PLANTS COLLECTED BY DR. GAMBEL. 157 
whitely pubescent purple stem. Tube of the flower very long compared with the 
_ length of the border, whose segments are oval, of a fine rose red with a yellow throat, 
making a very bright appearance. 
Has. On moist rocks, on the Oregon near the outlet of the Wahlamet; the only 
place where we saw it. (Nuttall.) 
FENZLIA. 
F. *spECIOSA. Copiously branching from the base, nearly glabrous; leaves linear, entire ; flowers 
pedunculate, (concolor, nearly white?) border of the corolla as long as the elongated segments of the 
smooth calyx. 
Closely allied to G. dianthoides, yet decidedly distinct. We have seen many 
specimens, and they are usually a span high, (in place of two or three inches, ) much 
branched from the base, branches with opposite branchlets. Leaves narrow, linear, 
and as well as the upper parts of the stems a little pubescent. Flowers inclined to 
form a trichotomous loose panicle. Segments of the calyx narrow, linear, shorter in 
proportion than in G. dianthoides. Corolla widely funnel-formed, the segments 
broadly obovate, the border denticulate; the corolla yellowish-white, and with the 
throat of the same colour. Style and stigmas scarcely exserted beyond the throat of 
the corolla; the stigmas rather long and filiform. This section is so perfectly natural 
and distinct from all the other Gilias, that we cannot help regretting its abolition as 
a genus. 
Has. On the island of Catalina. Flowering in February. 
F. *concinna. ©. Very dwarf and somewhat pubescent, branching from the base ; leaves linear, flowers a 
nearly sessile; segments of the calyx longer than the cup. 
A very elegant but minute plant, scarcely more than an inch or an inch anda half 
high, with a much shorter but nearly as broad a flower as that of F. dianthiflora, of 
a delicate rose purple with a yellow base, and five purple spots. The calyx is 
somewhat hirsute, ovules in each cell, about twelve in a double series, angular with 
a concave depression. 
Has. Near San Diego, Upper California. Flowering in May. (Nuttall.) 
LEPTODACTYLON. 
ak *omsPITosuM. Diffusely caespitose, herbaceous and smooth ; leaves imbricated, the segments about three, 
flat, with sharp subulate points; the tube of the corolla exserted; segments cuneate, entire. 
A very distinct species from ZL. hookert and L. pungens of Torrey, which are 
suffruticose. In this the flower is white, something resembling a Phlox, but the base 
of the border is somewhat concave; ovules few. This species formed dense tufts of 
one or two feet in diameter, but only two or three inches high. 
