502 HYDROPHYLLACE,E. Hydrophyllum. 



* * Leaves all or all but the lower alternate : flowers in cymes, scorpioid spikes, or racemes, or 



rarely in the forks of the stem. 



+- Style from 2-cleft at the apex to 2-parted. 



5. Phacelia. Calyx of 5 similar or slightly dissimilar mostly narrow divisions. Corolla de- 



ciduous, not yellow. Stamens equally inserted low down. Flowers clustered, spiked, or 

 racemed. 



6. Emmenanthe. Corolla yellow or cream-color and scarious-persistent. Otherwise as the 



preceding genus. 



7. Conanthus. Calyx of very narrow and similar divisions. Corolla deciduous, tubular-funnel- 



form : the unequal stamens unequally inserted on its tube. Flowers solitary in the leafy 

 forks and terminal. 



8. Tricardia. Calyx of 3 outer much enlarging cordate sepals and 2 inner linear ones. 



+- +- Style and even stigma entire. 



9. Eomanzoffia. Calyx of similar divisions. Corolla destitute of appendages. Leaves round- 



reniform and crenate-lobed. Flowers racemed. 



* * * Leaves (alternate) all radical : peduncles in their axils 1-flowered : style 2-cleft at apex. 



10. Hesperochiron. Corolla campanulate or nearly rotate, deciduous. 



Tribe III. NAMEiE. Ovary (more or less completely 2-celled), capsule, dehiscence, &c, 

 nearly of Phaceliece. Styles 2, distinct to the base, their tips thickened or stigmas capi- 

 tate. Herbs or shrubs. 



11. Nama. Corolla funnelform. Capsule membranaceous, 2-valved ; valves undivided. Low 



herbs or suffrutescent : leaves entire. 



12. Eriodictyon. Corolla funnelform or almost campanulate. Capsule crustaceous, splitting 



into 4 equal half-valves. Shrubs : leaves toothed. 



1. HYDROPHYLLUM, Tourn. Waterleaf. 



Calyx 5-parted into narrow divisions, nearly unchanged after flowering ; the 

 sinuses in our species entirely without appendages. Corolla campanulate, 5-lobed ; 

 the lobes oval, convolute in the hud, in the tube a nectariferous grooved appendage 

 opposite each lobe. Filaments and style filiform and exserted beyond the lobes of 

 the corolla : the former bearded with some long hairs near the middle : anthers 

 linear or oblong, inflexed in the bud. Ovary hispid with stiff straight hairs, 4- 

 ovuled. Capsule tardily 2-valved, 1 - 4-seeded. — Perennials (an annual species 

 in the Atlantic States) ; with erect and sparingly branching stems from clustered 

 horizontal rootstocks, mostly pinnately parted long-petioled leaves, and white or 

 violet flowers in close or cajfltate pedunculate cymes. 



A wholly North American genus, of six species, growing mostly in wooded or shaded places ; two 

 of them peculiar to the Rocky Mountain and Pacific regions and found in California ; a third, viz. 



H. Virginjctjm, Linn., is common to the Atlantic States and Oregon, and may be looked for 

 on our northern borders. This may readily be known by being comparatively smooth, and with 

 only 3 to 5 divisions to the cauline leaves, which are of ovate general outline. 



1. H. capitatum, Dougl. Only a span or so high, in tufts, with rather small 

 rootstocks and coarse fleshy-fibrous roots : leaves soft-hirsute or pubescent, and with 

 blade shorter than the petiole, ovate or roundish in general outline, 2 or 3 inches 

 long, pinnately parted or at base divided into 5 or 7 crowded 2 - 3-lobed leaflets or 

 divisions ; the lobes oblong, obtuse, mucronate : flowers in a close capitate cluster 

 on a very short peduncle : calyx very hispid : corolla bluish or violet : anthers ob- 

 long. — Benth. in Linn. Trans, xviii. 273. — In California we have only 



Var. alpinum, Watson. Almost stemless, the comparatively open cymes and the 

 petioles of the leaves rising directly out of the ground ; the calyx more white-hairy 

 and less hispid. — Bot. King Exp. 249. 



Sierra Nevada (Plumas Co., Mrs. Pulsifcr Ames) to Humboldt Mts., Nevada, Watson, &c. The 

 ordinary form of the species from Utah to Washington Territory. 



