256 SCROPHULARIACE^. Collinsia. 



tary leaf y-bracteate capitate cluster : corolla straightish, white or ochroleucous ; its upper 

 lip blue or bluish and very short, the lobes being almost obsolete ; lobes of elongated 

 lower lip entire : gland small, oblong, compressed, sliort-stipitate : seeds 4 or 5 in each cell, 

 rugose-reticulated. — Ind. Sem. Petrop. 1867, & Gartenfl. 1868, 35, t. 568; Gray, Proc. Am. 

 Acad. vii. 378, & Bot. Calif. I.e. — Shore of the northern part of California, Bolander, &c. 

 (Doubtless not " Mexico.") 



++ ++ Filaments and interior of corolla glabrous : upper lip of latter prominently fornicate-crested: 

 flowers fewer : .seeds about 4, smooth. 



C. Greenei, Gray. Slender and smaller, erect, glandular-puberulont ; leaves oblong- 

 linear, tapering to base, sparsely and coarsely dentate : flowers 2 to 6 in the clusters, on 

 pedicels sometimes as long as the calyx : corolla violet-i^urple, 5 or 6 lines long ; its upper 

 lip much shorter tlian the oblong throat, about half the length of the lower; the crest 

 under the origin of the limb developed into a pair of conspicuous callous teeth on each 

 side; lateral lobes of lower lip small: gland small and sessile. — Proc. Am. Acad. x. 75, 

 & Bot. Calif. 1. c. — On rocks, Lake Co., California, Greene. 



* * Flowers slender-pedicelled, umbelliform-verticillate, or sometimes solitary. 



-H- Calyx-lobes acute, from lanceohUe or even ovate to subulate, usually surpassing the capsule : 

 plants gkibrous, or the stems and pedicels puberulent, not glandular or viscid : leaves in the same 

 species eitlier somewhat serrate or entire : seeds about 4, smooth or nearly so. 



+-»• Eastern species : showy corolla half inch long, with very gibbous throat much shorter than the 

 limb : upper tilaments more or less bearded below. 



C. verna, Nutt. 1- c. Stem 6 to 20 inches high : leaves ovate or oblong, or the lowest 

 rounded and slender-petioled, and the upper ovate-lanceolate and partly clasping; the 

 upper floral reduced to subulate-linear bracts : whorls about 6-flowered : pedicels filiform, 

 longer than the flowers : throat of the corolla equalling the calyx-lobes ; the ample lower 

 lip bright blue ; the upper white or purplish ; lobes barely emarginate : gland subulate, 

 porrect : seeds thick, not flattened, oblong, arcuate. — Sweet, Brit. Fl. Card. t. 220; Hook. 

 Bot. Mag. t. 4927. — Moist woods, W. New York and Penn. to Wisconsin and Kentucky, 



C. violacea, Nutt. Lower: leaves thickish ; the upper lanceolate : whorls 2-4-flowered : 

 pedicels as long as the flower : corolla violet ; the upper lip much smaller than the lower ; 

 all the lobes obcordate. — Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. n. ser. v. 170; Gray, Proc. Am. Acad, 

 xi. 93. Antirrhinum tenellum, Pursh, Fl. ii. 421 '? — Arkansas, Nuttall, Pitcher. Little known 



species. 



++ -t-+ Western species, one extending north-eastward. 



r= Flowers showy: corolla strongly declined; its saccate-ventricose throat shorter than the limb. 



C. grandiflora, Dougl. A span to a foot high : leaves thickish ; the lowest roundish 

 and petioled ; upper from oblong to linear and sessile ; the floral in whorls of 3 to 7 : pedi- 

 cels in whorls of 3 to 9, about the length of the flower: calyx-lobes lanceolate gradually 

 subulate-attenuate to a very acute point: corolla half to two-thirds inch long, white or 

 purple with lower lip deep blue or violet ; its very saccate throat as broad as long, almost 

 or quite transverse with the tube, as long as the recurving (internally 2-callous) upper lip; 

 lobes of the larger lower lip merely refuse or emarginate : filaments glabrous : gland ses- 

 sile and capitate: seeds roundish, smooth. — Lindl. Bot. Reg. t. 1107; Gray, I.e. — Shady 

 hills, &c., from Mendocino Co. California to Brit. Columbia along the coast. 



Var. pusilla. Small form, a span or more high : corolla only 4 or 5 lines long, more 

 blue or violet throughout.- Plumas Co. California to Brit. Colmnbia. 



C. sparsifiora, Fisch. & Meyer. More slender: upper leaves all lanceolate and 

 linear, all opposite, or the uppermost small bracts in threes : pedicels solitary or some of 

 the upper 2 or 3 in a Avhorl, sometimes longer than the flower : calyx-lobes from ovate to 

 deltoid-lanceolate, acute: corolla 4 to 8 lines long, violet ; the saccate throat very oblique 

 but not transverse ; upper lip hardly shorter than the lower : filaments hirsute below : gland 

 sessile, elongated-subulate : seeds meniscoidal, acute-margined, obscurely reticulated. — Ind. 

 Sem. Petrop. 1835, ii.33; Gray, I.e. C. solitaria, Kellogg, Lc. 10. — Rocky places, Cali- 

 fornia, from San Francisco northward. 



= = Flowers small, 2 or .3 lines long : corolla less declined or oblique; the oblong gibbous throat 

 longer than the limb : stigma 2-(left. 



C. parviflora, Dougl. vVbout a span high, at length diffuse or spreading : leaves oblong 

 or lanceolate ; the upper narrowed at base and entire ; the floral often in whorls of 3 to 5 : 



