202 
LIII. SCROPHULAKINEiE. 
[' Calceolaria . 
2. C. repens. Hook. f. FI. N. Z. i. 187. A very slender, branched, 
creeping, pubescent herb. Leaves with slender petioles, -j-f in. long, orbicular, 
broadly ovate-oblong or ovate-cordate, irregularly and unequally doubly- 
toothed or crenate, very membranous. Panicles very few-flowered. Flowers 
} in. across. Calyx half-superior. 
Northern Island: ravines and forests at the hase of the Ruahine range, Colenso. 
2. MIMILLUS, Linn. 
Erect or creeping herbs. Flowers solitary and axillary in the New Zealand 
species. — Calyx tubular or short, terete or 5-angled, 5 -toothed or -lobed. 
Corolla campanulate, 2-lipped ; upper lip erect or reflexed, 2-lobed ; lower 
3-lobed, usually with 2 protuberances at the throat, lobes all flat. Stamens 
4 ; anther-cells diverging, finally confluent. Stigma 2-lamellate. Capsule 
loculicidal, 2-valved ; valves separating from the placentas. 
A considerable genus, found in various parts of the world, hut not in Europe, except as 
an introduced plant. 
Glabrous. Leaves sessile 1. M. repens. 
More or less pilose. Leaves petiolate 2. 31. radicans. 
1. M. repens, Br .; — FI. N. Z. i. 188. A small, creeping, succulent, 
perfectly glabrous herb ; stems branched, 1-5 in. long. Leaves -g— J in. long, 
oblong or broadly ovate, sessile or stem-clasping, quite entire. Peduncle 
axillary, 1-flowered, longer or shorter than the leaves. Calyx variable 
in form, from obconic to hemispherical ; lobes obscure. Corolla large, \ in. 
across, pale-blue with yellow throat. — Bot. Mag. t. 5423. 
Northern and Middle Islands : not rare in muddy places, bogs, etc., Banks and 
Solander, etc. Also a common Tasmanian and South-Eastern Australian plant. 
2. M. radicans, Hook. f. FI. N. Z. i. 188. Stem creeping and root- 
ing, with short, leafy branches. Leaves spreading, close together, ^—1 in. 
long, petiolate, obovate, obtuse, quite entire, glabrous or pilose. Peduncle 
stout, erect, longer or shorter than the leaf, 1- or 2-flowered, with a subulate 
bract in the middle or at the fork. Calyx 5 -cleft, pilose. Corolla large, £ 
in. broad. 
Northern Island : Tararua mountains and Wairarapa valley, Colenso. Middle Island : 
common in swampy places, ascending to 1200 ft., from Nelson, 3Iunro, etc., to Otago, 
Lindsay. 
3. MAZUS, Loureiro. 
Herbs. Leaves opposite or fascicled. Flowers in terminal, leafless racemes, 
or solitary. — Calyx bell-sliaped, 5-fid. Corolla: upper lip 2-fid ; lower larger, 
3-fid, with two protuberances at the throat. Stamens 4 ; anther-cells 
diverging. Stigma equally 2-lamellate. Capsule globose or compressed, lo- 
culicidal, 2-valved ; valves entire, separating from the placentas. 
A small Indian, Chinese, and Australian genus. 
1. M. Pumilio, Br. ; — FI. N. Z. i. 189. Stem creeping underground, 
sending out very short, leafy branches. Leaves fascicled, spreading, \-2 in. 
long, petioled, narrow obovate-spathulate, obtuse, nearly entire or lobulate, 
membranous, glabrous or sparingly pilose. Scape slender, 1-6-flowered. 
