a) oat & ~~ 2ce & OR GOR OS: ar Sod dene seekes wexawh ee enh eS ole mrt a ery as rf ‘ rpbteeeeee Chie Varss : rieitdesest bese Vp yean ese ee et feei es shyee + 5 erat babe) H tt} Laseres ; Chaser ranted febsiie oa) Sty edngegesee etensgy rhyeberegteredgiees thie? ~ qybavyettetes aqeebeed Tebeebleae a PeePEL bed geagsads it? ivhyy ryyabiat aerredartyas VEECPESHEU RE debs él 7 papvateent tates reeeeeeeryi toh) iT i SE tb) 1? eeenhiaeee t 1 teperet s} th rah teee ee osiev beeper ’ ’ t i? 3hht SHsogsthe put rh beered >) peseaede Luistesnpeieet ’ LeESPIE RTT LESSIS ES) ech trengeeepgceepbore reeernyy SPpeeapepeeeeseteey: Siagseeebraapei ays CArsbseTsegapirsaigl +4 iyssngyy? PTPEEL VELA S ECR Eee tho gene $3} LaRBi 7 Teagsadrcenapeen 13) Lacebgeguyee , Levee doe 2} is Heecnsesens ryargens iftit Prssttsnpsteeeyy vy eeaggyraes rey? beey pesepisensree easy pear F Hil dyty2ayt tht {ft) ty PUSeacaesen? Labeseareg DEGEC ERE GEE? tur PO FRAEARAERART LEAT carrie SERIITD rebenaage) ati) Be) rELEPHT Peas (doe Se eotena robe Tio : 2 a5 ; Te IE SSO Tg aed ee TD ores ipirtyteccrdetracere phat yarns Th haa if a é ree org a fey CP Ma > ae an ia od * 2 % Per 3 AN ENUMERATION OF = F ae Oe = fs a ~ ee oe ae fg OWES ae > : ‘2 a ad + Sn. 4 Ess ; gee TF “ -_ - = . WITH REMARKS, AND DESCRIPTIONS OF b: my ae] 4; 3S R m A p> gis OE NEW YORK BS _ NEW SPECIES, ETC. \8 OTA HED 44> Be GEORGE. ENGELMANN ann ASA GRAY. a= “an _ [From the Boston Journal of Natural History. Vol. V.] BOSTON: "PRINTED BY FREEMAN AND BOLLE a 1845. = Spo griee a ae : a. fa om 22°68 Fc me . Mr. Linpuermer’s plan for exploring the botany of Texas, and preparing specimens of dried plants for distribution, was announced in Silliman’s Journal for July, 1843. 'The-collec- tion of that season, owing to various misfortunes, havirlg been much smaller than was anticipated, it was thought best to defer its distribution until that for the year 1844 should come to hand. A part of the second collection was lost in the course of transmission to St. Louis; those which were received in sufficient quantity for distribution extend the number to 318. Mr.-Lindheimer is now entering upon an unexplored field west of the Colorado River, and we may confidently expect that a rich harvest of peculiar plants will .-~—yeward-his efforts during the present season. ‘This collection will be assorted and distributed without delay, and our ac- count of them duly published in the pages of this journal. The collection of 1843 was made on Galveston Island, around Houston, on the Brazos, &c. ‘The series commences with some species of Ranuncutus, allied to &. pusillus, which, having been long since distinguished by Dr. Engel- mann, and communicated to various botanists under the» following names, the characters as assigned by him are here given. 1. Ranuncutvs Texensts (Engel. MSS.): caule erecto ramosissimo basi hispido; foliis petiolatis, inferioribus ovatis subcordatis denticulatis, superioribus lineari-lanceolatis, basi petiolorum membranaceo-dilatata bracteisque ciliatis ; petalis 5 oblongis sepala ovata obtusa longe superantibus ; staminibus plurimis ; carpellis subglobosis acutis minutim tuberculosis in capitulum globosum congestis. — Margin of ponds, &c. near MAY { Plante Lindheimeriane. 3 Houston. April. A span to a foot high, with conspicuous bright yellow petals. . 2. R. rracuyspermus (Engel. MSS.): caule ramoso gla- bro; foliis petiolatis, inferioribus plerumque orbiculato-ovatis obtusis subintegris, superioribus lanceolatis lineari-lanceola- tisve denticulatis, basi petiolorum membranaceo-dilatata brac- teisque subciliatis; sepalis 3-4 ovatis reflexis petala 3-5 minima lineari-spathulata superantibus; staminibus 5-10; carpellis compressis obtusis undique tuberculosis in capitulum oblongum seu cylindricum congestis. — Margin of ponds near Houston, &c. April, May. 3. R. TRacuyspermus, 8 aneustirotius (Engel. MSS.): foliis omnibus lanceolatis lineari-lanceolatisve ;—-and 7? (an spec.?) Linpuemert (Engel. MSS.): foliis inferioribus ovatis; sepalis 3-5 ovatis obtusis patentibus petala 3 lineari- spathulata zequantibus; carpellis compressis obtusiusculis tu- berculosis in capitulum globosum congestis. — Near Houston, &c. but not growing together with No. 2. 4, Crematis cytinprica, Sims. A narrow-leaved variety ;| the herbaceous stem beginning to flower in April, when only - a foot or so in height. Houston. 5. C. reticuuata, Walt. Houston. June. 6. Anemone Carouintana, Walt. Prairies, Houston. Feb- ruary, March. Ds Coccutus Caroxinus, DC. Houston. June. 8. StrepTanrHus uyacinTuoipes, Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 3516. West of the Brazos. July. 9. Crisratitya EROsA, Nuit.; Torr. & Gr. FI. I. p. 123. Sandy prairies on the Brazos. August. 10. Creometta Mexicana, DC. High prairies west of the Houston. April, August. 11. PoryeaLta Leprocauuis, Torr. & Gr. Fl. I. p. 130. West of the Brazos. August.— More or less }branched. Capsules ovate, with glands along the dissepiment on the face of the valves. 12. P. nvcarnata, Linn. Houston. April. BOTANIC aL L4ape®: 4 Engelmann and Gray, 13. Krameria tanceouata, Torr. in Ann. Lyc. New York, II. p.168. The root of Krameria lanceolata is ligne- ous, 2 to 3 lines thick, and very long, of a dark red color, and has the same chemical and medicinal properties as the South American Ratanha, (root of K. triandra, R. & P.) As the plant appears to be common in some parts of Texas, it might become valuable for collection and export.’ 14. Drosera Brevirouia, Pursh. Galveston Island. April. 15. Hexranrnemum capitatum, Nutt. (ex Torr. & Gr. Fl. I. p. 151.) H. polifolium, Torr. & Gr. l. c., which name is preoccupied in the genus. ‘The clusters are seldom capitate. May. 16. Lecuea Drummonnu, Torr. & Gr. Fl. I. p. 154. With the preceding. 17. Hypericum eyMNaNTHUM (n. sp.): annuum, caule sim- plici vel superne ramoso erecto quadrangulari; foliis e basi cordata ovatis ovati-oblongisve amplexicaulibus 5—7-nerviis pellucido-punctatis; cyma dichotoma pedunculata strictius- cula laxiflora aphylla, nempe foliis floralibus in bracteis parvis lanceolato-subulatis diminutis; floribus pedicellatis; sepalis lanceolatis acutis petala superantibus; staminibus 10-12; 1 Professor A. Braun, after examining the flowers of species of this genus, has suggested that the natural affinity of Krameria is with Leguminosae, rather than with Polygalacee. And, indeed, at least in this species, the two lateral glandu- lous petals cover in estivation the stamens; they cannot therefore belong to an interior circle, as Bentham supposes. The ovary is one-carpellary (against the type of Polygalacez) and irregularly one-sided, like the ovary of Leguminose ; it is imperfectly bilocular, by the inflection of the placenta, as in some Leguminose ; but in both cases are the cells always side by side ; on the contrary, in Polygalacee one is before the other. rameria may, then, be considered a pentandrous Legu- minosa, where one or two stamina are abortive. In K. lanceolata, it is the lowest stamen, opposite the three connected petals, which is wanting; but, in some flowers, a sterile filament occupies this place; it corresponds with the free 10th stamen of most papilionaceous flowers, as the four others, which are united in K. lanceolata, are analogous to the tube of nine connected filaments. The lateral sessile petals correspond with the carina, and the three others, whose claws are connected, with the ala and carina; the five sepals alternate with them, as the stamens alternate with the petals. The fruit resembles somewhat the indehiscent spiny legume of an Onobrychis; and, in all the specimens we have examined, it is one-seeded when ripe. Engel. MSS. b ad ~, c q* oe m™ aney wer ™. J@SIRaTtTor ~ s “zane Ae ™~ ~ Plante Lindheimeriane. 5 capsula ovato-conica calycem vix superante uniloculari; se- minibus flavis longitudinaliter costatis. —Clayey ‘soil in pine woods near Houston. June. Also in Louisiana, Arkansas, &c. not uncommon. This is the plant mentioned in Torr. & Gr. Fl. N. Amer. under H. mutilum. It appears so different from the ordinary form of that species, that we are obliged to separate it. It varies from 6 to 20 inches in height. 18. Paronycuta Drummonnu, Torr. & Gr. Fl. I. p. 170. July. 19. P. seracea, Torr. & Gr. 1. c. West of the Brazos, with the preceding, &c. 20. Sirene Antirruina, Linn, var. suBGLABRA; and 21. var. pevieata; the leaves smooth, and with smooth margins. Galveston. 22. Linum Berenprert, Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 3480. Sandy downs of Galveston Island. April, May. Perennial? No. doubt distinct from L. rigidum. Styles ¢onnate above the middle. ‘The name should, if we mistake not, be L. Ber- landieri. 23. XantHoxytum Caroninranum, Lam. “ Pepper-tree, Toothache-tree.”” March. 24. Srpa LinpHeErmerti (n. sp.): annua? puberula; caule erecto ramoso; foliis linearibus vel oblongo-linearibus serratis basi subcordatis ; stipulis lanceolato-setaceis petiolum sub- cequantibus ; pedunculis folium demum equantibus; carpellis 10-12 reticulato-rugosis, apice breviter birostratis extus pu- bescentibus et angulo interno in dentem subuncinatum brevem introrsum productis. — Prairies east of the Brazos. June to August. (Also collected in Louisiana by Dr. Carpenter.) About 2 feet high; the leaves 1-2 inches long, and 2—4 lines wide. Peduncles articulated about three-fourths of an inch below the fruit. Flowers (the yellow corolla an inch or more in diameter) and fruit larger than in S. rhombifolia, from which the carpels of the present species differ by their shorter and blunter horns, reticulated sides, and by the tooth project- ’ 6 Engelmann and Gray, ing from the internal angle at the summit. JS. Elliottii has narrower leaves, shorter peduncles, and about 9 orbicular car- pels, which are only slightly bimucronate. 25. Matvaviscus Drummonnu, Torr. & Gr. Fl. I. p. 230. Wet places, Houston. August. Leaves 4 or 5 inches in breadth. This proves to be a very ornamental plant in culti- vation. 26. Vitis sipinnata, Torr. §& Gr. Prairies, Houston. June. 27. Vicra Lupoviciana, Nutt. Galveston and Houston. April. 28. Viena cuaBra. Savi? Thickets, Houston, &c. June, July.— The plant is hirsute, but the leaves are almost glabrous when old; the flowers hardly larger than those of the garden bean; the vexillum pale yellow, the carina deep yellow. Legume compressed, somewhat torulose, black, hirsute with whitish hairs; the seed black, with a white hilum. ‘The leaflets are broadly oval; but there is a variety @ aneustiroiia, which has lanceolate or linear-lanceokate leaves. Near brackish water on the coast of Galveston Bay. July. 29. Ruyncenosia minima, DC.; Torr. & Gr. Fl. I. p. 687. Houston. September. 