6 LOBELTACE^. Lohelia. 



shorter than the calyx-lobes : larger anthers slightly hirsute on the back, but naked at tip. 



— Prodr. vii. 376. — Moist grounds, W. Louisiana, Arkansas, and E. Texas: flowering 

 early. Tube of the bluish corolla 2 to 2| lines long. Calyx-appendages, as in all these 

 species, very variable. 



=.•: = Flowers or at least the fruit-bearing pedicels ascending, mostly very numerous and hardly 

 secund in the el'ongated and virgate spike-like raceme: tube of tiie corolla bareh' 2 lines long: 

 upper leaves passing into bracts in the stronger plants : calyx-lobes loose and spreading in flower. 



L. leptostachys, A. DC. Calyx-tube short-turbinate and in fruit becoming hemi- 

 spherical, the sinuses each with a pair of subulate or linear strictly deflexed appendages, 

 which mostly soon equal or even exceed the tube; otherwise as the next. — Prodr. vii. 376. 



— Sandy dry soil, Ohio to Illinois and Missouri, and Virginia to Georgia : fl. early summer. 

 L. spicata, Lam. Puberulent: stem virgate, 1 to 4 feet high (from a biennial? root) : 



leaves pale, barely denticidate, obtuse; the radical and lowest obovate, 1 to 4 inches long; 

 the upper spatulate, gradually smaller, and at length linear-oblong or lanceolate and bract- 

 like : spike-like raceme from 3 to 18 inches long : tube of the calyx turbinate ; the lobes 

 subulate or linear-subulate and shorter than the tube of the (light blue, pale, or rarely 

 white) corolla; the sinuses not appendaged. — Diet. iii. 587. L. Clai/lonkma, Michx. Fl. ii. 

 1.53. L. pallida, Muhl. Cat., Ell., &c. L. goodenioides, Willd. Hort. Berol. t. 30. L. nivea, 

 Raf. Ann. Nat. 1820, 15, white-flowered form. — Gravelly or sandy and mostly dry soil, N. 

 New England to Saskatchewan, Louisiana and Arkansas : fl. through summer. 



Var. parviflora, a small form, with calyx-lobes broadly subulate, and pale corolla 

 only 3 lines long. — L. pallida, Muhl.? — Swamps, Lancaster, Pcnn., Por/c?- ; fl. June. 



Var. hirtella, a western form, with somewhat scabrous jiubescence, and minutely 

 hirsutely ciliate bracts and calyx-lobes, the latter subulate-linear and fully as long as the 

 tube of the corolla. — Chiefly towards and beyond the Mississippi. 



++++++ Stem very leafy, simple and strict, continued into a very leafy -bracted spike: leaves 

 and bracts laciniate-tootlied : lips of the corolla of nearly similar lobes, smooth and naked: seeds 

 with a very smooth and even coat. 



L, fenestralis, Cav. Annual or at most biennial, 2 or 3 feet high, nearly glabrous, or the 

 sharp decurrent angles of the stem hairy : leaves oblong or lanceolate, all the upper partly 

 clasping and acuminate, passing into the similar bracts of the long spicate inflorescence, 

 these mostly exceeding the crowded flowers : calyx-tube obovate ; the lobes linear and 

 mostly with some slender teeth : tube of the corolla 2 lines long, surpassing the stamens 

 and style : larger anthers short-bearded at tip. — Ic. vi. 8, t. 512 ; Lindl. Bot. Reg. xxiv. 

 t. 47. L. pectinata, Engelm. in Wisliz. Rep. 108. — S. W. Texas to Arizona and Mexico. 



++ ++ -H- -H- Stems leaf}-, often paniculately brancJied: flowers loosely racemose: sinuses of the 

 calyx not appendaged : mainly biennials or annuals. 



= Cauline leaves chiefly linear, entire or merely denticulate : capsule not inflated. 

 a. Tube of the corolla fully 3 lines long: perennial from flliform rootstocks. 

 Li. gruina, Cav. Puberulent or glabrous: stems nearly simple, slender, a foot or two 

 high : leaves all lanceolate or linear, acute, denticulate, an inch or two long : raceme 

 mostly slender-pedimcled and few-flowered : calyx-lobes slender-subulate, shorter than the 

 tube of the corolla. — Arizona, in the Sierra Blanca, at 7000 feet, Bothrock. Flowers smaller 

 than in Mexican specimens; the tube of corolla only 3 lines long. (Mex.). 



b. Tube of the bright blue (rarely varying to white) corolla not over 2 lines long; the two superior 

 lobes small and narrow: plants maiidy glabrous, slender and erect: inflorescence disposed to 

 become paniculate. 



L. Boykini, Torr. & Gray. Perennial : stem a foot or two high from a creeping root- 

 stock, fistulous, mostly simple : leaves all small and scattered, filiform or nearly so, an inch 

 or less long and above reduced to setaceous bracts: filiform pedicels rather longer than the 

 flower, spreading : calyx-lobes setaceous-subulate, spreading, very much longer than the 

 short tube, which in fruit is rounded at base: mature capsule half superior: seeds short- 

 oval, rough-rugose. — A. DC. Prodr. vii. 374; Chapm. ¥1 255. — Pine-barren swamps in 

 shallow water, S. Carolina, Georgia, and Florida, beginning to flower in May. 



L. Canbyi, Gray. Perennial from offsets ? or annual, 2 feet high, the larger plants pani- 

 culately branched above, obscurely puberulent, scabrous or nearly smooth : leaves linear, 

 ri'motely denticulate-glandular, an inch or two long, a line or two wide : racemes elongated, 

 often leafy at base: pedicels naked, erect or ascending, shorter than the bracts or the 

 flower : calyx-lobes subulate-linear, denticulate-glandular, hardly longer than the wholly 



