410. 
411. 
310 
(1.) GEnothera dentata, Cav. ic. v. 4. p. 67. t, 398.— 
Chamissonia flava, Link.—Onosuris Chamissonis, De 
Cand.— Conception, Messrs. Lay and Collie ; Cuming 
(N.116.) Valparaiso, Cruckshanks; Bridges, 1832, 
(N. 330.) ; Cuming (N. 139.)— What we have received 
from gardens under the name of Œ. hirta, Link, has 
broadly lanceolate leaves. 
(2.) GEnothera Mendocinensis, (Gill. mst.) ; annua, pub- 
escenti-hirsuta, caule erecto, foliis linearibus acutis sub- 
undulatis inzequaliter dentatis, staminibus erectis petala 
calycemque erectum sequantibus, stigmate lobis breve 
cylindraceis, floribus parvis flavis, fructibus elongato- 
cylindraceis hirsutis sulcatis folio sub-brevioribus.—Los 
Chacayes, Melocoton, and La Capillas, Andes of Men- 
doza, Dr. Gillies.— We possess a plant from Mr. 
Tweedie, from Arroyo de las Vacas, which does not 
appear to differ as a species, but in which the stem seems 
es to be decumbent at the base. 
412. 
413. 
414. 
(3.) GEnothera longiflora, Jacq.— W oods of Entre Rios, 
Tweedie. 
(4.) CEnothera mollissima, Linn.—CE. nocturna, Willd. 
herb. (ex Spreng.), et Hortulan.—Conception, Messrs. 
Lay and Collie; Cuming (N. 120.)\—We thus name 
Cuming’s plant, as well as almost every one we have seen 
in British gardens called Œ. nocturna : it varies much in 
: pubescence, but the long filiform stigmas seem constant, 
and form the principal difference between it and the 
following: what we have obtained under this name in 
France, particularly from Audibert’s garden at Taras- 
con, is, we think, Œ. albicans, Lam. : 
(5.) GEnothera odorata, Jacq.—CE. undulata, Ait.—CE. 
mollissima, Hook. et Arn. in Bot. Beech. Voy—San 
Isedro, El Cerro del Diamante, and elsewhere on the 
mountains and valleys of the Andes of Mendoza; abun- 
dant also at Concon in Chili, Dr. Gillies. Juan Fernan- 
dez, Bertero; Dr. Scouler. Valparaiso, Cuming, (N. 
551.) Conception, Messrs. Lay and Collie.—The pub- 
escence on the leaf, both in this and the last, sometimes 