30. R. menisperMoiweEA, DC. With the preceding, in hard, clayey soil. 31. Davusenronia tonerrotia, DC. Houston. August. 32. Tepurosia onosrycuoiwes, Nutt. A variety with silvery pubescence, and somewhat persistent stipules. Flow- ers white, soon turning to pale scarlet; the vexillum green in the middle. Prairies from Houston to the Brazos. April, August. 33. T. Virernrana, Pers., and 34. InpicorerRA LepTosePaLa, Nutt. Houston and the Brazos. June, July. 35. Psoratea rHomBIFOLIA, Torr. & Gr. Fl. I.p. 308. Sandy places, Galveston Island, May. (Also collected by Dr, Plante Lindheimeriane. 7 Wright.) Stems diffuse, decumbent, from a filiform, often tuberiferous root. Leaflets of the lower leaves orbicular, of the upper rhombic-ovate and mostly acute. Peduncles in our specimens commonly shorter than the leaves. Legume mem- branous, suborbicular, rostrate, transversely dehiscent ; the upper part strigose-pubescent, the lower glabrous and some- what rugose. Seeds orbicular, compressed. The singular transverse dehiscence of the pod appears to confirm the opinion that Psoralea belongs to the tribe Hedysarez. 36. P. oprusinopa, Torr. & Gr.l.c. Dry prairies east of the Brazos, flowering early in the season. Legumes glandular. The allied, but distinct, P. floribunda is wrongly described as “canescent but not glandular,” whereas the plant is gen- erally glandular, often very much so. 37. AmorpHa panicuLtaTa, Torr. & Gr. Fl. I. p. 306. Thickets, Galveston Bay, and west of the Brazos. June, July. A stately plant, 6 to 9 feet high, the long spikes clustered in ample panicles. 38. A. euasra, Desf.; DC. prodr. 2. p. 256. Wet prairies, Houston, &c. 4 39. Dauea aurea, Nutt. West of the Brazos. June to August. 40. Peratostemon opovatum, Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 310. Brazos. August. 41. P. puieomrs 8 micropuytuum, Torr. & Gr. lL. c. Sandy elevations in the prairies west of the Brazos. July. 42. P. viotaceum, Michx.: a pubescent variety. 43. P. moittirtorum, Nuit. On the Brazos. August. 44. Trirotium reriexum, Linn. Galveston. May. 45. Astracatus Nurrauianus ? TricHocarpus, Torr. & Gr. Fl. I. p. 334. Coast of Galveston Island, on soil com- posed of fragments of shells; while A. Nuttallianus is found in prairies in the interior of the island. The present variety, if such it be, has rather shorter as well as hairy pods, with usually 7-8 seeds in each cell, while in the true A. Nuttalli- anus there are commonly 10-12. 8 Engelmann and Gray, 46. A. teprocarpus, Torr. & Gr. 1. c. April, with the preceding. 47. Mrwosa stricituosa, Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 399. Tet- ramerous, octandrous. Hard clayey soil. April, June. — We have this plant in cultivation. The foliage is nearly as sensi- tive to the touch as M. pudica. 48. Neprunia Lures, Benth. in Hook. Jour. Bot. IV. p. 356. Acacia lutea, Leav.; Torr. & Gr.l.c. Moist prairies, April — June. 49. Acacta uirta, Nutt. in Torr. , Gr. l. c. ; and 50. ? auaBrior. Dry, open woods around Eilisoas ; May, June, and frequently flowering again in September. 51. Acacta Farnesiana, Willd.; Benth. Nearly the only shrub on Galveston Island, where it attains the height of 6 or 7 feet, and forms considerable thickets. Its odorous flowers are produced in April or May. Certainly indigenous to Texas, and probably also to Florida. 52. Lyrurum avatoum, var. 7, Torr. & Gr. Fl. I. p. 482. “TL. foliosum, n. sp.” Engel. MSS. (who has noticed two states, viz., 1. staminewm; filaments as long as the darker colored petals, the style not exceeding the calyx, and the ovary frequently sterile? 2. stylosum ; filaments as long as the calyx only, the style as long as the apparently smaller and paler petals, or longer.) But, if a distinct species, it will fall under L. lanceolatum, Ell. 53. CGinoruersa Drummonpi, Hook. Downs of Galveston. April, May ; also in the autumn. 54, CE. wintronia, Nutt. Galveston Island. 55. CE. speciosa, Nutt. Houston. April, May. 56. (i. rnuomprpetaua, Nutt.in Torr. & Gr. Fl. I. p. 493. This handsome species, so remarkable for its acute or acumi- nate petals, has been cultivated in the botanic garden of Har- vard University from seeds received from Mr. Lindheimer. His specimens have broader leaves and petals than those from Arkansas ; the upper leaves ovate-lanceolate, closely sessile and somewhat cordate. The pods are cylindrical-prismatic, some- Plante Lindheimeriane. 9 what hairy and often incurved. ((. bifrons, Don, has rounded petals.) Galveston to the Brazos. June, July. 57. Lupwiera uirtecia, Raf.; Torr. & Gr. l.c. Houston. 58. L. LINEARIS, Var. PUBERULA: caule ramosissimo angu- lato foliisque junioribus minutim puberulis ; lobis calycis tri- angulari-lanceolatis acuminatis tubum «quantibus capsula elongato-turbinata subpedicillata dimidio brevioribus ; petalis flavis conspicuis. — Prairies and road-sides, Houston. June, September. Also in Alabama, Louisiana, &c.; these char- acters gradually shading away into the ordinary L. linearis, in its branching forms, so that we cannot consider it as a dis- tinct species. 59. Jusstma pecurrens, DC. Houston, &c. 60. Gaura sinuara, Nutt. Steep river-banks, &c., west of the Brazos. August. 61. Gaura LinpHermertr (n. sp.): perennis, erecta, vir- gato-ramosa, strigoso-pubescens vel hirsuta ; foliis infimis spathulatis lyrato-pinnatifidis sinuatisve, caulinis sessilibus lan- ceolatis acutis sinuato-dentatis vel undulatis, supremis plerum- que integris ; bracteis ovato-lanceolatis acuminatis scariosis caducis ; calycis tubo ovarium sessile equante segmentis (in alabastro hirsutis) mulio breviore ; petalis 4 spathulato-rhom- boideis breviter unguiculatis subadscendentibus staminibus 8 styloque deflexis paulo brevioribus ; nuce tetraquetra circum- scriptione ovali utrinque acuta, faciebus usque ad medium carinato-costatis fere levigatis. — Prairies from Houston to the Brazos, flowering from April to May, and through the summer. In the botanic garden of Harvard University, where it is cul- tivated from seeds collected by Mr. Lindheimer, it also flowers through the whole summer, and proves to be a very showy and elegant species. It attains the height of from 3 to 6 feet, and its copious racemose branches produce a long succession of blossoms which are of a large size for this genus. The petals, which are often three-fourths of an inch long, are pure white changing to rose color ; the calyx is reddish. Flowers always tetramerous and octandrous. This is probably the 2 10 Engelmann and Gray, same as the Texan plant referred by Spach to G. tripetala, Cav.; but it does not agree with the figure of Cavanilles, nor olin any trimerous flowers. 62. Erynerum coronatum, Torr. & Gr. Fl. I. p. 604. Bottom woodlands on the Brazos. August. _ 63. Cynoscrapium pinnatum, DC. 8 pumitum. Differs from the larger and erect form (which is usually a foot or two in height,) in its low and diffuse stems, its umbellets with only four or five rays, and few or no involucral leaves. Prairies, Galveston. April, May. 64. Leprocauntis ecuinatus, Nutt. Galveston Island. 65. Discopteura capmtuacea, DC. Galveston. May. 66. Spermacoce GuaBra, Michx. Near Houston. Sept. 67. Mirreoua petiotata, Torr. &§ Gr. Swampy thickets west of Houston. 68. PoLypremum prRocumBeENs, Linn. Houston. June. 69. Hepyotis Boscu, DC. Houston. May and June. 70. VERNONIA ANGUSTIFOLIA, var. 7 Torr. & Gr. Wet prairies west of the Brazos. July. 71. Liarris etegans, Willd. Houston to the Brazos: 72. L. acwwora. = L. mucronata, Torr. & Gr. Fl. II. p. 70,non DC. Houston to the Brazos, in wet praries. Au- gust, September. In the Flora of North America, this species, which is apparently common in Western Louisiana and Texas, was hesitatingly referred to L. mucronata, DC., from the character of which it differs in some respects, principally in the form of the involucral scales. But among Lindheimer’s plants, some specimens of what is no doubt the true L. mu- cronata, DC. occur, (which have been distributed in some sets, probably mixed with L. acidota,) and which render it clear that the present is a different, although very nearly allied species. We have accordingly given a new name. The diagnosis may be expressed as follows; the habit, foliage, &c. being nearly the same in both; and the involucral scales’ more or less ciliate when young. L. mucronata: capitulis in spicam strictam arcte digestis ; Plante Lindheimeriane. 11 invol. squamis ovalibus obtusis abrupte mucronatis ; pappo plumoso achzenio pubescente vix longiore; caudice globoso. — Capitula (3—5 flora) et flores magnitudinis illorum L. tenui- flore. Texas, Berlandier, Lindheimer ; near Houston, and near the mouth of the Brazos. _L. acidota: capitulis in spicam strictiusculam sepius elon- gatam digestis; invol. squamis oblongo-lanceolatis (extimis tantum ovatis) purpurascentibus, sensim acuminato-cuspidatis ; pappo plumoso achenio puberulo subglabrove longiore ; cau- dice perpendiculari incrassato e cormo globoso.— Capitula (seepius 3-flora) squamz floresque iisdem L. mucronate duplo majora. Western Louisiana, Hale. Texas, Drummond, Lindheimer. 73. L. acrmora, 8 vernatis: caulibus; humilibus (spi- tham. — pedal.) multicipitibus ; spicis brevibus laxiusculis ; ca- pitulis seepius 4—5-floris. —Wet, sandy prairies, near Houston. April, May. 74. L. pycnosracuya, Michx. MHouston to the Brazos. August. | 75. Evparorrum rotunpirotium, Linn. Houston. Aug. 76. E. 1wcarnatum, Walt. Thickets near Houston. Sep- tember — October. (This delicate species, which is quite rare in herbaria, grows abundantly on the rocky banks of the French Broad River, North Carolina, about ten miles below Asheville.) 77. Mixanta scanpens, Willd. UHouston, &e. 78. AsteR puyLLoteris, Torr. & Gr. Fl. Il. p. 118. Prairies, Houston. June — October. 79. Ertczeron scaposum, DC. Quicksands of the downs of Galveston Island. April, and continuing to flower until October. 80. Gutrerrezia Texana, Torr. & Gr. Fl. Il. p. 194. Dry, barren soil, Houston. September — October. 81. Souipaco nitipa, Torr. & Gr. Ll. c. Prairies on Chocolate Bayou, 50 miles south of Houston. September, October. 12 Englemann and Gray, 82. S. renurronia, Pursh. Wet prairies. October. 83. S. LeprocepHaLa, Torr. & Gr. l. c. Wet prairies, Houston. September.— We have two forms; one with broader leaves and larger heads, bearing about 5 disk and 11 ray-flowers ; another, with narrower leaves and smaller heads, which have about 3 disk and 10 ray-flowers. 84. S. Boorrn, Hook.; Torr. & Gr.l.c. Houston. July — September. 