Gi'osstilariece^ 
CALIFORNIA.— SUPPLEMENT. 
345 
into about 6 filiform downy stigmas. Capsule coriaceously membranaceous, as in Cerastium, globose, ter- 
minated by the style and stigmas, and firmly surrounded by the twisted withered corolla, separating trans- 
versely at the base, and there cleft into about 6 segments, leaving the short stipes in the form of a fleshy ring. 
Seeds numerous, dark-brown, hard, shining, smooth, reniformi-globose, each attached to a long white podo- 
sperm, arising from the base of the cell. Embryo terete, yellow, curved round the white mealy albumen. 
Radicle short. Cotyledons long, unequal. 
We do not find all the petals equal and narrow-lanceolate, as represented by Mr Nuttall. 
Mr Nuttall considers this plant as intermediate between FicoidecB and CactoidecB ; but the above descrip- 
tion and accompanying plate confirm the views we have all along entertained of its close affinity with Portu- 
lacecR. With that Order it agrees in the one-celled capsule, the long podosperms and stigmas, the structure of 
the seed-coat, albumen, and embryo, and with some of the species in the marcescent corolla twisting round the 
pistil. It differs principally in the more numerous sepals (Torrey and Gray having lately limited Portulacea 
to those genera which have two or rarely three sepals), and by the capsule bursting from the base upwards. 
If, however, it be thought necessary to form of it a new Order, surely the name Lewisieas is much to be pre- 
ferred to the barbarous one given by Nuttall, derived from that by which the plant is known to some of 
the Indian tribes. 
Tab. LXXXVI. — A. Flowering specimen, with growing leaves ; part of the root with the bark taken 
off, exhibiting the state in which it is eaten.— B. Specimen in fruit, with the old dry leaves : — nat. size. — 
Pig. 1. Side view of a flower; Jig. 2. Stamens ; Jig. 3. Pistillum ; Jig. 4. Ovary laid open, showing the 
ovules ; Jig. 5. Ovule, with its podosperm ; Jig. 6. Capsule firmly enveloped with the marcescent petals ; 
f. 7. Capsule separated from the receptacle, splitting upwards at the base ; f. 8. Seed ; f. 9. Seed laid open, 
showing the albumen and embryo ; Jig. 10. & 11. Embryo, with its unequal cotyledons. 
Ord. XXIV. GROSSULARIE^. De Cand. 
1 . Ribes tenuijlorwm. Lindl. — Hook. FI. Bor. Am. 1 . p. 285. 
2. R. malvaceum. Sm. in Rees’ Cycl. XXX. n. 13. DC. Prod. III. p. 483. Benth. m 
Hort. Soc. Trans. N. S. I. p. 476. Don in Sweet Br. FI. Card. N. S. IV. t. 340. — R. san- 
guineum. Hook, et Arn. supra^ p. 141. — a. bracteis subintegris. — /3. bracteis incisis. 
Mr Bentham, in the Hort. Soc. Transactions, appears to describe this as a new species, without advert- 
ing to the circumstance that it had been long ago accurately defined by Smith, under the same name, from 
specimens collected by Menzies. In the Flor. Bor. Am. it is united to R. sanguineum, from which, how- 
ever, we are now convinced it is perfectly distinct, on account of the short pedicels. Both these species 
have the branches of the style very short and recurved, while in R. glutinosum they are long and upright. 
3. R. glutinosum {Benth.) : inerme, foliis cordatis sub-5-lobis serratis venosis utrinque 
glabriusculis subviscosis, racemis 30-40-floris laxis pubescentibus folio 2-3-plo longioribus, 
pedicellis flore longioribus, calycis tubuloso-campanulatis laciniis oblongis obtusis paten- 
tibus petala (rubra) integerrima superantibus, bracteis oblongo-lanceolatis, baccis tur- 
binatis hirsutis. Benth. in Hort. Soc. Trans. N. Ser. 1. jo. 476. 
4. R. Menziesii. Pursh, FI. Am. Sept. II. p. 732. Hook, et Arn. supra, p. 141. — R. 
ferox. Sm. in Rees' Cycl. XXX. n. 26. 
5. R. speciosum. Pursh, FI. Am. Sept. II. jo. 731. — R. stamineum. Sm. in Rees’ Cycl. 
XXX. n. 30. 
2 X 
