428 GOODEXIACEAE. 



1. LOBELIA L. Sp. PL 929. 1753. 



Herbs (some tropical species shrubs), with alternate or basal leaves, and 

 racemose spicate or paniculate, often leafy-bracted, red yellow blue or white 

 flowers. Calyx-tube turbinate, hemispheric or ovoid, adnate to • the ovary. 

 Corolla-tube straight, oblique, or incurved, divided to the base on one side, 

 2-lipped in our species, the lobe on each side of the cleft erect or recurved, 

 turned away from the other 3 which are somewhat united. Stamens free 

 from the corolla-tube, monadelphous, at least above, 2 or all the 5 anthers with 

 a tuft of hairs at the tips, 3 of them usually larger than the other 2, all united 

 into a tube or ring around the style. Ovary 2 -celled, the 2 placentae many- 

 ovuled; stigma 2-lobed or 2-cleft. Cap?ule loculicidally 2-valved. [Named 

 after Matthias de L'Obel, 1538-1616, a Flemish botanist.] About 250 species 

 of wide geographic distribution. Type species: Lobelia Dortmanna L. 



1, Lobelia lucayana Britton & Millspaugh, sp. nov. 



Annual, slender, pilose with strap-shaped hairs. Stems simple, scapiform, 

 erect, 3-12 cm. high; basal leaves rosulate, small, 1-2 cm. long, ovate or 

 orbicular, obtuse, attenuate to the petiole, crenate-dentate, the teeth mucronu- 

 late; cauline leaves infrequent, spatulate or oblanceolate, sessile or short- 

 petioled; racemes few-flowered, 2-7 cm. long; flowers long-pedicelled, the 

 pedicels slender, much longer than the bracts; corolla blue, about 4 mm. long, 

 bilabiate, the tube elongate-cylindric, deeply fissured; inferior lip 3-lobed, the 

 lobes equal; superior lip 2-lobed, the lobes lanceolate, divergent; mature cap- 

 sule 3 m.m. long; seeds orbicular, biconvex, about 2.5 mm. in diameter, dark 

 and shining. 



Type from North Caicos, in the vicinity of Kew, Wilson 7713 in herb. N. Y. 

 Botanical Garden : shady places in rich soil, Watling's Island at the southeast end. 

 Habitally like L. Feayana A. Gray, of southern Florida, but in our species the seeds 

 are lenticular, dark brown and polished, while in L. Feayana they are oblong and 

 tuberculate. Bahama Lobelia. 



Family 3. GOODENIACEAE Dumort. 



GooDEXiA Family. 



Herbaceous or shrubby plants, wath w^atery sap. Leaves alternate or 

 sometimes opi^osite, without stipules, entire, toothed or rarely pinnatifid. 

 Flow^ers perfect. Calyx 5-toothed, an entire border, or sometimes obsolete. 

 Corolla 5-lobed, split on one side. Stamens 5, distinct, the anthers opening 

 lengthwise. Ovary mostly inferior, 1-2-celled; styles usually united. 

 Stigma surrounded wdth an indusium. Ovules 1 or 2, or more in each 

 cavity, mostly erect or ascending. Fruit dupaceous, berry-like or capsular. 

 Seeds usually one in each cavity; embryo straight in the axis of the fleshy 

 endosperm. About 12 genera and over 200 species, mostly Australian. 



1. SCAEVOLA L. Mant. 2: 145. 1771. 



Fleshy stout herbs or shrubs, with alternate or rarely opposite, mostly 

 entire leaves, the flowers irregular, axillary, in dichotomous cymes or rarely 

 solitary. Calyx 5-lobed, or a mere border. Corolla white or blue, its lobes 

 winged, its tube split to the base on one side, villous within. Stamens epi- 

 gynous. Ovary inferior or nearly so, 2-celled or rarely 1-celled; stigma sur- 