85. S. rorriroiia, Ell. With the preceding. 86. BieeLovia nupaTa, § vireata, Torr. & Gr. I. c. Prairies on Chocolate Bayou. September. 87. Brappurta HiRTELLA, Torr. & Gr. Fl. IL. p. 250. Prairies, in hard, clayey soil, west of the Brazos. July, Au- gust.— The flowers of this very interesting and pretty plant are certainly yellow (a point which could not be positively determined from Drummond’s specimens,) and the genus was therefore rightly placed in the homochromous series. 88. Hererorueca scaspra, DC. Houston, &c. July. 89. Curysorsis craminirouia, Nutt.; and 90. C. pitosa, Nutt. Houston, &c. 91. Amprosrta coronoriroutia, Torr. & Gr. l. c. Sub- saline prairies, Galveston Bay, &c. July. 92. BerLANDIERA TOMENTOSA, 8 DEALBATA, Torr. & Gr. l. c. Sandy prairies west of the Brazos. June. 93. Zrinnta MuutTieLors, Linn. With the preceding. 94. Ecurnacea ancustirot1a, DC. Pine woods near Houston. April, May. The slender and original form of this species, which varies much as does E. purpurea. 'The peduncles are scarcely incrassated at the summit, the head hemispherical, with 8 to 13 narrow, rose-colored rays. The northern form, (E. sanguinea, Nutt.) is a much stouter plant, the peduncle much thickened at the summit, the head twice the size, and at length conical, with 12 to 16 dark red rays. Both forms are quite variable. 95. Rupgsecxia aLismzrouia, Torr. & Gr. l.c. Houston to the Brazos. Plante Lindheimeriane. 13 96. Hetriantuus cucumerirouius, Torr. & Gr. Fl. II. p. 319. Sandy soil, west of the Brazos. July, August. The mottled stems, with the leaves all cordate and coarsely toothed, and the narrow involucral scales quite reflexed and tapering gradually into long subulate points, are uniform in all the speci- mens. The foliage is deep green. 97. H. prmcox (n. sp.): annuus vel biennis; caule his- pido ramoso ; foliis alternis longe petiolatis (subcinereis) leviter serratis deltoideo-ovatis in petiolum abrupte attenuatis, infimis tantum cordatis ; pedunculis elongatis monocephalis ; involucri foliolis lanceolatis, subulato-acuminatis discum vix superanti- bus; corolla fl. disci atro-purpurea gracili; achenio piloso ; paleis pappi lanceolatis puberulis.—In loose sandy soil im- pregnated with salt, Galveston Island. April and May; in cultivation flowering from June to October. Plant 13-2! feet high ; the heads about as large as in H. cucumerifolius, to which it is nearly allied ; but from which it is constantly dis- tinguished by its smaller size, the slightly toothed and seldom cordate leaves, the broader and more abruptly pointed in- volucral scales, the slender disk-corollas, the nearly flat (instead of hemispherical) disk in fruit, &c., &c. 98. H. occipenratis g pLantacineus, Torr. & Gr. I. c. Bottom lands, south of Houston. August, September. 99. H. r1erus, Desf. Fertile prairies. Juné— August. 100. H. aneusriroxivus, Linn. Wet prairies. June— Aug. 101. Coreopsis Drummonnu, Torr. & Gr. 1. c. Sandy downs of Galveston Island. May — October. 102. C. rincrorta, Nutt. Prairies on Galveston Island. 103. GartLarpia picta, Don. Galveston Island, on a soil _ formed of fragments of shells. May. 104. G. amptyopon, Gay. In sandy or gravelly soil, west of the Brazos. May—July. ‘This species is equally showy with the preceding in cultivation: the copious rays are deep reddish-flame-color, with brown-purple at the base, and under- neath. 105. G. panceouata, Michx. Galveston Island, &c. 14 Engelmann and Gray, 106. Panaroxia Texana, DC. Wet prairies, Houston. August. Annual, as is P. Hookeriana also. 107. Hymenoparrpus arremisimrouivus, DC. Open oak woods, &c.; west of Houston, &c.; flowering from March to September. Radical leaves very variable. 108. Hevenium Tenurrouium, Nutt. Open woods. Sep- tember. : 109. Lerropopsa BracHypopa, Q (purpurea.) Torr. & Gr. Fl. Il. p. 388. May. 110. Marswatiia cxspitosa, Nutt. Dry prairies, Hous- ton, &c. The specific name is singularly inappropriate, at least as applied to the Texan plant ; for the stems are single, scattered, and not at all cespitose. The lowest leaves are often lanceolate-oblong or spatulate. 111. Eereres Arxansana, Nutt.; Torr. & Gr. Fl. Il. p. 411. (KE. Texana, Engel. MSS., but agrees very well with the original Arkansan plant. A. Gr.) Downs of Galveston Island, April, May, and also in November, when it has very diffuse and decumbent stems, somewhat woody at the base ; but the plant is surely annual. After flowering, the tube of the corolla of the outer disk-flowers, as well as those of the ray, become enlarged and corky at the base; and the inner part of the disk is sterile. It is quite a handsome plant in cultivation.” The numerous rays are pure white above, and usually marked with pink underneath. 112. GnapHaLium purPUREUM, Linn. var. (G. spicatum, Lam.?) April. 113. Crrstum Virein1anum, Michx. Open woods. March to May. 3 114. Centaurea Americana, Nutt. Moist fertile prairies, Houston. July. 115. Pyrruoparpus Caroxinianus, DC. Dry prairies. May, June. 116. Losen1a cuanpuLosa, Walt. Wet prairies and woods. September. A more or less scabrous form: bracts lanceolate from a broad base ; the sinuses of the calyx very slightly re- Plante Lindheimeriane. 15 flexed. The specimens collected in shady places are less rough ; the tube of the calyx is either hispid or nearly glabrous. 117. Vaccinium arsoreum, Marsh. Woods. April. 118. Ascueprras paupercuna, Michx. Swamps near the coast. Stem 4—6 feet high. Root tuberous. June. 119. Sevrera maritima, Reichenb., Decaisne. (Lyonia, Ell.) Wet, saline prairies, Galveston, &c. May. 120. Sappatia campestris, Nutt. Contrib. Fl. Arkans. &c. Flowers April to vay, and again in August and Sep- tember ; in dry prairies. 121. S. catycosa, Pursh: a variety with rather longer calyx lobes than usual. Shady margins of streams near Hous- ton. May, June. 122. Git1a coronoprrouia, Pers.; Benth. in DC. Prodr. VIII. p. 313. Dry prairies and open woods. June, July. 123. Cuscura neuroPETALA, Engel. in Sill. Jour. XLV. p- 75. (§ minor. A smaller, earlier flowering form, growing in drier places, mostly on Petalostemon multiflorum, but also on Liatris, and even on Euphorbia corollata. It approaches C. hispidula so much that, not improbably, further investi- gation of living plants may prove both to be only varieties of a single species, for which the name of C. porphyrostigma would be most appropriate, as all the forms that would belong to it, are distinguished from every other known North Amer- ican species by the purplish-brown stigmas. Another remark- able variety is: 124. C. neuroperata, Engel. y LirToORALIs: cymis pani- culatis ; floribus majoribus pedunculatis ; tubo corolle late campanulato calycis segmenta late ovata acutiuscula subcari- nata et lacinias limbi enervias ovatas abrupte acuminatas crenulatas patentes subequante ; squamis tubum subzequanti- bus. — Seashore of Galveston Island, on Lycium Carolinianum, Borrichia frutescens, Iva frutescens, &c. Flowers in May. Dif- ferent from the inland form by the much larger, more openly campanulate flowers, expanding in spring; by the hardly cari- nate, broader, and not so acute sepals, and the broad lobes of the 16 Engelmann and Gray, corolla, which are rarely somewhat nerved ; stigmata also pur- ple, and anthers purple or yellow. (ngel.) 125. C. cuspipata (Engel. n. sp.): caule filiformi ramosis- simo ; floribus pedunculatis in cymas laxas bracteosas disposi- tis 5-fidis; tubo corolle cylindrico sepala usque ad_ basin libera ovata concava (exteriora cuspidata) et lacinias limbi ovatas acutiusculas uninervias erectas s. patentes superante ; staminibus limbo brevioribus ; squamis ovatis fimbriatis tubum subeequantibus ;_ stylis filiformibus "ovario (minuto) globoso pluries longioribus ; capsula globosa corolla marcescente ob- tecta. —Var. «. pratensis: floribus minoribus; calyce bracteis paucis involucrato ; tubo corollz subcylindrico calycis et co- rolle segmentibus paulo longiore ; staminibus limbi laciniis ova- tis acutiusculis duplo brevioribus ; stylis ovarium parvum duplo superantibus. — Dry prairies west of the Brazos, on Tephrosia, Bradburia, Ambrosia, &c. June. — Var. 8. numipa: floribus majoribus ; calyce bracteis pluribus involucrato ; tubo corollee infundibuliformi calycis et corollze segmenta duplo superante ; staminibus laciniis limbi lanceolatis acutis paulo brevioribus ; stylis ovarlum minutum quater superantibus. Bottom lands of the Colorado, on Iva ciliata, Ambrosia trifida, &c. August, 1844, (No. 276, infra.) —A remarkable species. The stems are very much branched, filiform ; inflorescence loose panicu- late, pedicels with many cuspidate bracts, some of them sur- rounding the calyx like an involucrum, similar in shape but smaller than the sepals ; sepals somewhat lacerate or crenu- late, ovate, carinate, (the carina less distinct in the var. §,) cuspidate, interior ones rather obtuse, all concave, loosely im- bricated. Lobes of corolla thin membranaceous, with a strong middle nerve, formed by large oblong or linear cells; when dry, convolute ; the exterior ones generally somewhat cuspi- date, the interior ones obtuse ; at the base the lobes are dilated and cover one another, more than in any other North Ameri- can species. Styles remarkably slender and long, about the length of the stamens, but elongated after flowering, when the corolla assumes an urceolate shape, and finally covers like a Plante Lindheimeriane. 17 hood the upper part of the globose capsule.—JIt appears to be an intermediate form between Cuscuta proper and Lepi- danche. ‘The var. @ has larger and thinner flowers, of paler color, and the lobes of the corolla lanceolate and acute. Engel. 126. C. pentacona, 6 caLycina, Engel. Wet prairies. June. 127. C. verrucosa, Engel. l.c. Dry prairies. July.’ é 1 An undescribed North American species, collected in the Alleghanies of Vir- ginia and North Carolina by Dr. Gray and Mr. Sullivant, in the autumn of 1843, is here appended. (This was named C. orycarpa,n. sp.; but, just as these sheets are going to press, Dr. Engelmann writes that Mr. Shuttleworth has distributed the same plant from Rugel's collection, with a printed label, under the name of C. ros- trata, which he therefore now substitutes for his own. A. Gr.) C. rostraTA (Shuttlew. in coll. Rugel): caule ramoso; floribus pedunculatis cymoso-umbellatis 5-partitis; tubo corolle globoso-campanulato calycis segmenta ovata obtusa leviter crenulata et lacinias limbi ovatas obtusas patentes (demum reflexas) duplo superante; staminibus limbum subequantibus; squamis fimbriatis (convergentibus ?) basi inter se connatis; stylis filiformibus ovarium stylopodio ejusdem longitudinis coronatum pyriforme subequantibus; corolla marcescente ad basin capsule (maxime) acutate persistente.