124 



California Art & Nature 



U5 



the segment-! subu'are, entire, very un- 

 equal, trie sliortest fully equalling the 

 tube the longest surpassed by tie pur- 

 plish corolla: capslue 3-celled, many- 

 seeded. Hanson's ranch, in the north- 

 ern part of Lower California, July lo, 

 1884, <". R. • rcutt, No. II 13 Kelated to 

 N divaricata, but sufficiently distin- 

 guished by its clamminess ar.d different 

 inflore.scence, as well as by its larger 

 corollas." — Greene, Initonia. i. 186. 

 NAVARRETIA HAMATA Greene. 



'"Near N atractyluides, and like it aro- 

 matic, but smaller and comparatively 

 slender; leaves not ioliaceous-dilated, 

 but with a linear, or nearly linear racliis 

 and few or many spinnse-subulate seg- 

 ments of which the terminal one, and 

 sometimes one or all of the lateral pairs 

 are strongly recurved or else abiuptly 

 deflexed (forming hoi>ks); caiyx-seg- 

 ments all si;bulate and ^spinose-tipped, 

 all erect, 2 mice as large'as the others: 

 corolla salveiiorm, deep purple, large 

 for the plant, the slender tube well ex- 

 serted from tl.c calyx. Guadalupe mt., 

 Lower Cali.ornia. June, lUi^ C. R. Or- 

 cutt. Also at All Saints bay, Viay, 1885, 

 bv the preset writer." — Greene, Pit. i. 

 139 (N 25, 1887). 



NAVARRETIA ATRACTYLOIDES Gne. 

 N\VA.RRETIA DIVARICATA Greene. 

 NAVARRETIA PROSTRATA Greene. 

 NAVARRETIA VISCIDULA Greene. 



HYDROPHT^LLACEAE. 



LEMMONIA CALIFORNICA A. Gray. 

 Genns EMMENANi IE Bentham. 



BMMENANTHE PENDULIPLORA Bth. 



California yellow bells; a broad bushy 

 anraifll from a rpan to 2 feet high, loaled 

 with broadly bell-shaped pendulous flow- 

 ers, V2 incii long-, of a delicate cream col- 

 or—the persistent corolla drying- and re- 

 taining its shape until seed ripens. 'The 

 general effect of a branch is suggestive of 

 a long spike of the lily of the valley', says 

 one writer. Utah; Lake county, Cal. to 

 Lo-sver California; Arizona. 



Gcnns XEMOPHILA Nuttall. 



NEMOPHILA AURITA Lindl. 

 NEMOPHILA INSIGNIS Dougl. 

 NEMOPHILA MENZIESII H. & A. 

 NEMOPHILA RACEMOSA Nutt. 



Genus ELLISIA liinnnens. 



ELLISIA CHRYSANTHEMIFOLIA Bth 

 ELLISIA MEMBRANACEA Benth. 



Genua PHACELIA Joss. 



PHACELIA AFFINIS A. Gray. 

 PHACELIA CAMPANULARIA A. Gray. 

 PHACELIA CILIATA Benth. 

 PHACELIA CIRCINATA Jacq. f. 



PHACELIA CORDIFOLIA S. Watson. 

 PHACELIA CURVIPES Torr. 

 PHACELIA DAVIDSONII A. Gray. 

 PHACELIA DISTANS A. Gray. 

 PHACELIA DOUGLASII Torr. 

 PHACELIA FREMONTH Torr. 

 PHACELIA GRANDIFLORA A. Grav. 

 PHACELIA HB:TER0SPERMA Parish. 

 PHACELIA HISPIDA A. Gray. 

 PHACELIA IXODES Kellogg. 

 PHACELIA IVESIANA Torr. 

 PHACELIA LEUCANTHA Lemmon. 

 PHACELIA MICRANTHA Torr. 

 PHACELIA MOHAVENSIS A. Gray. 

 PHACEi.IA OR'I'TTIANA A. Gray. 

 PHACELIA PARRYI Torr. 

 PHACELIA RAMOSISSIMA Dougl. 

 PHACELIA RUGULOSA Lemmon. 

 PHACELIA SUFFRUTESCENS Parry. 

 PHACELIA TANACETIFOLIA Benth. 

 PHACELIA VISCIDA Torr. 

 PHACELIA WHITLAVIA . A. Gray. 



Genns TIlICARDIA Torrey. 



TRICARDIA WATSONI Torr. 



Ger.ns XAMA liini^Rens. 



NAMA DEMISSUM A. Gray. 

 NAMA HISPIDUM A. Gray. 

 NAMA PARRYI A. Gray. 

 NAMA ROTHROCKII A. Gray. 

 NAMA STBNOCARPUM A. Gray. 



Genns ERIODICTYOX Bentliani. 



ERIODICTYON ANGUSTIFOLIUM Nt. 

 ERIODICTYON CRASSIFOLIUM Benth. 

 "Densely tomentose-villous, the hairs 

 straight: corolla salver-form, twice as 

 long as the calj-x, densely villous outside: 

 seed finely about 10-striate,with innum- 

 erable minute transverse lines." — Greene, 

 Bull. Cal. Acad. Sci., 1. 201. 



ERIODICTYON GLUT! NOSUM Benth. 

 "Infusicn of the balsamic-resiniferous 

 leaves in spirit used as a tonic" (Wat- 

 son, Bot., Cal., 1:518). This and E. an- 

 gustifolium Nuttall are probably iden- 

 tical. The species is very variable. 

 These shrubs are abundant in the hills 

 and mountains of Southern and Baja 

 California, and held in about equal re- 

 pute as remedial agents by the Mexi- 

 cans who do not seem to distinguish be- 

 tween them. E. sessilifolium Greene, 

 of the vicinity of Todos Santos bay. 

 Lower California, is also known by the 

 same name and cedited with the same 

 virtues. This seems to be a form con- 

 necting E. glutinosum and E. angusti- 

 folium with E. crassifolium. 

 ERIODICTYON SESSILIFOLIUM Grne. 

 Ge ca ac b 1:201. Br Zoe 4:208 j only. 

 E intermedia Parry ined. Or 77 j 



ERIODICTYON TOMENTOSUM Benth. 

 H. C. Ford gives the San Rafael moun- 

 tains as the habitat of this species. 

 Mrs. Bingham says: "Found on the 

 banks of mountain streams, and used 



