B OT AN Y . 



143 



Ellisia MEMBRANACEA, Bcutli. hi Trans. Linn. Soc. 17,2^- -"-il I Alph. DC. I. c. p. 292. Moist 

 shady places, San Diego, California ; Parry. Coulter's No. 470 is the same. 

 ] Ellisia ciirysanthemifolia, Benth. I. c; Alph. DC. h c. Santa Barbara, California, 



and near Tucson, Sonora ; Parry. Oar specimens agree with Douglas' original ones, except 

 that the flowers are more developed in the former than in the latter. The corolla is nearly twice 

 as long as the calyx, 



PiiACELrA cmciNATA, Jacq. fl Ed. 1, p. 135^ t, 91, d: Alph. DG. Prodr. 9, p. 298. Dry hills 

 near Santa Barbara and Monterey, California^ April — May ; Parry. 



PiiACELTA INTEGRIFOLIA, ToTT, iTi Ann. Lyc. New Yovlc^ 2^ p. 222,^3. ^ear El Paso, etc., 

 March — Aprilj and Chihuahua, August; TJacrher. (No. 1581, WrigliL) The specimens from 

 these stations resemble the original plant; hut others, from the Mimbres and Sonora, hare the 



leaves more or less deeply pinnatifid and the segments often 



Wright,') 



\ so that the specific name is not appropriate. The capsule is globose. The four seeds are oval, 



rough, with minute warts on the back, and the face is strongly corrugated transversely, as well 

 as marked with a longitudinal ridge. 



Phacelia coxgesta, IIooL BoL Mag. t 3452 ; Alj^h. BO, L c. ' Rocky hills near Camp Bache, 

 and near the Copper Mines, July — August; Blgeloio, Near San Antonio, Texas, April — May; 

 Thurher. Nos, 1574, and 1576, Wright ; also, ? 1755, a dwarf form. 



Phacelia tanacetifolia, Benih. ?, c; Alph, DC, I. c. Hills near Monterey, California, May; 

 Parry. San Diego, May; Thurher. Var. texuifolia. P, tenuifolia, Harv. 3ISS. PL CouU. 



■r 



San Diego and other places ia California, March ; Parry ^ Thurher. This is surely only a slender 

 leaved var. of P. tanacetifolia, Var. latifolia: foliis segmentis ovato-oblongis grosse dentatis. 

 Mountains east of San Diego, June; Parry. 



Phacelia Neomexicaxa {Thurh. 31SS.) : erecta, pilis patentibus pubescentia viscosa intermix- 

 tis ; foliis pinnatisectis, segmentis valde inequalibus^ iitrinc|ue 4-6 cum imparl oblongis inciso-den- 

 tatis, lobis ovatis subdentatis acutiusculis ; racemis spiciformibus densifloris corymbosis ; floribus 



subsessilibus ; lobis calycis oblongis ; corolla calyce subduplolongiore campanulata, margine 

 eroso-dentata ; staminibus vix exsertis. Pine woods near the Copper Mines, New Mexico, 

 August; Tliurher. (No, 1577, Wright.) Stem 1-2 feet high, hispidly pilose and viscidly 

 pubescent. Leaves 3-4 inches long, thin, the segments rather distant, about an inch long. 

 Calyx not enlarged in fruit. Corolla about 3 lines in diameter, the appendages near the base 

 with their free margins reflexed. Filaments smooth. Style hairy below. Capsule globose-ovate. 

 Phacelia (Eutoca) loas.efolia. Eutoca L0AS>EFaLTA, Benth. I. c. Monterey, California, May ; 

 Parry. Also found by Rev, Mr. Fitch, but the station not recorded. We strongly suspect this 

 to be only P. malva^flora, Cham. & Schhcht, in Linnoiaj 4, p. 494. The only discrepancy is the 

 number of seeds said to occur in that species ; but there may have been more ovules, only part 

 of which ripened. 



(E 



Cosmanthus viscidus. 



Alph. DC. Prodr. 9, p. 296. Bushy places near Santa Barbara, California, March. ''^ Flowers 

 yellowish,'^ Parry. Eutoca albiflora, Natt. PL Gamb.y seems to be scarcely distinct from 

 this species. Mr. Nuttall described from dried specimens, and was not sure that the flowers were 

 "white. 



Phacelia (Eutoca) Douglasii. Eutoca Douglasii, Benth. I. c. Sand hills, Dana's Ranch, 

 California, March ; Parry. Sepals linear-spatulate. Stamens included, '^dilated at the base, 