— Alleghany Mountains from Vir- ginia to South Carolina, (Mr. Buckley! 1842.) Prof. Gray and Mr. Sullivant ! 1843. — August to October. — Particular localities recorded by Messrs. Gray and Sullivant are: Grandfather and Negro Mountains, N. Carol.; Tygart’s Valley, Va. ; and ‘common in moist, shady ravines in western Virginia.” The specimens which came under my observation grow on Urtica, Rubus, Aster, Solidago, Rudbeckia, and some other plants, After repeated and careful investigation, and with some hesitation, I have ad- mitted this mountain plant as a distinct species, different from C. rulgivaga. The large pointed capsule would seem to characterize it at once; but C. rulgivaga offers so many different forms and sizes of the capsule, that other characters were necessary ; and they are found in the tissue of the corolla, which is ever destitute of the large pellucid dots constantly observed in C. vulgivaga, but is composed, especially about the tube, of regular, somewhat elongated, hexangular cells, easily distinguishable in dried specimens with a common glass. In the common species, the cells are linear, mostly much elongated, interspersed with the large air-cells, which have been frequently mentioned. The flowers are mostly twice as large as in C. vulgivaga, but of the same shape and proportion, about 2, and sometimes (especially in Tygart’s Valley specimens) 3 lines long; but the elongated ovary, whose stylopodium is nearly as long, though only half as thick, as the ovary proper, distinguishes it at once even from those forms of C. rulgivaga where the stylo- podium is unusually large. The filiform styles are at first about the length of the stamina, but soon after they are long exserted. The capsule is very large, fully 3 lines long, globose, attenuated to a bifid point; it is larger and more acute than in any other known American species.— During the same journey, the following species was abundantly collected : C. (Leripancue) compacta (Choisy): caule ramoso; floribus sessilibus glome- ratis 5-partitis ; sepalis sub-novem leviter crenulatis orbiculatis concavis adpressis, 18 Engelmann and Gray, 128. Ipomma sacirrata, Desf.; Choisy. June — Sept. 129. Convo.tvuLus aquaticus, Walt. Wet prairies west of the Brazos. Often 10 feet long. July. 130. Nama Jamatcensis, Linn.? Sandy prairies, &c. near the Brazos. June. Annual. 131. LirnospermMum TENELLUM, Nutt. in Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc. (n. ser.) V. p. 88. On the Brazos, &c. April— August. 132. Hexiotropium curassavicum, Linn. Galveston, &c. 133. H. insunpatum, Swartz ; DC. prodr. 9, p. 539. Banks of the Brazos. June. 134. Evroca urrsuta = Phacelia hirsuta, Nutt. in Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc. 1. c. p. 191. Pine woods near Houston. March and April. Corolla with 5 very obscure pairs of squamelle at the base of the tube. Ovary 5—10-ovuled. (Vide No. 279, 280, infra.) Also Texas, Drummond’s Coll. 3, No. 299. interioribus minoribus; tubo corolle cylindrico calycem et lacinias limbi lineari- oblongas obtusas duplo superante ; staminibus limbo brevioribus; squamis pinnati- fido-laciniatis ; ovario cum stylopodio stylos subequante ; capsula globosa subacuta corolla marcescente obtecta 1-4-sperma.— North Carolina to Alabama, in the mountains, on shrubs, frequently on evergreens; on Corylus rostrata, Buncombe Co., N. Carol.; on the same, and on Andromeda uvillaris or spinulosa, on the sides of Negro Mountain, N. Curol., Prof. A. Gray and Mr. W. SS. Sullivant; in Ala- bama, on Prinos glaber, Dr. Gates, (Herb. Gray.) This is clearly the Cuscuta compacta of Choisy’s monograph, (and of DC. prodr. excl. syn.) described after specimens collected in Alabama and Georgia; the notice in Silliman’s Journal, Vol. XLIV. p. 195, must therefore be corrected. — It is very near Cuscuta (Lepidanche) adpressa, which thus far has only been found on the bottom lands of the Mississippi and Illinois Rivers. This is again a remarkable instance of two nearly allied species, one growing in the mountainous region of the Southern States, the other one in the western lowlands. Analogies offer in Baptisia alba and leucantha, Phacelia fimbriata and Purshii, and others. The mountain species is distinguished from its western relative by the closer and compacter glome- rules, and much more slender and mostly smaller flowers. The tube of the corolla exceeds the compact scales of the calyx considerably, and is much narrower in pro- portion to its length; it gives, therefore, to the capsule which it covers, a much more pointed appearance, though the capsule itself is nearly globose. This appear- ance of the vestiges of the corolla on the capsule distinguishes this species from C. adpressa just after flowering. The corolla appears to be more membranaceous than in the western species, and remains whitish when well preserved in the herba- rium; the other usually turns reddish-brown. Planta Lindheimeriane. 19 135. Soranum Texense (n. sp.): perenne, inerme, to- mento stellato incanum; caule (pedali) herbaceo erecto ramoso ; foliis (2—4-unc.) petiolatis lanceolatis undulatis sinu- ato-dentatis integerrimisve sparsis; racemis terminalibus ; pe- dunculis flore longioribus fructiferis deflexis ; ‘ealyce 5-fido ; corolla violacea extus ad carinas stellato-pubescente ; stamini- bus zequalibus ; baccis flavis. — Road-sides, prairies, &c., Houston to the Brazos. June—September. (This is also No. 200 of Drummond’s Third Texan Collection. We like- wise have specimens from Dr. Wright.) 136. Puysatis pupescens? (P. maritima, M. A. Curtis, MSS.) Coast of Galveston Island. April — November. 137. Hereestis Monnrersa, Humb. & Kunth. Wet places. June, July. 138. Conopea muttiripa, Benth. in DC. prodr. & Torr. & Gr. Fl. ined. (Capraria, Michz.) Brazos. July. 139. Bucunera ELoNnGATA, Swartz, Benth. 1. c. Gal- veston to the Brazos. April, May, and again in July. Flow- ers smaller than in B. Americana, the teeth of the calyx and bracts less acuminate. 140. Herpestis nigrescens, Benth. Brazos, &c. August. 141. Gerarpia spicirLora, Engel. MSS. G. maritima 6 grandiflora, Benth. in DC. prodr. ined. Margin of brack- ish ponds, Galveston Island. 142. Penrstemon Cosma, Nutt. in Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc. (n. ser.) V. p. 182. Ravines near Houston. May. 143. Scuretyaria Drummonpu, Benth. Lab. p. 441. On soil composed of fragments of shells, on the coast of Galveston Island. May. Apparently annual: stems 10 to 29 inches high. 144. S. carpiopnytia (n. sp.): puberula; caule erecto (1-2-pedali) ramoso ; foliis omnibus petiolatis cordato-trian- gularibus obtusiusculis caulinis, grosse crenatis, floralibus gradatim minoribus integrioribusque lato-cordatis vel deltoideis, . summis bracteiformibus ; floribus axillaribus oppositis ; corol- lis pubescentibus calyce pedicello longiore plus triplo longiori- bus.—Var. £. humilior, foliis omnibus parvulis. — Open woods, 20 Engelmann and Gray, &c. near Houston. Flowering through the summer. Dr. Engelmann has likewise collected the smaller variety at the Hot Springs, in Arkansas. Fruiting specimens of this well- marked species also exist in Drummond’s Texan Collection, (No. 209, Coll: 3,) but we find no allusion to it in Bentham’s fine Monograph of the Labiate. ‘The smaller forms might be confounded with S. parvula, but even the floral leaves are distinctly petioliate, broadly triangular-ovate, or cordate, and more or less crenate-toothed ; all are shorter than the corolla, which is three-fourths of an inch long; the uppermost scarcely exceeding the calyx. The cauline leaves are from one to nearly two inches in length, and considerably resembling those of S. sazxatilis, Riddell: those of the elongated flower branches scarcely half an inch long. Achenia strongly tuber- culate. Root apparently annual. 145. Satvia azurea, Lam. Houston. May to September. 146. Hypris raprata, Willd. Houston. September. 147. Puysosteera Vireiniana, Benth., var. foluis ovalibus oblongisve subdenticulatis. _(Dracocephalum variegatum, Vent., Ell.) Wet prairies west of the Brazos. July. 148. P. Virerntana, var. foliis lanceolatis argute serratis. Dry, sandy soil. Houston. September. 149, TricnostemMA DicHoromum, Linn. September. 150. Tevcrium Cupensr, Linn., Benth. Lab. P 668. Galveston Island. April, May. 151. Monarpa Linpuerimert, (n. sp.): caule glabro super- ne piloso subsimplici ; foliis ovatis acuminatis subcordatis erosse serratis glabris glandulosis margine scabris, petiolis brevibus basi pilosis; bracteis acuminatis integris capitulum laxum subsequantibus ; calycibus glandulosis, dentibus subu- latis diametrum tubi subequantibus, fauce villosa; corolla glandulosa et villosa. — Prairies and margin of woods, in clayey soil. April to June, and again in October. — According to Mr. Bentham’s view, this would probably be deemed a variety of M. clinopodia. 152. M. puncrara, Linn. Houston. July. Plante Lindheimeriane. 21 153. M. aristars, Nutt. in Benth. Lab. p. 318, in Mem. Amer. Phil. Soc. (n. ser.) V. p. 186. Prairies east of the Brazos. June. . 154. Versena stricosa, Hook. Compan. to Bot. Mag. I. p. 176. Roadsides, near Houston. April—July. Lower leaves obovate and tapering into a winged petiole, doubly incisely toothed ; the upper tri-multifid. The hispid pubes- cence of the stem is not appressed. ‘The foliage, the more slender spikes, and the much shorter fruit distinguish the species readily from V. stricta. 155. V. spurta, var. caulibus erectis; bracteis brevioribus. Dry prairies, Galveston, tothe Brazos. March to July. 156. Zapanra NopiFLOoRA, Lam. var. foliis lanceolato-cu- neiformibus. Downs of Galveston Island. April. 157. Dipreracantuus (Pantcuartia, folia floralia in brac- teas parvas reducta, ideo cyma trichotoma terminalis) nup1- FLORUS (7. sp.): parce pilosus, demum glabratus; caule erecto herbaceo ; foliis ovalibus ovato-oblongisve obtusis mar- gine obsolete repandis basi in petiolum attenuatis; cymulis trifloris in cymam laxam_ glanduloso-puberulam congestis ; bracteis lineari-lanceolatis pedunculis multo brevioribus ; tubo corollz apicem versus sensim dilatato calycis lacinias atten- uato-subulatas duplo triplove longiore ; capsulis puberulis sub- clavato-cylindraceis vel oblongis utrinque acutis 8—12-spermis calycem equantibus.