Nama. HYDROPHYLLACE.^. 173 



family). — Dwarf stemless perennials, or possibly biennials (W. N. American), 

 soft-pubescent ; with entire spatulatc or oblong leaves, on mostly elongated mar- 

 gined petioles, crowning the caudex or rootstock ; and from their axils sending 

 forth naked one-flowered peduncles, equalling or shorter than the leaves. Parts 

 of the flower occasionally in sixes or sevens. Corolla purplish or nearly white ; 

 the tube and the base of the subulate filaments more or less hairy or hirsute ; the 

 lobes often slightly unequal. Disk none. Base of the calyx obscurely adnate to 

 the broad base of the conical-ovate ovary, which tapers into the rather stout style : 

 stigmas minute. Ovary 1-celled ; the narrow placentaj projecting more or less on 

 incomplete half-dissepiments : ovules 20 or more to each placenta. Capsule 

 loculicidal, 1.5-20-seeded. Seeds pretty large, with a somewhat fleshy minutely 

 reticulated testa. — A genus of doubtful afhnity, but most probably Ilydrophyl- 

 laceous. — Watson, Bot. King, 281 ; Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. x. ooO, & Bot. Calif, 

 i. 51 G; Benth. & Hook. Gen. ii. 82t). 



H. CalifornicLls, "Watson. Leaves copious in a rosulate radical tuft : corolla some- 

 what oblong-campaimlate ; the lobes shorter than the tube. — Bot. King, 281, t. 30. Ourisia 

 Californica, Benth. PI. Hartw. 327. llesperocliiron lutifulius, Kellogg in Proc. Calif. Acad. v. 

 44, a large form. — Hills and meadows, Sierra Nevada, California, from the Yosemite north- 

 ward to Washington Terr., and east to the mountains of Utah. — Leaves an inch or two 

 long, besides the petiole, into which the blade abruptly contracts or gradually tapers. 

 Corolla from nearly half to three-fourths of an inch long in the largest specimens ; the 

 lobes oblong. Here belongs Nicotiana nana, Lindl. Bot. Reg. t. 833. 



H. pumilus, T. C. Porter. Leaves fewer, crowning the rather slender rootstock : 

 corolla nearly rotate ; its lobes longer than the tube, which is densely bearded within. — 

 Hayden, Geol. Rep. 1872, 768 ; Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. x. 330. VUlarsia pumila, Doiigl. ; 

 Griseb. in Hook. Fl. ii. 70, t. 157. — Springy and marshy ground, mountains of Idaho to 

 Oregon, Douglas, Gcyer, Hayden, &c. Also Plumas Co., California, Mrs. Austin. 



1 1. LEMM(!)NIA, Gi-ay. (Named after John Gill Lemmon, the discoverer, 

 a most ardent and successful explorer of E. Californian and Nevadan botany.) — 

 Proc. Am. Acad. xii. 162. Single species. 



L. Californica, Gray, 1. c. Small and depressed winter-annual, canescently pubescent, 

 and the calyx white-villous : stem branched from the base, divergently and repeatedly 

 dichotomous : leaves alternate, rosulate at base, and crowded at the sinnmit of the branches ; 

 entire, spatulate and tapering into a short petiole, nearly veinless, 3 to 5 lines long : flow- 

 ers sessile, solitary in the lower forks, cymose-gloraerate at the leafy extremity of the 

 branches: sepals very narrowly linear, not widening upward, in fruit 2 lines long and 

 exceeding the short-oval retuse capsule : corolla apparently white, a line long, not surpass- 

 ing the calyx, moderately 5-lobed : styles shorter or not longer than the ovary : placenta or 

 half-dissepiments narrow, adhering to the valves: seeds half a line long, somewhat rugose- 

 foveolate in the manner of Conanthus. — Desert region of San Bernardino Co, California, 

 about the sources of the Mohave River, May, 1876, ./. G. Lemmon. 



12. NAMA, L. (Ndim, a stream or spring, in allusion to supposed place of 

 growth of the original species.) — Chiefly low herbs, some few suffrutescent or 

 woody-based (N. & S. American and one Ilawaian), of various habit; the corolla 

 purple, bluish, or white ; the stamens sometimes equally, oftener unequally adnate 

 to the base or lower part of the tube. (Besides the following there are several 

 species in the bordering parts of Mexico.) — Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. v. 3o7, 

 viii. 282, x. 330, & Bot. Calif, i. 517, G21. 



§ 1. Low annuals, merely pubescent or hairy : leaves entire : flowers terminal 

 or lateral, or in the forks of the stem. 



