HYDROPHYLLACEAE (WATERLEAF FAMILY) 409 



loosely united over the filament: filaments and style conspicuously exserted. 

 In the Green river shales, Wyoming. 



7. Phacelia glandulosa Nutt. Journ. Acad. Sci. Phila. II. 1: 160. 1847. 

 Plants 2-7 dm. high, rather stout, often widely branched, viscidly pubescent 

 or in the inflorescence hirsute: primary segments of the leaves few-lobed or 

 incised, or some entire: flowers comparatively large: corolla violet or blue, 

 8-12 mm. high, with ample rounded lobes quite entire: stamens and style 

 much exserted: capsule short-oval. Montana to Texas and Arizona. 



8. Phacelia neo-mexicana Thurb. Torr. Bot. Mex. Bound. 143. 1859. 

 Plants. 2-6 dm. high, erect and strict, very leafy, viscid-pubescent, sometimes 

 also hirsute: leaves interruptedly twice pinnately parted into small and short 

 lobes: corolla comparatively small, 4-6 mm. long, bluish, purplish, or white, 

 the short lobes minutely crenulate to erose-denticulate : stamens and style 

 often no longer than the corolla-lobes, sometimes rather conspicuously ex- 

 serted. (P. alba Rydb. Bull. Torr. Bot. Club 28: 30. 1901.) Southern Col- 

 orado and New Mexico. 



9. Phacelia Franklinii (R. Br.) Gray, Man. Ed. 2. 329. 1856. Erect, sim- 

 ple, or corymbose at summit, 2-4 dm. high, soft-hirsute or pubescent: lower 

 leaves petioled and pinnately or somewhat bipinnately divided or parted 

 into numerous and short linear-oblong divisions or lobes, the upper sessile 

 and less divided: spikes cymose-glomerate or crowded, little elongated in age: 

 corolla pale blue or almost white: ovules 40 or more: capsule about the length 

 of the calyx; seeds oval, minutely alveolate in vertical lines. Wyoming and 

 far northward and westward. 



10. Phacelia Ivesiana Torr. Ives Colorado Exp. 21. 1860. Diffusely much 

 branched from the base, 10-15 cm. high, hirsute-pubescent and glandular: 

 leaves pinnately parted into 7-15 linear or oblong and entire or incisely few- 

 toothed lobes, rarely bipinnatifid: racemes loose, 6-20-flowered : narrow ap- 

 pendages of the corolla adnate to the filament only at base: capsule oblong, 

 16-24-seeded. (P. campcstris A. Nels. 1. c. 26: 242.) From western Wyo- 

 ming to southern California. 



11. Phacelia corrugata A. Nels. Bot. Gaz. 34: 26. 1902. Slightly glutinous 

 and more glandular-pubescent; stem branched or simple, moderately leafy, 

 terminating in elongated naked peduncles: leaves narrowly oblong, somewhat 

 alternately 11-15-lobed, the broad sinuses extending about halfway to the 

 midrib, each lobe with 2 or 4 rounded unequal lobes; petioles short or want- 

 ing: spikes very dense even in fruit: sepals linear-oblanceolate, sparsely hir- 

 sute, nearly as long as the corolla: corolla blue, campanulate-funnelform, 1 cm. 

 or more long: stamens and styles nearly twice ihe length of the corolla; the 

 undivided base of the style pubescent: capsule elliptical, about 5 mm. long; 

 seeds oblong, obtuse at both ends. Utah, through Colorado to western Texas. 



12. Phacelia integrifolia Torr. Ann. Lye. N. Y. 2: 222. 1827. Annual or 

 biennial; stem very leafy, 1.5-5 dm. high: leaves finely strigose-pubescent, 

 ovate-oblong or oblong-lanceolate, irregularly crenate-dentate, obtuse at the 

 apex, rounded or cordate at the base, 2-6 cm. long, petioled or the uppermost 

 sessile: spike-like branches of the scorpioid cymes dense, 5-10 cm. long when 

 expanded; flowers sessile, about 8 mm. long: calyx-segments acute: corolla 

 tubular-campanulate, white or blue, the tube longer than the calyx: filaments 

 glabrous, exserted: ovules 2 on each placenta. In saline soil; Kansas and 

 Colorado to Utah and Arizona. 



13. Phacelia sericea (Graham) Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. 10: 323. 1875. 

 Stems 1-3 dm. high from a branching caudex, silky-pubescent or canescent, 

 or the simple virgate stems and inflorescence villous-hirsute, rather leafy to 

 the top: leaves pinnately parted into numerous linear or narrowly oblong 

 lobes, these often again few-cleft or pinnatifid, silky-canescent or sometimes 

 greenish; the lower petioled; the uppermost simpler and nearly sessile: short 

 spikes crowded in a naked spike-like thyrsus: corolla violet-blue or whitish: 

 stamens long-exserted : capsule a little longer than the calyx. Mountains 

 of Colorado, Nevada, and northward. 



14. Phacelia idahoensis Henderson, Bull. Torr. Bot. Club 22: 48. 1895. 