— Open woods at Sim’s Bayou, near Houston. May to July. Also, in Drummond’s Texan Col- lection, (Coll. 2, No. 221, and 3, No. 257.) Stems one to two feet high, simple or branched from the base, slender, pubescent when young, as well as the leaves and petioles, with scattered hairs. Corolla two inches long. Anthers some- what included; the lobes slightly mucronate at the base. Stigma a simple lamella, with a mere rudiment of the second lobe. —This well marked species differs from the rest of the genus in its inconspicuous bracts, and naked, more explicate inflorescence, which entitle it to the rank of a distinct sec- tion. 22 Engelmann and Gray, 158. D. ciurosus, N. ab E. in Linn. XVI. p. 294. = Ru- ellia ciliosa, Pursh. Open woods, Houston. June. 159. DianrHera HuMiLIs. In clear water. June. 160. Dicuiprera BRacHiaTA, Spreng. Shady woods, Houston. June—September. Seeds hispid, with short, minutely glochidiate bristles." 161. Urricunaria supuLata, Linn. Wet prairies of Gal- veston Island. April. 162. Samotus eBractreatus, H. B. K. Sandy brackish soil, Galveston. April. It is singular that this should have been overlooked by Duby, in DC. Prodr., as a North Ameri- can plant. It was recorded as such by Torrey in the report on the plants collected in Major Long’s Expedition, and 1s not uncommon along the coast from Florida to Texas. The leaves in the Texan plant, as generally in our specimens, are obovate or broadly spatulate, tapering into pretty long winged petioles, which are decurrent on the stem. 163. Puanraco enapuHaorpes, Nutt. Galveston Island. 164. P. arnistata, Michx. Houston, &c. April. 165. Iresine cexostorpes, Linn. Houston. September. 166. OpLotHeca Frormana, Nutt. Prairies and open woods in loose sandy soil, west of the Brazos. August. 167. Ertogonum toneirouium, Nutt., Benth. g Puianta- cineuM : foliis brevioribus latioribusque. Dry prairies west of the Brazos. July, August. The same form occurs in Drum- mond’s Third Texan Collection, No. 352. 168. PotyGoneLLA ERICOIDES. == Gonopyrum America- num, Fisch. & Meyer, in Mem. Acad. St. Petersb. (ser. 6.) IV. p. 144. Prairies, west of San Felipe, on the Brazos. 1 Among Lindheimer’s plants a few specimens were received of the Ruellia justicieflora, Hook. Comp. to Bot. Mag. I. p. 176, which has also been distributed by Dr. Riddell, under the name of Eberlea. We refer it to the genus Hygrophila, R. Br. To the character given by Hooker, for the most part excellent, we may add, that the stem and leaves are somewhat fleshy, and that the upper lip of the corolla is not entire, but 2-cleft. ‘The anthers of the shorter pair of stamens are smaller than the others, but are polliniferous and 2-celled. The plant grows in wet swamps, and flowers in the autumn. Plante Lindheimeriane. 23 July. A low shrubby plant, 1-2 feet high, with the aspect of a heath.’ 1 This plant also occurs in Drummond’s Texan Collection (No. 19 & 348 of 3d Coll.) ; from which source doubtless Fischer and Meyer obtained the specimens, upon which they established the genus Gonopyrum. But their genus must be reduced to Polygonella, from which it differs only in the hermaphrodite, instead of dioico-poly- gamous flowers, a character which would be insufficient, even if constant, which it probably is not. The filaments of Polygonella polygama (which are more correctly described than figured by Ventenat) are not materially different from those of the new Texan species. The generic character, &c. should properly stand as follows : POLYGONELLA, Michr. (Trib. Rumiceez, Meyer.) Polygonella and Gonopyrum, Meyer l. c. supr. Flores dioico-polygami vel hermaphroditi. Perigonium pentaphyllum, petaloide- um; phyllis seriei exterioris 2 immutatis fructif. reflexis, seriei interioris 3 erectis planis post anthesin ampliatis conniventibus fructum triquetrum includentibus. Stamina 8: filamenta dimorpha ; nermpe, tria phyllis perigonii interioribus opposita inferne dilatata et sepe bidentata; cetera subulato-setacea. Styli 3: stigmata capitata. Embryo in axi albuminis rectiusculus. — Fruticuli ramosissimi glabri, in planitiebus aridissimis Amer. Bor.-Orient. calidioribus vigentes; ramis hornotinis herbaceis foliosis ochreatis (ochreis brevibus nudis unidentatis) ; foliis crassiusculis parvulis linearibus spathulatisve subsessilibus sparsis vel in axillis pl. m. fascicula- tis; floribus (albis vel roseis) parvis spicato-racemosis ; rachi dense et appresse imbricatim ochreato-bracteati quasi articulati ; pedicillis solitariis articulatis, fructi- feris pendulis ; racemis sepius paniculatis. 1. P. polygama: foliis cuneato-linearibus spathulatisve ; floribus dioico-polygamis ; sepalis ovalibus ad anthesin subequalibus ; filamentis tribus basi ovato-dilatatis vix aut ne vix dentatis ; stylis brevissimis.— Polygamum polygamum, Vent. Hort. Cels. t. 65; Ell. Sk. J. p. 458. Polygonella parvifolia, Michz.! Fl. IL. p. 240; Nutt. Gen. I. p. 256 (sub Polygono) ; Meisn. Gen. Vasc. Comm. p. 228. ~Polygo- num (Polygonella) gracile, Nutt. Gen. 1. c.?—In arenosis (sandy pine-barrens,) Caroline ! Georgie! Floride (Barlram! Leavenworth!) et, fide Nutt., in Ar- kansas. 2. P. ericoides: foliis linearibus vel anguste spathulato-linearibus fasciculatis ; floribus (an semper?) hermaphroditis ; sepalis orbiculatis, interioribus subcordatis exteriora virido-carinata ad anthesin superantibus; filamentis tribus basi valde. bidentato-dilatatis quasi obcordatis; stylis longiusculis. — Gonopyrum Americanum, Fisch. § Meyer, in Mem. Acad, St. Petersb. 1. c. supra. —In planitiebus aridis Texas, Drummond ! Lindheimer ! Wright! Flores duplo majores quam in prece- dente, ramis crassioribus, etc. For the first species we have adopted the older specific name of Ventenat, in place of that of Michaux, chiefly because it is the largest-leaved species of the genus. Polygonum articulatum, Linn., which is joined, by Nuttall and Meisner, to Poly- gonella, with which, indeed, it nearly accords in habit (though an annual herb) and inflorescence, has all the sepals uniform and erect in fruit, the three inner not at all enlarged, and the embryo is lateral as in Polygonum. 24 Engelmann and Gray, 169. Srinuineia sytvatica, Linn. Prairies. April—June. 170. S. tieustrina, Michx. Thickets near water-courses, Houston. May.— 'The staminate flowers are rather conspicu- ously pedicillate, not brevissime pedicillatis, as described by Michaux. 171. Prninopuyrum Linpuermert (n. sp.): annuus, stel- lato-tomentosus ; caule (4—5-pedali) erecto ramoso ; _foliis longe petiolatis e basi ovata subcordatave lanceolatis sepe acutato-mucronatis, inferioribus denticulatis ; floribus foemineis paucis ad basin spicee masculze ; staminibus sub-12 ; stigmati- bus plerumque 12; seminibus vix compressis. — Dry prairies, Houston to the Brazos. Also, Texas, Drummond, and West- ern Louisiana, Leavenworth. A taller, more upright plant than P. capitatum (Croton, Michz.,) with larger and less canescent leaves; the lower 4—5 inches long, and gradually acuminate to an usually sharp point, on petioles 3 inches long. The spike in fruit is less capitate, and the seeds are smaller and less compressed. Something like intermediate specimens between this and the P. capitatum, which also grows in A remaining species, the Polygonum fimbriatum of Elliott, which has been deemed a near ally of Polygonum polygamum, may be taken as the type of a new genus, viz.: THYSANELLA, A. Gr. Flores dioico-polygami. Perigonium pentaphyllum petaloideum ; phyllis omnibus erectis margine scariosis et eroso-fimbriatis, duobus exterioribus cordato-sagittatis post anthesin auctis, interioribus minoribus ovato-lanceolatis pectinato-fimbriatis. Stamina 8: filamenta filiformia perigonium adequantia. Ovarium (infertile) trigo- num: styli 3, filiformes; stigmatibus simplicibus. Fructus ...... Semen Ete dade Caeat® with and a half feet high, bearing solitary or few heads. Prairies between the Brazos and the Colorado, forming large patches. October. 262. H. erosse-serratus, Martens: the same form, with the large leaves silvery-tomentose beneath, which was col- lected in Texas by Drummond, and which, as it best deserves the specific name, is assumed in Torr. & Gr. Fl. l. c. as the type of this variable species. Banks of rivulets and margin of woods. August — October. 263. H. crosse-serratus, 8 Torr. & Gr. Fl. lic. A less canescent variety, with the stem, although somewhat glaucous, slightly scabrous throughout. Prairies, &c., with H. Maximiliani. ; 264. Cosmipium rFitirouium, Torr. & Gr. Fl. Il. p. 350. Prairies west of the Brazos. May—June. This is really a perennial, and proves quite ornamental in cultivation. It extends as far north as the south-western borders of Missouri. 265. Dysop1a raceroiwes, Torr. & Gr. FIII. p. 361. Wet prairies, and on sandstone hills of Mill-creek. August. This is also a perennial. ‘The dots of the leaves are orange-yellow. 266. Pararoxia Hooxertana, Torr. & Gr. l. c. Sandy post-oak woods, near Industry. August. We have it in cul- tivation, from Lindheimer’s seeds. ‘The flowers are rose-color or deep flesh-color, and about two inches in diameter; the rays large and conspicuous, but often irregular, and some of them palmate. 267. Actinetia Linearirouia, Torr. & Gr. Ll. c. De- 4 42 Engelmann and Gray, clivity of sandstone hills near Industry. May—June. Rays yellow, turning white when fading. 268 & 269. Senecio amputuacevs, (Hook.): annuus vel biennis; caule erecto fistuloso striato superne ramoso ; foliis inferioribus obovato-spathulatis in petiolum decurrentibus, superioribus ovato-lanceolatis acutis basi subcordata semiam- plexicaulibus, omnibus subintegris vel denticulatis; cyma co- rymbosa ; pedicellis apice demum incrassatis ; involucro squa- Mis setaceis paucis calyculato; radiis 7-9; acheniis strigoso- canescentibus. Var. « GLaBerrimus (No. 268): caule foliisque angusti- ortbus subintegerrimis glabris. Wet prairies. Var. 8 FLoccosus (No. 269): caule foliisque junioribus latioribus cano-floccosis; superioribus e basi latiore acumina- tis, nunc grosse repando-dentatis. — Sandy prairies in loose, dry soil. April. Both forms are certainly annual or biennial. 270. Lycopesmia apHyLua, 8 Texana, Torr. & Gr. FI. Il. p. 485. Prairies. June—July. Roots penetrating deep into the soil. Some of the radical leaves are runcinate-pinna- tifid, with subulate lobes. 271. Pyrruoparpus GRANDIFLORUS, Nutt. Prairies, near San Felipe. April. Perennial; the slender perpendicular root enlarging, at the depth of a few inches, into an oblong tuber, similar to the root of Cynthia Dandelion. Scapes several from one root, with or without a bract in the middle. 