Phacelia. HYDROPHYLLACE^. 511 



loith long spreading hairs . appendages of corolla united to the base of the fda- 

 ments. 



20. P. circinatiformis, Gray. Erect, a span high, hispid and puberulent : 

 leaves ovate and oblong-lanceolate, conspicuously parallel -veined, somewhat strigose : 

 racemes or spikes dense : corolla narrow, almost funnelform, little longer than the 

 calyx, apparently pale or white, much surpassing the stamens : oviUes about 4 to 

 each placenta. — Proc. Am. Acad. x. 325. Eutoca 2)hacelioides, Benth. 1. c. 



California, Douglas ; only known in his collection, probably from Monterey. Has Ihe aspect 

 of a small form of P. circinata. 



21. P, curvipes, Torr. Diffuse, 3 or 4 inches high, hirsute and puberulent : 

 leaves oval or lanceolate, mostly shorter than the slender petiole : racemes simple, 

 soon loose ; the lower pedicels as long as the calyx : corolla open-campanidate, violet 

 or blue: style 2-cleft to the middle: ovules 8 or 10 to each jilacenta. — Watson, 

 Bot. King Exp. 252. 



Eastern foot-hills of the Sierra Nevada ( Watson), extending to Owens Valley, Dr. Horn. Re- 

 sembles P. huriiilis. Pedicels a quarter to half an inch long, even the lowest not commonly 

 deflexed and then upturned ; so that the name is seldom ai)plicable. Corolla 3 lines long : the 

 hispid calyx in fruit 4 or 5 lines long. 



22. P. divaricata, Gray, 1. c. Diffusely spreading, a span high, more or less 

 hirsute and pubescent : leaves ovate or oblong, mostly longer than the petiole, occa- 

 sionally 1 - 2-toothed or lobed at base, the veins curving upwards : spikes or racemes 

 at length loose : the pedicels usually much shorter than the calyx : style 2-cleft at 

 the apex : corolla open-campanulate, pretty large (three fourths of an inch in diam- 

 eter when expanded), violet : ovules 12 to 20 on each placenta. — Eutoca divaricata, 

 Benth.; Lindl. Bot. Eeg. t. 1784; Hook. Bot. Mag. t, 3706. E. Wrangeliana, 

 Fischer & Meyer; Don, Brit. El. Gard. ser. 2, t. 362, a form with leaves inclined to 

 be 1 - 2-lobed or toothed. 



Common about San Francisco Bay, &c. : a sho^vy species in cultivation. 



-i- -f- -t- Leaves entire or crenate-lohed, roundish ; the veins divergent, mostly obscure : 

 pubescence glandular, not at all hispid: appendages of the narroiv-campanulate 

 white corolla nearly free from the unequal filaments : jioicers small {only about 2 

 lines long) in a loose raceme. 



23. P. pusilla, Torr. 1. c. Only 2 or 3 inches high, slender : leaves roundish- 

 oval or oblong, entire, seldom half an inch long : flowers few on filiform pedicels : 

 capsule narrow-oblong, obtuse and slightly pointed, 18- 24-seeded. 



Under sage-brush and junipers, east of the Sierra Nevada, extending to the borders of Califor- 

 nia, Watson. 



24. P. rotundifolia, Torr. 1. c. Diffusely branclied, slender, 2 to 4 inches 

 high : leaves tliin, round-cordate, crenately 7 - 13-toothed or somewhat lobed, much 

 shorter than the petiole : flowers on pedicels shorter than the calyx-lobes : style 

 obscurely 2-cleft at the apex: capsule oval-oblong, abruptly pointed, 60-100- 

 seeded. 



Southeastern borders of California (on the Mohave, &c. Cooper) to Southern Utah. Leaves half 

 an inch or less in diameter, nearly palmately veined. 



§ 3. Seeds [several or numerous) transversely corrugated : otherivise as in § 2. Low 

 animals : stamens unequal and shorter than the corolla : style '2-cleft only at 

 the tip. — MiCROGENETES, Gray. (Microgenetes, A. DC.) 



V: Corolla almost rotate, the tube being shorter than the lobes : the internal ajyjyeiidages 

 10 transverse callous ridges just beloiu the throat, remote from the stamens. 



25. P. micrantha, Torr. Slender and delicate herb, branching and spreading 

 or procumbent, sliglitly hirsute and glandular : leaves thin, pinuately parted into 



