162 HYDROPHYLLACE^. Phacelia. 



acute, coarsely and irregularly incised or pinnatifid ; the lower sliort-petiolulate and the 

 uppermost confluent : racemes loose, 7-20-flowerod : pedicels spreading or in fruit recurved : 

 calyx-lobes linear, loose, longer than the globular capsule : corolla rotate-campanulate, 

 violet-blue, over half an inch in diameter, with rather short rounded lobes and very con- 

 spicuous internal appendages : stamens (bearded) and style usually more or less exserted. 

 — Fl. i. 13i, t. 1(3 ; Gray, Man. ed. 5, 369. — Shaded banks of streams, Ohio and Illinois to 

 Alabama : flowering in June. 



Var. brevistylis, Gray. A remarkable form, with corolla about one half smaller : 

 style and esi)ecially the stamens not exserted. — P. brevisti/lis, Buckley, in Am. Jour. Sci. 

 xlv. (1843) 172. — Alabama, Bticklei/, N'evius, &c. 



§ 2. CosmXntiius, Gray. Ovules and seeds of Euphacelia : corolla destitute 

 of internal appendages, almost rotate ; its lobes fimbriate : filaments (villous- 

 bearded) rarely longer than the corolla : ovary villous-hispid at the summit, 

 otherwise glabrous : low aimuals, with loosely racemose flowers in the manner of 

 the last preceding species and of earliest of the next section. — Man. Bot. ed. 2, 

 328, & 5, 369. Cosmant/ms, Nolte. Cosmanthus § Eucosmanthus, A.DC. in part. 



P. Plirshii, Buckley. A span to a foot high, diffusely branched from the base, sparsely 

 hirsute : caullne leaves pinnately 5-11-parted, the upper closely sessile ; lobes oblong or 

 lanceolate, acute: racemes rather many-flowered, sometimes forking: calyx-lobes linear: 

 corolla light blue varying to white (half inch in diameter). — Buckley in Am. Jour. Sci. 

 xlv. 172; Gray, Man. I.e. P. fimbriata, Pursh, &c. Coftmnnf/iHS Jimhriatus, Noltc, A.DC. 

 Prodr. ix. 297. — Moist wooded banks, W. Pennsylvania to Minnesota and Missouri, North 

 Carolina and Alabama. — Pedicels filiform, 6 to 10 lines long. Perhaps only a variety of 

 the next. Seeds as in tlie preceding. 



P. fimbriata, Michx. Weak and diffuse, a span high, less hirsute : cauline 3-7-clef t or 

 lobcd or the lower lyrately divided ; the lobes obtuse or roundish : racemes few-flowered : 

 pedicels filiform : calyx-lobes linear-oblong or spatulate : corolla white (only 3 or 4 lines 

 broad), rather shorter than tlie stamens. — Fl. i. 131; Gray, Man. 1. c. In woods of the 

 higher Alleghany Mountains, Virginia to Alabama ; flowering early. 



Var.? Boykini, Gray. More robust, evidently growing in more exposed soil : 

 racemes rather many-flowered, at length strict, with fruiting pedicels erect and not longer 

 than the calyx : corolla far less fimbriate, bluish. — Proc. Am. Acad. x. 320. — Upper part 

 of Georgia, Bot/kin. Perhaps a distinct species, more likely a state of P. Jimbriata, growing 

 in a lower and warmer region. 



§ 3. CosMANTHOiDKS, Gray. Ovules and seeds 3 to 8 (rarely only a pair) on 



each i^lacenta, the latter with reticulated testa : appendages of the rotately or 



open-campanulate corolla wanting, or very inconspicuous and remote from the 



stamens : capsule globular and pointless : low annuals of the Atlantic United 



States, early-flo^vering, hirsute-pubescent or glabrate, with mostly pinnatifid leaves, 



the upper closely sessile, simply racemose flowers, and somewhat villous-bearded 



filaments about the length of the blue or white corolla. 



* Ovules 2 to 4 on each (at length deciduous) placenta: globose capsule thin-walled: slender and 

 smoothish Utile annuals, with the aspect of Cosmanthus, but lobes of the corolla entire, its base 

 with no appendages or only obscure vestiges. — Proc. Am. Acad. x. 320. 



P. glabra, Nutt. Slender, 3 to 8 inches high, glabrous except a few hirsute short hairs 

 chiefly on the margins of the leaves and calyx: corolla 3 or 4 lines in diameter : calyx- 

 lobes in fruit little longer than the capsule, mostly oblong or oval : otherwise as in P. par- 

 viflora. — Ti'ans. Amer. Phil. Soc. n. ser. v. 192; Gray, I.e. — Low prairies, Arkansas and 

 Eastern Texas. Very like slender and smoother forms of the next, into which it probably 

 passes. Ovules 4 in some flowers, 5 to 7 or 8 in others. 



P. parviflora, Pursh. A span or more high, sparsely hirsute or glabrate, branched 

 from the base : radical and lowest cauline leaves lyrately pinnate, with 3 to 5 roundish 

 leaflets or divisions, or sometimes simple and entire ; tlie upper mostly sessile and 3-9- 

 parted or cleft into oblong or linear-lanceolate lobes : racemes loose, sevcral-many-flowered ; 