272. Ascuepias (Orarta) LinpHEIMERI (7. sp.) : caudice perpendiculari incrassata caulem herbaceum pubescentem singulum erectum (vel plures adscendentes) emittente ; foliis oppositis ovatis obtusis (aut rarius lanceolatis) basi nune sub- cordatis breviter petiolatis utrinque puberulis; pedunculis brevissimis lateralibus ; pedicellis gracilibus pubescentibus corollz laciniis acutiusculis subduplo longioribus ; cucullis ad apicem sensim dilatatis subtrilobatis; processu bifurco, ramo altero brevi incluso recto, altero longiore incurvo exserto; folliculis ovato-lanceolatis acuminatis puberulis carina exteriore setulis mollibus pl. m. conspersis. — Black, clayey soil, near Plante Lindheimeriane. 43 Industry. June — August. Also, in Drummond’s Texan Collection. Stems six to sixteen inches high, from a very thick perpendicular root. Leaves mostly broadly oval, and obtuse. Flowers large and greenish: calyx pubescent, one- third the length of the corolla. Follicles ovate-lanceolate, and with a long acumination, ‘‘ 8-angled, the angles often some- what tuberculated ; the outer one furnished with soft spines, or a dentated crest.” Lindheimer. ‘This species is nearly allied to A. longicornu, Benth., which we find has a similar gynostegium, only a little more decidedly 3-lobed at the apex, as well as a bifurcated horn, both lobes of which are shorter than in our species. There is also a bifurcated horn in A. obtusifolia. 273. GONOLOBUS CYNANCHOIDES (7. sp.): caulibus pluribus e radice subtuberoso debilibus basi ramosis adscendentibus pilosis ; ramis teretibus ; foliis inferioribus late ovatis, summis lanceolato-ovatis, omnibus basi cordatis breviter petiolatis sub- tus presertim pubescentibus acutiusculis vel acutatis; pedun- culis subnullis vel brevissimis bifloris; pedicellis basi subulato- bracteolatis petiolo sublongioribus ; corollz rotati-campanulate lobis ovatis obtusis intus glaberrimis (extus parce pilosis) calycis segmenta ovato-oblonga acuta pilosa excedentibus ; corona staminea cyathiformi gynostegii basin cingente 5-loba, lobis rotundatis crassiusculis margine tenuiori cinctis, supra processu lineari scaphoideo arcuato instructis ; folliculis ovoi- deis utrinque attenuatis coriaceis muricatis pubescentibus ; seminibus (rufis) orbiculatis marginatis comosis. — Sandy soil, in open woods, near Industry. April—June. (Also, No. 190 and 203 of Drummond’s second, and 237 of the third Texan collection.) Stems 6 to 15 inches high, diffuse ; leaves 1-2 inches long, cordate, with an open sinus, the uppermost some- times almost truncate at the base. Corolla greenish purple, about two lines in diameter. The fleshy lobes of the cup- shaped corone are furnished in the middle with a small pro- cess, which is connected at the base with the mid-nerve of the anther, and is free and incurved at the obtuse point, the di Engelmann and Gray, upper surface of which is excavated. ‘The membranaceous cusps of the anther are triangular acute, and partly cover the very obtusely 5-angular and somewhat convex stigma. The small horizontal pollen-masses are oblong, slightly curved, and scarcely attenuated at the exterior (attached) end. — From the description, there can be little doubt that this plant is a congener of Chthamalia biflora, and C. pubiflora, Decaisne, in DC. prodr., from which it differs in the glabrous corolla, etc. ; but surely it cannot be separated from Gonolobus, as that genus is left by Decaisne. The corona of Gonolobus, charac- terized as “ annuliformis undulato-lobata, lobis integris prom- inentibus,”’ exhibits great diversities in the admitted species, from the proper annular and 5-lobed crown of G. levis, to the campanulate one, with 10 long subulate and 5 short trian- gular teeth, of G. macrophyllus and G. hirsutus. 274. Evsroma Russeuuianum, Don, Griseb. Clayey, wet prairies. July — August. 275. Puitox Drummonpit, Hook. Sandy soil, near water courses. 276. Convotvutus (Sryuisma) Picxerineu, Torr. Dry, sandy prairies. May — July. — Specifically distinct, we sus- pect, from the C. tenellus, Zam. to which Choisy joins it.’ 277. Cuscuta cuspipata $8. Vide No. 125, supra. Bot- tom lands of the Colorado River. August. 278. LirHosPERMUM BREVIFLORUM (n. sp.): caulibus soli- tariis, vel plurimis e radice nigro-purpurea fusiformi erectis apice ramosis, foliisque linearibus lineari-lanceolatisve margine revolutis utrinque strigoso-canescentibus ; floribus subpedicel- latis; corolla calycis lacinias lineares strigosas vix equante fauce exannulata, lobis erectis (an semper?) minutissime crenulatis; nucibus albidis nitidis ovatis acutis, intus acute 1 The collection also comprises a few specimens of Convolvulus hastatus, Nuit. in Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. (n. ser.), V. p. 174: which name, being several times pre- occupied, we propose for it the name of C. topsarus. Sandstone rocks, near Industry- May, June. Stems prostrate, 8-4 feet long. Flowers rather small, white. Dr, Wright has also sent it from the Colorado. Plante Lindheimeriane. 45 carinatis et impresso-punctatis. — L. Mandanense, Torr. in Nicollet, Rep. p. 155, non Hook. — Clayey prairies, near In- dustry. April, May. A foot high. Leaves rather scabrous above, almost exactly like those of L. longiflorum (L. incisum, Lehm.) ; the radical somewhat oblanceolate. Lobes of the corolla hirsute on the outside. Except the flowers, the plant has wholly the aspect of L. longiflorum ; but the corolla is shorter than in L. Mandanense, and entirely destitute of the append- ages in the throat, unless their rudiments may be obscurely discerned in the sinuses, not opposite the lobes of the corolla. 279. Evroca sTrictTiIFLora (n. sp.) : cinereo-hirsuta ; cau- libus plurimis simplicibus e radice annua adscendentibus ; fo- liis pinnatifidis lanceolato-oblongis (seu primordialibus integris obovatis), inferioribus in petiolum attenuatis lobis brevibus obtusis, superioribus sessilibus lobis lanceolatis acutiuscullis ; racemis terminalibus multifloris elongatis arcte secundis, fructi- feris strictis ; calycis lacintis spathulato-linearibus, fructiferis erectis auctis pedicello appresso parum longioribus ; corolla late campanulata calyce sesquilongioribus, tubo obscure 10- squamigero ; filamentis pilosiusculis inclusis; ovario 14—20- ovulato ; capsula plerumque 12-sperma.— Sandy soil on the banks of the Brazos near San Felipe. March. A span high ; the whole plant almost hoary with a hirsute pubescence. Radical leaves with about 5, the upper cauline with 2 or 3 pairs of lobes. ‘The erect calyx-segments as well as the pedi- cels give the crowded racemes in fruit a very stiff and strict appearance. Corolla apparently blue, a little hairy externally ; the margin very obscurely erose-crenulate ; the tube furnished at the base with 5 pairs of linear and narrow appendages which are adherent by the whole margin, so as to form 5 rather inconspicuous grooves which alternate with the stamens. The corolla is almost an inch in diameter in Lindheimer’s speci- mens. ‘lhe same species occurs in Drummond’s Collection (3. No. 298) apparently with smaller flowers. 280. E. parutirtora (n. sp.): pubescens, subcinerea ; caulibus e radice annua diffusis ramosis; foliis spathulato- 46 Engelmann and Gray, oblongis obovatisve membranaceis pinnatifido-dentatis vel in- cisis basi angustatis sessilibus vel infimis petiolatis, dentibus subovatis obtusis ; racemis terminalibus simplicibus secundis ; calycis laciniis oblongis, fructiferis subspathulatis patulis pedi- cello filiformi patente seu reflexo multum brevioribus ; corolla late campanulata calycem parum excedentibus, tubo obscure 10-squamigero ; filamentis pilosiusculis inclusis ; ovario 14—16- ovulato ; capsula circiter 12-sperma.— Woods near San Fe- lipe. March—April. Stems 6 to 12 inches long, often de- cumbent. Whole plant with somewhat the habit of Eutoca viscida, but not glandular. Leaves 1 to 2 inches long. Ra- cemes lax; the spreading pedicels an inch long in fruit. Corolla much smaller than in the foregoing species, deep blue, yellow at the base ; the margin of the lobes somewhat erose ; the 5 pairs of very small squamellz also as in E. strictiflora. — We can discern the obscure rudiments of the tubal ap- pendages in the corolla of Eutoca viscida. In E. hirsuta (Phacelia, Nutt.) No. 134 of this collection, they are very narrow but are distinctly visible under the microscope ; as also in the nearly allied E. parviflora. Hence we should have no hesitation in restoring the genus Cosmanthus of Nolte and Alph. DC. to Eutoca and Phacelia.’ 281. Sonanum mammosum, Linn.?? Road-sides in prairies between the Brazos and the Colorado. June. A stout branching perennial, with broader, more canescent and lobed leaves than SS. Carolinense. 282. Penrstemon Murrayanum, Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 3472. Dry sandy soil in open woods west of the Brazos. May — June. The splendid flame-colored flowers, with a scarlet bor- der, form a pleasing contrast with the bluish glaucous leaves. Pedicels erect, the flowers horizontal. 283. GraTioLa spHmRocARPA, Ell. Along ponds and riv- 1 Euroca GLAsrA = Phacelia glabra, Nuit. l.c. Of this a very few specimens were collected by Lindheimer. Fine specimens in fruit exist in Drummond’s Texan Coll. 111. No. 302. The capsule is about 6-seeded. The calyx-segments in fruit become ovate-lanceolate or oblong. Plante Lindheimeriane. 47 ulets, flowering from February to April, and also through the summer. 284. Castimiesa inpivisa (Engel. MSS.) : “ piloso-hispi- da ; foliis integris lineari-lanceolatis acutis basi pleraque rotun- datis, floralibus apice ovato- vel obovato-dilatatis coloratis ; spica demum elongata ; calycis lobis late obovatis apice colora- tis truncatis retusisve corolla paulo vel vix longioribus. — Valde affinis quoad flores C. coccinee, et quoad folia,C. lithospermi- folie, ab illa imprimis foliis indivisis, ab hac statura sepius elatiore differt, foliis acutioribus et capsulis majoribus.” Benth. in DC. prodr. ined.— Prairies from Houston to the Colorado: March to June. Also collected by Drummond and ~ Berlandier. 