V. PLANTS "WRIGHTIAN^. 45 



an inch and a half long, 8 or 9 lines wide, green above, beneath veiny and silvery, 

 with a very fine and close whitish pubescence. Racemes strict, not interrupted, 

 many-flowered ; the " purple " flowers smaller than in G. glabella, 5 to 6 lines long. 

 Pedicels a line long, shorter than the lanceolate deciduous bracts. Calyx-teeth tri- 

 angular-lanceolate, nearly twice the length of the tube. Fruit not seen. 



112. Galactia Texana, Gray, PI. Lindh. 2. p. 170. Lablab Texanus, Scheele 

 in Linncea, 2\. p. 467. Banks of the Leona River, June; in fruit. 



% CoLOGANiA ANGUSTiFOLiA (Ku7ith, Mimos. p. 209. t. 58): "volubilis; foliis li- 

 nearibus obtusis subconcoloribus utrinque strigulosis ; calycibus hispido-pilosis " 

 (Kunth ex DC); legumine falcati-gladiato hirto. — New Mexico, near El Paso? 

 coll. of 1851. — This appears to be Kunth's C. angustifolia ; but I have not the 

 work in which it is described and figured to refer to. Our plant has a strong and 

 deep perennial root ; from which proceed slender, branching, striate-angled, herba- 

 ceous stems, cinereous-hirsute, as is the foliage, &c., with copious short strigulose 

 hairs. Petioles 6 to 9 lines long. Leaflets from one to nearly two inches in length, 

 about two lines wide, of rather firm texture, exactly linear, very obtuse at both 

 ends, mucronate. Flowers in pairs, or sometimes solitary in the axils, on peduncles 

 half an inch long, which are bibracteate at the base and minutely bibracteolate next 

 to the villose-hirsute calyx : bracts and bractlets subulate. Corolla apparently vi- 

 olet-purple. Vexillum biappendiculate at the base with narrow inflexed margins. 

 Legume narrowly linear, an inch to an inch and a half long, compressed, sabre- 

 shaped, 7 - 9-seeded. Seeds oval, with a small hilum, not strophiolate. 



J C. PULCHELLA, H.B.K. Nov. Gen. Sf Sp. 6. p. 414; DC. I c. ; Schlecht. in 

 Linncea, \2. p. 287. New Mexico, near El Paso'? coll. of 1851 ; in flower only. — 

 The specimens are more pubescent and cinereous, the leaflets thicker and more 

 veiny, the flowers rather smaller and the calyx more hairy than in No. 603 of Coul- 

 ter's Mexican collection, which is named C. pulchella by Bentham, and they belong 

 perhaps to a different species, but they accord well with Kunth's character. 



113. Indigofera Lindheimeriana, Scheele in Linncea, 21. p>. 464. On the 

 Honda and San Felipe ; June. " Flowers red." — This is more cinereous than I. 

 Anil (to which I had referred it in PI. Lindh. 2. p. 172), and the pods are longer 

 and somewhat flatter, not tetragonal, but rather compressed (as De Candolle charac- 

 terizes I. Anil) : I see no other essential diff'erence. 



J L leptosepala, Nutt., var. undique cinereo-argentata. — Between Texas and 

 El Paso; coll. of 1851. 



114. Psoralea cyphocalyx. Gray, PI. Lindh. 2. p. 172. Banks of the Honda 

 River, Western Texas ; June. 



115. P. hypog^a, Nutt, var. scaposa. Gray, PI. Lindh. 2. p. 173. Southern 

 and Western Texas.* 



115 (bis). Eysenhardtia amorphoides, H.B.K. Nov. Gen. Sf Spec. Q. p. 491, t. 

 592; Gray, PI. Lindh. 2. p. 173. E. Texana, Scheele in Linncea, 21. p. 462. 

 Rocky hills, Austin, Texas. 



* Psoralea Floridana, Shiittleuwth, PI. Riigel, No. 163, appears to be just the same as P. Lupinellus; 

 the legume of which should not have been called " small" in the Flora of N. America. 

 VOL. III. ART. 5. — 7. 



