antirrhinum, species of Lin. and Thunb.—Lináría 
species, Spreng. 
Lin. syst. Didynàmia, An- 
giospérmia, Calyx 5-parted. 
Corolla personate, furnished with 
a spur at the base; upper lip 4- 
cleft: lower one emarginate ; 
palate prominent. Stamens 4, 
didynamous. Capsule compress- 
ed, truncate, oblong, 2-celled, 2- a f 
valved; valves keeled. Seeds (^ 
numerous, linear, girded by a SUD 
membrane. — Annual or peren- 
nial herbaceous plants; with b | 
opposite or verticillate leaves, 
and terminal racemes of flow- 
ers. Corollas usually purple. 
1 N. rx'rENs (Vent. malm, 
l. c.) leaves opposite, lanceo- 