285. Hepeoma Drummonpu, Benth.: but the verticillastri are only about 3-flowered, and the corolla is long and much exserted. Yet it is certainly the same species as Nos. 276 and 278 of Drummond’s Third Texan Collection. — Sandstone rocks near Industry. July. The whole plant has the taste and odor of lemon-peel. The two following Labiate plants, upon which Dr. Engel- mann proposes to establish two new genera, viz., No. 286. Stachyastrum (so called from the resemblance of the plant to Stachys in habit) ; and 287. Brazoria (from the habitat on the river Brazos,) we think may, notwithstanding minor dif- ferences, be properly associated in a single genus, which will be well distinguished from Physostegia by the inflated bilabiate calyx which becomes closed in fruit by the inflexion of the lower lip. The genus should perhaps be referred to the tribe Scutellarinee rather than Stachydez. It may be thus charac- terized. BRAZORIA, Gen. nov. Calyx late campanulatus, bilabiatus (labio superiore breviter 3-lobo, inferiore 2-lobo) per anthesin inflatus, post anthesin e surrectione labii inferioris clausus, indistincte nervosus, reticu- lato-venosus. Corolla tubo longe exserto, fauce inflata ; limbi 48 Engelmann and Gray, bilabiati labio superiore erecto subgaleato breviter bilobo vel integro, inferiore profunde trifido, lobis rotundatis patentibus seu recurvis. Stamina 4, sub labio superiore adscendentia : filamenta supra medium corollz adnata, ubi pilosa, inferioribus eminentibus: anther approximate ; loculis distinctis divari- cantibus ad rimam pl. m. ciliatis. Stylus glaber apice zquali- ter bifidus, lobis subulatis. Achenia sicca.— Herbe annue, Texane, facie -: et inflorescentia Physostegiz. Corolla incarnata, fauce Juteola. § 1. Eusrazoria. Calycis lobi latissimi, truncati, subzequa- les, mucronato-denticulati: corolla majuscula tubo prope basin piloso-annulato ; fauce infra labium inferiorem intrusa quodam- modo palatum efficiente ; lobis omnibus eroso-crenulatis, iisdem labii inferioris zequalibus, apice bilobis: achenia triangulata, pubera. 286. Brazoria TRUNcaTA = Physostegia truncata, Benth. Lab. p. 505; Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 3494.— Sandy soil on de- serted ant-hills, &c., in the prairies along the Brazos: May — June. It was first collected by Drummond (No. 274 of the Third Collection) ; and has since been gathered on the Colo- rado by Dr. Wright. Stem pubescent, scarcely a foot high. Spike dense. Calyx hairy at the base, especially after flower- ing. Flowers nearly as large as in Physostegia Virginiana : the tube of the corolla spotted with purple. The lobes of the lower lip of the calyx are usually merely mucronulate in the middle ; those of the upper are erose-denticulate with mucro- nulate teeth. In fruit the achenia are contained in a gibbous cavity belonging to the upper side of the calyx: this is closed by the inflexion of the lower lip, which is appressed to the face of the upper, or partly wrapped around it; so that the fructiferous calyx is flat on the lower side, and very gibbous at the base of the upper side. § 2. Sracuyastrum. Calycis sub-7-nervis labium superius latum, lobis rotundatis; inferius angustum, lobis triangu- lari-lanceolatis, omnibus cuspidato-mucronatis: corolla exan- nulata, parvula ; lobo medio labii inferioris ceteris majore, Plante Lindheimeriane. 49 retuso, marginibus in omnibus fere integerrimis: achenia sub- globosa, leevia. 28D B. scure.uarioiwes, n. sp.—In heavy black soil on the prairies near Cat Spring, west of the Brazos: April, May. The plant was also collected by Drummond, and specimens were distributed, under No. 274, of the Third Collection, mixed with B. truncata, which it greatly resembles in habit and foliage. ‘The stem is glabrous, however, though the in- florescence, as well as the calyx, is minutely pubescent. The flowers are scarcely half the size of the preceding: the calyx is more deeply bilabiate, and the lobes, except the middle one of the upper lip, pointed with a rather conspicuous cusp: in fruit the upper lobes are somewhat curved backwards, while the narrow lower lip is incurved, so as nearly to close the ori- fice. Corolla flesh-color : anthers purplish. 288. PuysosreGia INTERMEDIA = Dracocephalum interme- dium, Nutt. in Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc. l. c. Wet prairies west of San Felipe, growing in patches, —a smaller plant than P. Virginiana, with a much more slender spike. The cauline leaves, especially the upper ones, are broadest and cordate at the base, and serrate throughout. Our plant accords with No. 275 of Drummond’s Third Texan Collection. No. 274 is a form with acute and more entire leaves, more nearly that described by Nuttall. It is difficult to distinguish the species sufficiently from some forms of P. Virginiana. 289. VERBENA BIPINNATIFIDA = Glandularia bipinnatifida, Nutt. in Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc. l. c. Rich prairies, &c. March, April. A plant with more prostrate and radicant sterile stems, more dissected leaves, denser spikes, smaller flowers, shorter calyx, and also more hirsute than V. Aubletia. 290. Dipreracanruus ($ Metopuanes, corolla parva cadu- ca, limbo vix expansa) MicranrHus (n. sp.) : subglaber, caule erecto ramoso ; foliis lanceolato-oblongis subintegerrimis utrin- que acutis in petiolum brevem attenuatis, junioribus ciliatis ; cymulis paucifloris subsessilibus axillaribus bracteis ovalibus brevioribus ; calycis laciniis subulato-lanceolatis piloso-ciliatis corollam inconspicuam capsulamque 8-spermam f}) »*¢ : 56 Engelmann and Gray, Plante Lindheimeriane. elayey bottom of clear rivulets, in the prairies between the Brazos and Colorado. July, and the whole year round.’ #* No. 151. Monarpa Linpneimertr of this enumeration must be the same as M. scasra, Beck, in Sill. Jour. X. p. 260, which name should therefore be adopted. } 1 In addition to the enumeration of the North American Chare, published in Silliman’s Journal, Vol. XLVI. p. 92, (January, 1844,) we record the following notices, caiatttsieticel by Professor Braun : Mr. Lindheimer has sent from Texas specimens of Chara fievilis, Linn. ? (incom- plete specimen,) and of Ch. tenuissima, Desv. This last, as well as the specimens from Massachusetts, may be distinguished as var. Americana; the whorls are less densely glomerate, but more approximate than in the European form. Chara polyphylla, A. Br., is a very polymorphous plant, occurring in many differ- ent forms in America, Asia, and the Sandwich Islands. Professor Braun distin- guishes seven subspecies. a. Ch. polyphylla Michauxii (Ch. polyphylla, A. Br. in Regensb. Bot. Zeit. 1835, p. 70; Ch. Michauzii, A. Br. in Sillim. Journ. 1. e. No. 11; Ch. capillata, Michaux in herb. Jussieu; Ch. Aaitensis, Turpin, Dict. sc. nat. Atlas.) Ohio, (Michaux, Dr. Frank); Missouri, (Dr. Engelmann); Texas, (Mr. Lindheimer) ; Hayti, (Turpin, 1796.) This is the stoutest, and also the most northern of all species and subspecies of the remarkable group of Gymnopode, A. Br. There are five species now known, belonging to this group ; and of these Ch. pol yphylla i is the ‘mos ‘polymorphous, and widest spread species. — The Gymnopode are distin- aving the lowest (often very short) joint of the otherwise coated leaves pa Ke guished t ommonly cal ak yerticillated branchlets) naked, or destitute of the coating. ee Ch. polyphylla guadeloupensis, (Ch. indica, Bert.) Guadeloupe, Bertero. More slender, with smaller, more elongated seed vessels (sporangia) and still shorter bracts. c. Ch. polyphylia ceylanica, (Ch. zeylanica, Klein in Willd.) Ceylon, Pondi- cherry, Madras, etc. d. Ch. polyphylla javanica. e. Ch. polyphylla Muhlenbergii, (Ch. foliosa, Muhlenb. in Willd. ; ; Sillim. Journ. l.c., p. 93, No. 10.) Pennsylvania, Muhlenberg. Very near Sileaekig C. ceylan- ica, aid distinguished from a. Michauzii, by the bracts being much longer than the sporangia, while they are shorter in Michauzit. f. Ch. polyphylla Humboldtiana, (Ch. compressa, H. B. K.) New Andalusia, Humboldt. A variety with some of the upper joints of the leaves destitute of the coating. g. Ch. polyphylla armata, (Ch. urmata, Meyen, Reisebesch.) _ Sandwich Islands, Meyen. Distinguished by the stronger spines, and also mostly naked upper joints and smaller seed vessels. A second species, distinct from Ch. polyphylia, but also belonging to Gymnopode, has been collected by Dr. Engelmann, in lakes in the bottom lands of the Missis- sippi, near Saint Louis ; it is called by Professor Braun Ch. sejuncta, a more slender and greener plant than the last, but principally dis- tinguished by the seed vessels (sporangia) and globules (often called anthers) being always found on different joints of the leaves (or branchlets,) never as in most other species, together on the same joint. — Martius has collected the same species in Brazil ; the North American form is larger, and more slender, and has bracts shorter ‘than the seeds; and may therefore be called var. brevibracteata, and the Brazilian variety, longibracteata. BOSTON So JOURNAL OF NATURAL HISTORY. VOLUME VI.—NO. I. Art. I1.— Puantz Linpueimeriane, Part II. An Account of a Collection of Plants made by F. Lixpuemer in the Western part of Texas, in the Years 1845 —6, and 1847 —8, with Critical Remarks, Descriptions of new Species, &c. By Asa Gray, M. D. - [The numbers follow on from the end of the former collection, as published in Vol. V. of this Journal, through the collection of 1845-6, and thence to the later collection. Those inclosed in ( ) belong to the collection of 1847-8; for greater convenience in describing them, they are here intercalated. The few numbers in brackets below 319 belong to species which occurred in the former distribution. Those marked with aj in place of a number have not been distributed at all. The orders elaborated by Dr. Engelmann have his name affixed to that of the Order. ] RANUNCULACEZ. 319. Cuematis Drummonnu, Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 9. Dry prairies, Comale Spring, &c. June. Cultivated in the Cambridge Botanic Garden, from Texan seeds, this plant climbs extensively, but does not show its blossoms until Octo- ber. The calyx is yellowish green, tinged with purple. 320. Ranuncutus repens, Linn. var. MACRANTHUS: pe- talis 7-16; caulibus petiolisque villosissimis. R. macran- thus, Scheele in Linnea, 21, p. 585. Sparsely on high, rocky plains, and in patches on damp Muskit (Algarobia) flats, New Braunfels. March.— Mr. Wright has specimens JOURNAL B, S. N. H. 19 JAN. 1850. 142 Plante Lindheimeriane. of the same plant, with the leaves also densely silky-vil- lous, nearly as much so as in R. canus, Benth. Pl. Hartw. No. 1626, from California; indeed, it would seem to belong to the same species; but the carpels are, as in our &. repens, pointed with a pretty long, straight, or flexuous beak, slen- derly subulate from a broad base, and not ‘“‘mucrone valde recurvo fere circinnato,”’ as #. canus is characterized. My specimen of the latter exhibits no fruit. The petals are in some specimens nearly an inch in length; in others no larger - than in ordinary American forms of R. repens, into which it passes by every kind of gradation. + Detpuinium virescens, Nutt. Gen. 2, p. 14; Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 82; floribus albis. Rocky prairies and hills, Comale Spring. April. The species is very likely to be considered as only a broader-leaved variety of D. azureum. 