176 HYDROPHYLLACEiE. Eriodictyon. 



E. tomentosum, Bentll. 1. c. White-tomentose with a dense c,oat of short villous 

 hairs, sometimes rusty-colored with age, 6 to -10 feet high: branches leafy to the top: 

 leaves oblong or oval, rigid, obtuse (2 to 4 inches long) : cymes at length broad : calyx 

 densely and corolla slightly villous, the latter somewhat salverform and about twice the 

 length of. the former. — Torr. Mex. Bound. 148, &c. E. crassifolium, Benth. 1. c, described 

 from flowers with imperfect corollas. — Southern part of California, San Gabriel to San 

 Diego and Tejon. 



B. glutinosum, Benth. 1. c. Glabrate, glutinous with a balsamic resin, 3 to 5 feet 

 high : leaves lanceolate (3 to 6 inches long), irregularly more or less serrate, sometimes 

 entire, whitened beneath between the reticulations by a minute and close tomentum, above 

 glabrous : cymes in an elongated naked thyrsus : corolla tubular-funnelform (half an inch 

 long), thrice the length of the slightly and sparsely hirsute calyx. — Wigandia Californica, 

 Hook. & Arn. Bot. Beech. 364, t. 88. — Dry hills, rather common in California. Infusion 

 of the leaves in spirit used as a tonic, under the name of Yerba Santa. 



E. angustif olium, Nutt. Glabrate and glutinous : leaves narrowly linear or narrowly 

 lanceolate, rigid, and the margins at length revolute : corolla 2 or 3 lines long, short-f unnel- 

 form or approaching campanulate : otherwise nearly as in the preceding. — PI. Gamb. 181. 

 E. glutinosum, var. angustifolium, Torr. 1. c. — S. Nevada, Arizona, and adjacent parts of New 

 Mexico. Leaves 1£ to 4 inches long, 1 to 3 lines wide. 



14. HYDR6LEA, L. (TBcqq, water, the plants inhabiting wet places.) 

 — Herbs, or rarely suffruticose plants (widely diffused in warm climates) ; with 

 ovate or lanceolatevpinnately veined entire leaves, numerous on the stems, often 

 with a spine in the axils, and clustered blue or rarely white flowers. Sepals dis- 

 tinct to the base. Corolla rotate or very open campanulate, 5-cleft. Stamens 

 about the length of the corolla : filaments dilated at the insertion. Capsule 

 globular ; the fleshy or spongy placentas very large. Seeds minute, generally 

 striate-ribbed. Styles and placentae occasionally varying to 3. — Ours appear to 

 be perennials, flowering through the summer. 



H. corymbosa, Ell. Spineless or nearly so : stem slender, a foot or two high, above 

 minutely pubescent: leaves lanceolate, nearly sessile (an inch or so long), glabrous: 

 flowers in a terminal corymbose cyme : sepals linear-lanceolate, villous-hispid ; shorter 

 than the corolla : filaments and styles long and filiform. — Sk. i. 336 ; A. W. Bennett in 

 Jour. Linn. Soc. xi. 275. — Pine-barren ponds, S. Carolina to Florida. Expanded corolla 

 two-thirds of an inch in diameter. 



H. affinis, Gray. More or less spiny, glabrous throughout or nearly so : stems ascend- 

 ing : leaves lanceolate, somewhat petioled (2 to 5 inches long) : flowers in short axillary 

 leafy-bracted clusters : sepals ovate, equalling the corolla : styles shorter than the capsule. 

 — Man. ed. 5, p. 370. H. leptocaulis, Featherman, Louisiana Univ. Rep. 1871. — S. Illinois 

 to Texas. Often confounded with the next. 



H. Caroliniana, Michx. More or less spiny, sparsely villous-hispid or the leaves 

 nearly glabrous : stem ascending : leaves lanceolate, short-petioled (3 or 4 inches long) : 

 flowers in short axillary clusters, or solitary in the upper axils : sepals linear or linear- 

 lanceolate, about the length of the corolla: styles shorter than the capsule. — Fl. i. 177. 

 H. quadrivalvis, "Walt. Car. 110, an older but false and deceptive name. H. paniculata, Raf. 

 Neobot. 64. — N. Carolina to Florida and Louisiana ? (S. Amer.? ) 



H. ovata, Nutt. Spiny, minutely soft-pubescent and above slightly hirsute: stems a 

 foot or two high, paniculately branched at summit : leaves ovate, sometimes ovate-lan- 

 ceolate (8 to 20 lines long) : flowers clustered at the end of the branches : sepals lanceolate, 

 very villous-hirsute, shorter than the corolla ; this an inch broad when expanded : filaments 

 and especially the styles long and filiform. — Fl. Arkans. in Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. ser. 2, 

 v. 196; Chois. Hydrol. t. 1 ; A. W. Bennett, 1. c. 270. H. ouatifolia, Raf. % Neobot. (1836), 

 64. H. Ludoviciana, Featherman, I. c. — Margin of ponds, Arkansas, W. Louisiana, and 

 Texas. (S. Amer.) 



