6oS 



ONAGRACEAE. 



Vol. 11. 



I. Meriolix serrulata (Xutt.) Walp. Tooth-leaved Primrose. Fig. 3067. 



Oenothera sernilala Nutt. Gen. i : 246. 1818. 



Meriolix serrulata Walp. Repert. 2: 79. 1843. 



M. intermedia Rydb. ; Small, Fl. SE. U. S. 846. 1903. 



Erect, simple or branched, canescent or glabrate. 

 4'-i8' high. Leaves linear-oblong, lanceolate or 

 oblanceolate, acute or acutish at the apex, narrowed 

 at the base and usually sessile, sharply dentate or 

 denticulate, 1-3' long, 2"-^" wide; flowers yellow, 

 axillary, 6"-2' broad ; calyx-lobes ovate, acuminate, 

 somewhat reflexed, the tube funnelform, silvery 

 canescent, shorter than or equalling the ovary ; petals 

 obovate, crenulate ; stigma discoid ; capsule sessile, 

 linear-cylindric, silvery canescent, 8"-i5" long, about 

 i" thick, slightly grooved longitudinally. 



In dry soil, Manitoba and Minnesota to Wisconsin, 

 Texas and New Mexico. Consists of several races, dif- 

 fering in size, shape of leaves and size of flowers. May- 

 July. 



18. GAURA L. Sp. PI. 347- i753- 



Annual biennial or perennial herbs, somewhat woody at the base, with alternate nar- 

 row sessile leaves, and wdiite, pink or red flowers in terminal spikes or racemes. Calyx 

 usually pubescent, its tube narrow, prolonged beyond the ovary, deciduous, 4-lobed (rarely 

 3-Iobed), the lobes reflexed. Petals 4 (rarely 3), clawed, unequal. Stamens usually 8, 

 declined; filaments filiform, each with a small scale at the base. Ovary i-celled ; united 

 styles filiform, declined; stigma 4-lobed, surrounded by a cup-like border; ovules usually 4, 

 pendulous. Fruit nut-like, ribbed or angled, indehiscent or nearly so, 1-4-seeded. Seeds 

 unappendaged. [Greek, proud, some species being showy.] 



About 18 species, natives of North America and Mexico. Type species: Gaura biennis L. 



Fruit sessile or very nearly so ; flowers spicate. 



Flowers lU"-^" broad: stigma little exserted beyond its cup. i. G. parviflora. 



Flowers 4"-5" broad ; stigma exserted beyond its cup. 

 Flowers red. turning scarlet ; fruit canescent. 



fruit villous. 3. 



Flowers white, turning pink 



Fruit pedicelled ; flowers racemose. 



Leaves mostly glabrous : fruit 7 



Leaves densely villous ; fruit 5" 



G. coccinea. 

 G. biennis. 



' long, glabrous, its stout pedicel club-shaped. 4. G. sinuata. 



long, pubescent, its slender pedicel nearly filiform. 



5. G. villosa. 



I. Gaura parviflora Dougl. Small- 

 flowered Gatira. Fig. 3068. 



Gaura farviftora Dougl.: Hook. Fl. Bor. .^ni. i: 

 208. 1832. 



Erect, branched, villous-pubescent with whit- 

 ish hairs, 2-5 high. Leaves ovate-lanceolate, 

 acute or acuminate at the apex, repand-den- 

 ticulate, narrowed at the base, softly pubescent, 

 ii'-4' long, 4"-i8" wide; spikes elongated, 

 usually densely flowered ; flowers sessile, pink. 

 ii"-2" broad, the ovary and calyx-tube slen- 

 der ; fruit sessile, narrowed at the base, 

 4-nerved, obtusely 4-angled, glabrous or nearly 

 so, 3"-4" long. 



In dry soil. South Dakota to low-a. Missouri. 

 Louisiana. Texas. Mexico, Oregon, Utah and New 

 Mexico. May-Aug. 



