770 SCROPHULARIACEAE. | Jovellana. 
B. Rhinanthideae. Under-lip or lateral lobes of the corolla coverang the upper in bud. 
* Stamens 2, 
Shrubs or herbs. Leaves opposite, often imbricate and quadri- 
faricus in the New Zealand species. Corolla rotate or tube 
short; limb 4-lobed or rarely 5-lobed ~e es .. 7, VBRONICA, 
** Stamens 4. 
Corolla 5-lobed, campanulate or nearly so, tube short. Stigma 
capitate Pe = as +4 ve . 
Corolla 2-lipped, tube short. Ovary usually with several ovules 
in each cell, rarely reduced to two tc 7 oe Y. EUPHRASIA, 
Corolla 2-lipped, tube exceedingly long, gibbous, upper lip entire. 
Stigma 2-lobed .. os ste se - . 10, StPHONIDIUM. 
8. OURISIA, 
1. JOVELLANA Ruiz and Pavoir. 1774. 
Herbs or small under-shrubs, erect or creeping. Leaves opposite, 
simple; margins more or less toothed or crenate. Flowers in few- or 
many-flowered terminal panicles. Calyx inferior, 4-partite; segments 
subequal. Corolla-tube very short, 2-lipped; the lips nearly equal and 
both concave, the lower one not conspicuously larger and slipper-shaped. 
Stamens 2, inserted near the base of the corolla-tube ; anther-cells con- 
tiguous, adnate. Style short; stigma capitate. Capsule ovate-conical, 
2-celled. Seeds striate. 
A small genus of 4 species, 2 of which are found in New Zealand, the remaining 
2 in Chile. It is very closely allied to Calceolaria ; from which it only differs in the 
2 lips of the corolla being nearly alike in size, whereas in Calceolaria the lower lip 
is very much larger than the upper. 
Stems erect. Leaves ovate, 1-3in. long. Panicles usually 
many-flowered .. 1. J. Sinclairia, 
Stems creeping. Leaves broadly ovate or orbicular, 4-1 in. 
long. Panicle 1—5-flowered be &s a .. 2. J, repens. 
We.}. 
l. J. Siuélairht lane m Pflanzenr, Heft 28 (1907) 18.—More or less 
glandular-pubescent in all its parts. Stems slender, erect, laxly branched, 
6-l18in. high. Leaves opposite, on slender petioles 1-3in, long; blade 
I-3in., ovate or elliptic-ovate, obtuse or subacute, obliquely rounded or 
almost cordate at the base, coarsely crenate-toothed or -lobed, the lobes 
again toothed, membranous, pubescent on both surfaces, paler below. ; 
Panicles terminal, branched, few- or many-flowered; pedicels slender. 
Flowers small, {4 in, diam., white or yellow spotted with purple. Calyx- 
lobes small, deltoid, acute. Corolla pubescent, divided about 4-way down 
into 2 nearly ‘equal concave lips, the upper lip but slightly smaller. 
Stamens on very short filaments ; anthers orbicular. Capsule din. long.— 
Hook. Ic, Plant. (1843) t. 561; Raoul Choiw (1846) 43; Hook. f. Fl. Nov. 
Zel. 1 (1853) 187; Handb. N.Z. Fl. (1864) 201; Bot. Mag. t. 6597; Cheesem. 
Man. N.Z, Fl. (1906) 483; Ill. N.Z. Fl. ii (1914) t. 147. ©. albula and 
C. Sturmii Col. in Trans. N.Z. Inst. xxvii (1895) 391, 392. Jovellana 
albula Kranzl. and Sturmii Kranzl. Pflanzeny. Heft 28 (1907) 20. 
R Nort IsLanp: From Hicks Bay and the East Cape to Hawke’s Bay and the 
eee Mountains, Sinclair, Colenso! Bishop Williams! Guthrie-Smith ! Adams and 
elrie! W. Townson / &e, Sea-level to 1500 ft. November—February. 
Col ee in his monograph of the genus printed in the “ Pflanzenreich,” admits 
lo ee S ‘alceolaria albula and ©. Sturmii as distinct species, a view with which I 
cannot coincide. I cannot even separate them as varieties. 
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