Eritrichium. BORRAGIXACEiE. 193 



vada and California ; Truckee Pass, Watson, a largor-flowered form. Sierra Valley, Lemmon, 

 a smaller-flowered form and with some fruit. Connects PUujiobolhrys with the following 

 section. 



§ 3. Kryni'tzkia, Gray. Nutlets ventrally attached from next the base to 

 the middle or to the apex to the pyramidal or columnar or subulate gynobase ; 

 the scar mostly sulcate or slightly excavated: seed from amphitropous to nearly 

 anatropous, commonly pendulous : corolla (except in the last species) white : 

 calyx o-parted, closed in fruit. — Knjnilzhia, Fisch. & Meyer, Ind. Sem. Petrop. 

 1841, 52. § Knjnitzldu & § Piptocalyx, Gray, 1. c. 



* (EuKKYxnzKiA.) Nutlets without acute lateral angles or marcfins, the sides more commonly 

 rounded: corolla mostly small; the tube not surpassing the mostly setose-hispid calyx : anthers 

 oval: root annual. 

 H— Calyx early circumscissile; the 5-elcft upper portion falling away, leaving a membranaceous 

 somewhat crenate-margined base persistent around the fruit: corolla with naked and open throat: 

 anthers mucroiiate: flowers all leafy-bracteate and sessile. — Piptocalyx^ Torr. 

 E. circumscissum, Gray. Depressed-spreading, very much branched from the annual 

 root, an inch to a span high, whitish-hispid throughout: narrow linear leaves (a quarter to 

 half inch long) and very small fiowers crowded, especially on the upper part of the 

 branches : nutlets oblong-ovate, smooth or minutely puncticulate-scabrous, attached by a 

 narrow groove (with transverse basal bifurcation) for nearly the whole length to the pyra- 

 midal-subulate gynobase. — Proc. Am. Acad. x. 58, & Bot. Calif, i. 527. Lithospcrmum cir- 

 cumscissum, Hook. & Am. Bot. Beech. 370. Piptocali/x circujiiscissus, Torr. in Wilkes Exp. 

 xvii. 414. t. 12. — Desert plains, E. California to Utah, Wyoming, and Washington Terr. 

 ■i— -i— Calyx neither circumscissile nor disarticulating from the axis in age; the lobes linear- 

 olilong, obtuse, nearly nerveless; the bristles short and even, not setose or pungent: corolla with 

 minute if any appendages at tlie throat: nutlets attached for the whole length to a slender 

 columnar gyn'obase by a groove which does not bifurcate nor sensibly enlarge at base: flowers all 

 leafy-bracteate, short-pedicelled: style at length thickened! 

 E. micranthum, Torr. Ilirsute-cancscent, slender, 2 to 5 inches high, at length dif- 

 fusely much branched : leaves linear, only 2 to 4 lines long : flowers in the forks, and much 

 crowded in short leafy spikes, about equalling the upper bracts : corolla barely a line high, 

 and its lobes one to two-thirds of a line long, obscurely appendaged at the throat : nutlets 

 oblong-ovate, acute or acuminate, smooth and shining or dull and puncticulate-scabrous (half 

 to two-thirds of a line long) ; style becoming thicker than the gynobase, or even pyramidal. 

 — Bot. Mex. Bound. 141 ; Watson, Bot. King, 244. — Dry plains, western border of Texas 

 through Utah and Arizona to E. California, where larger flowered specimens connect with 



Var. lepidura. Less slender and more hirsute : corolla larger, its expanded limb 2 or 3 

 lines in diameter ; the appendages or folds in the throat very manifest : nutlets nearly a 

 line long, puncticulate-scabrous. — California, in San Diego Co., D. Cleveland. 



-^c— -^^ -i— Calyx not circumscissile, 5-parted, conspicuously and often pungently hispid with hirge 

 stiff bristles, and the lobes usually with a stout midnerve; the whole calyx (or short pedicel) in 

 several species inclined to disarliculate at maturity and to form a sort of bur, loosely enclosing 

 the nutlets: inflorescence scorpioid-spicate, without or partly with bracts. 



++ Gynobase slender and narrow: nutlets with narrow grooved scar, or continued into a groove 

 above the attachment and so running the whole length of the ventral face : spikes when developed 

 mainly bractlcss: leaves in all linear. 



= Lobes of the fructiferous calyx very narrow; the strong bristles below reflexed and partly unci- 

 nate: aiipcndages in the throat of the small con)lla obsolete or wanting: oidy one nutlet 

 usually maturing. 



E. OXycarjOim, Gray. Somewhat canescently strigulose-pubescent or above hirsute, 

 slender, (i to 20 inches high : leaves narrow : spikes dense in age, but slender, becoming 

 strict, and with the sessile fruiting calyx appressed : this at most 2 lines long, thickly beset 

 toward the base with stout reflexed bristles (of a line or less in length), the tips of some 

 of them curving : nutlet ovate-acuininate or ovatedanceolate, very smooth and shining, 

 fully a line long, much surpassing the subulate gynobase and style, affixed to the latter 

 only by the lower half or third of the narrow ventral groove. — Proc. Am. Acad. x. 58, & 

 Bot. Calif, i. 52G. Mi/osotisjlaccida, Hook. & Am. Bot. Beech. .309, ex Benth., not Dougl. 

 Krynitzkia Ic.iocarpa, Benth. PI. Ilartw. (no. 1872), 320, not Fisch. & Meyer. — Common in 

 W. California. (Not seen from Oregon.) 



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