GENUS 28, FIGWORT FAMILY. 207 
3. Dasystoma serrata (Benth.) Small. 
Serrate False Foxglove. Fig. 3814. 
D. Drummondii serrata Benth. in DC. Prodr. 10: 
521. 1846, 
G. grandiflora integriuscula A. Gray, Syn. Fl. N. 
Am, 2': 291. 1871. 
Gerardia grandiflora serrata Robinson, in A. Gray, 
Man. Ed. 7, 730. 1908. 
Dasystoma serrata Small, Bull. Torr. Club 28: 451. 
1901, 
Perennial, grayish puberulent or finely pubes- 
cent; stems 1°-3%° tall, often widely branched. 
Leaf-blades of the lower part of the stem pin- 
natifid and their segments entire, merely serrate 
and much smaller above; calyx-tube 24-3” 
broad during anthesis; calyx-lobes linear-lanceo- 
late to lanceolate, entire; corolla 1/13’ long; 
capsules ovoid or globose-ovoid, 5’-74” long, 
short-beaked. 
In dry soil, Missouri to Louisiana and Texas. 
July-Sept. : 
4. Dasystoma grandiflora (Benth.) Wood. 
Western False Foxglove. Fig. 3815. 
Gerardia grandiflora Benth. Comp. Bot. Mag. 1: 206. 
1835. 
D. Drummondii Benth. in DC. Prodr. 10: 520. 1846. 
D. grandiflora Wood, Bot. & Flor. 231. 1873. 
Perennial, cinereous-puberulent and roughish; 
stem much branched, very leafy to the top, 2°-3° 
high, the branches ascending or spreading. Leaves 
short-petioled, thin, ovate or ovate-lanceolate in 
outline, all pinnatifid or deeply incised, 2’-4’ long, 
the lobes acute or obtuse, serrate, or nearly entire; 
upper leaves smaller, sessile; pedicels, even in fruit, 
shorter than the calyx; calyx-lobes oblong or ovate, 
dentate or entire, about as long as the tube; corolla 
14’-2’ long, glabrous without, its tube much ex- 
panded above. 
In dry woods and thickets, Minnesota and Wisconsin 
to Tennessee, Kansas and Texas. July—Aug. 
5. Dasystoma laevigata Raf. Entire- 
leaved False Foxglove. Fig. 3816. 
Gerardia laevigata Raf. Ann. Nat. 13. 1820. 
Dasystoma quercifolia var. integrifolia Benth. in 
DC. Prodr. 10: 520. 1846. 
Dasystoma laevigata Raf.; Chapm. Fl. S. States, 
Ed. 2, 636. 1883. 
Perennial, glabrous or very nearly so, not 
glaucous; stem strict, simple, or sparingly 
branched, 1°-3° high, the branches ascending. 
Leaves usually all petioled, lanceolate or ovate- 
lanceolate, 13’-4’ long, entire, or the lowest 
dentate or incised; pedicels shorter than the 
calyx, or in fruit longer; calyx-lobes ovate- 
lanceolate, equalling or shorter than the tube; 
corolla glabrous without, 1’-134’ long, the limb 
fully as broad, the tube much expanded above; 
capsule glabrous, twice as long as the calyx. 
In dry thickets, Pennsylvania to Michigan, 
Georgia and Missouri. July—Aug. 