321. D. virescens, Nutt., var. floribus subceruleis. Dry and rocky prairies, and margins of thickets, New Braunfels. April. BERBERIDACE. 322. Berserts (Trinicina, Gray,) Trrrotiotata, Mori- cand, Pl. Now. Amer. p. 113, t. 69. B. ilicifolia, Scheele an Linnea, 21, p. 591, non Forst. B. Roemeriana, Scheele, |. c. 22, p. 352. High shore of Matagorda Bay. Also common in the interior of Texas, on Comale Creek, at New Braunfels, &c. (575.) An evergreen shrub, with few branches, but with many stems from the same base, often forming large thickets. It flowers in February and March; and the yellow blossoms exhale the odor of saflron. The globose berries, about the size of peas, ripen in May, are red, aromatic, and. acid; they are called “currants” by the inhabitants, and are used for tarts, &c. This interesting species, which is remarkable for its palmately trifoliolate leaves, is first men- tioned in the Appendix to the first volume of the Flora of N. America, as having been gathered by Drummond with- out flower or fruit. In 1841, it was named and characterized Plante Lindheimeriane. 143 by Moricand, from flowering specimens which occurred in Berlandier’s Texan Collection. We have now fine specimens both in flower and fruit from Mr. Lindheimer’s, Mr. Wright’s, and from Dr. Gregg’s collections; the latter met with it as far south as Buena Vista. I have characterized it as a third section of Berberis, in the Genera Am. Bor.-Cr. Illustrata, 1. p. 80. CRUCIFERZ. 323. SrreprantHus peTiouaRis, Gray, Pl. Fendl. p. 7. Muskit thickets and shady woods, New Braunfels and San Antonio. March.— All the lower leaves, as well as the base of the stem, are more hairy in my specimen than in those cultivated in the Cambridge Botanic Garden, from seeds taken from Mr. Wright’s plant; and the radical leaves are barely lyrate-pinnatifid, and rounded at the summit. From seeds sown in early spring, it flowers and fruits during the summer and autumn. +S. pracreatus (Gray, Gen. Am. Bor.-Or. Ill. 1. p. 146, t. 60. fig. 1-—3.): glaberrimus, subglaucus; foliis caulinis auriculato-amplexicaulibus, inferioribus oblongis acutis spe repando-dentatis, superioribus cordatis sinu profundo clauso in bracteas cordatas (inferiores florem, summas pedicellum subzequantes) sensim decrescentibus; petalis obovatis purpu- reis ; siliquis angustis preelongis (54-6 unc.) patentibus sub- falcatis. —At New Braunfels. June. Also gathered by Mr. Wright on sand bars of the Colorado, near Austin, in flower only, in the month of April. The radical leaves are sometimes entire or barely repand-toothed, sometimes incised or even lyrately pinnatisect, with most of the lower segments minute. One of Mr. Wright’s specimens is remarkable for having all the lower cauline leaves pinnately parted in this way, and petioled. The sepals are tinged with deep purple; the petals are light purple, with the broad spreading lamina half an inch in length. No ripe pods were gathered. The largest seen are about six inches long, but less than a line wide ; the immature seeds are winged. I have no specimens 144 Plante Lindheimeriane. of JS. obtustfolius nor of S. maculatus, with which last espe- cially our plant should be critically compared. But Dr. 'Tor- rey informs me that these species want the bracts, so uncom- mon in Crucifere, and which so conspicuously distinguish S. bracteatus. 324. Erysimum Arxansanum, Nutt. in Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 94; Gray, Gen. Ill. 1. t. 63. Wooded, rocky banks, &c., Comale Spring, and on the Guadaloupe. March, April. —A showy species, with large, deep, golden yellow, and faintly fragrant flowers. It was found on the Rio Grande by Mr. Wright. 325. Vesicarta Enceimanu (Gray, Gen. Am. Bor.-Or. Ill. ]. p. 162, t. 70): perennis, pube lepidoto-stellata argentata ; caulibus e caudice sublignoso plurimis simplicibus erectis su- perne parce foliatis ; foliis inferioribus spathulatis seu oblance- olatis rariter repando vel sinuato-dentatis in petiolum attenu- atis, superioribus sublinearibus integerrimis; racemo etiam fructifero brevi s%pius corymbiformi; silicula globosa glaber- rima_ breviter stipitata 5—12-sperma (loculis 8-ovulatis) stylo pergracili breviora ; seminibus submarginatis; funiculis septo longe adnatis. — Pebbly shore of the Guadaloupe, New Braunfels. May. Chiefly with mature fruit. (The same species, apparently, with elliptical and entire radical leaves, was found on the Upper Canadian, by Mr. Gordon.) From Lindheimer’s seeds, this handsome and very distinct perennial species is in cultivation in the Cambridge Botanic Garden. It makes a strong, deep root. The clustered, simple stems rise to the height of a span or a foot, are clothed, like the foliage, with a silvery pubescence composed of dense and closely appressed stellar tufts, and are terminated by a short and dense, usually umbelliform, raceme of golden yellow flow- ers, which are fully as large as those of V. grandiflora, the petals being half an inch long. Lower leaves two to three inches in length. The style is one third of an inch in length. I should have adopted Dr. Engelmann’s or Lindheimer’s name of V. umbellata, under which the specimens were sent, Plante Lindheimeriane. 145 and which is not inappropriate to this form, where the pedicels are as long as the axis of the fruiting raceme, except that, in the cultivated and some wild specimens, the raceme elongates in fruit to the length of three or four inches, as in the suc ceeding. (576.) V. ENGELMANNII, var. §. ELATIOR: racemo fructi fero extenso (3 -—-4-pollicari). V. pulchella, Kunth & Bouché, in Ann. Sci. Nat. 3-ieme Ser. 2, p. 229 (Apr. 1849,) ex char. 326. V. aneustirouia, Nutt. in Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 101. Summit of hills, in large patches, on stony soil, New Braun- fels. March, in flower. Accords entirely with the original specimens. What Scheele has taken for this species is evi- dently V. recurvata, at least in part. . 327. V. LinpueImeR! (sp. nov.): radice crassa perenni ; caulibus decumbentibus foliosis cinereis; foliis oblongis ar- gute sinuato- vel laciniato-dentatis imis lyrato-pinnatifidis pube implexa appressissima (e pagina superiore sero subdecidua) argenteo-incanis ; racemo fructifero elongato; silicula ovoideo- globosa glaberrima stipite plus duplo stylo subduplo longiore ; seminibus immarginatis. — Black, stiff prairie soil on the lower Guadaloupe, east of Victoria. February, in flower and fruit. — This appears to be a truly perennial species, and is remark- able for its strongly toothed leaves, as well as for the matted, extremely fine and close-pressed, silvery pubescence which clothes them. ‘The upper surface of the older leaves, how- ever, is merely cinereous with minute and rather sparse stellardown. Petals apparently light yellow, three or four lines long. 328. V. DENsIFLORA (sp. nov.): annua v. biennis, pube stellata laxa cinerea; caulibus adscendentibus usque ad flores foliosis ; foliis oblongo-spathulatis vel oblanceolatis basi atten- uatis sepius repando-denticulatis, radicalibus integris; race- mo etiam fructifero denso multifloro, pedicellis erectiusculis ; silicula estipitata subdepresso-globosa glaberrima stylo bre- viore 10-16-sperma (loculis 8-ovulatis); seminibus im- 146 Plante Lindheimeriane. marginatis; funiculis septo longe adnatis.— Prairies near Victoria, on the lower Guadaloupe; February, in flower. Gravelly banks of streams, Fredericksburg; May, in fruit (577.) (Also, near Austin, Mr. Charles Wright.) —Stems numerous from the same root, rather stout, spreading or ascending, 5 to 10 inches long, leafy to the top. Leaves equally cinereous both sides, as well as the stem and pedicels, with a rather loose stellar pubescence; the cauline an inch or less in length; even the radical undivided and barely re- pand or repand-denticulate. Flowers bright yellow, smaller by about one third than those of V. grandiflora. ‘The remark- ably dense raceme becomes in fruit from two to four inches long, often ripening as many as fifty silicles; the lower pedi- cels usually subtended by leaves. Silicles two lines in diame- ter, slightly didymous as well as depressed, not strictly sessile on the receptacle as in V. grandiflora, but raised on a barely appreciable stipe. Style fully two lines long. Seeds small, not at all margined.— This well-marked species appears to be common in Texas, especially throughout the Western dis- tricts. But I do not find that it has yet been described. + V. cranpirLora, Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 3464. var. 8 PINNA- viripa: foliis radicalibus majoribus interrupte pinnatipartitis segmentis dentatis lobatisve, caulinis seepe subpinnatifidis. — Prairies east of Victoria; February, in flower. The same form was gathered by Mr. Wright. — V. grandiflora is well distinguished from all the other species (of which a goodly number are now known in North America) by the unusually short style, the narrowly winged seeds, and the large flowers and pods. 329. V. arcyrma (sp. nov.): perennis, pube lepidoto- stellata undique argentea ; caulibus diffusis v. procumbentibus foliosis ; foliis omnibus spathulatis integerrimis vel repando- dentatis ; racemo laxifloro, fructifero elongato ; pedicellis szpi- us patentibus apice sursum curvatis ; silicula globosa estipitata glaberrima stylo equilonga oligosperma (loculis 16—- 18-ovu- latis) ; seminibus immarginatis. — V. arctica var.? Gray, Pl. Plante Lindheimeriane. 147 Fendl. p. 9.— Sandy banks of Green Lake, near Matagorda Bay, and prairies near Victoria; February, in flower and half- grown fruit. Also gathered by Mr. Wright on the Rio Grande, Texas; by Dr. Gregg at Buena Vista, and Dr. Edwards at Monterey, Northern Mexico; and by Fendler at Santa Fe, in flower only. The species assumes a variety of forms, according as it flowers early near the root, or from long procumbent stems. In the first case the pedicels are more upright ; in the latter they are spreading and upwardly curved, as mentioned in the specific character. They are sometimes subtended by leaves; and the racemes in Dr. Gregg’s speci- mens are occasionally proliferous. The bright-yellow flowers are about half an inch in diameter. The plant is silvery with crowded, but distinct, appressed, scurfy stelle. 330. V. recurvata (Engelm. ined.) : tenella, pube minuta lepidoto-stellata cinerascens; caulibus e radice annua pluri- mis gracilibus diffusis vel procumbentibus ramosis; foliis spathulatis integerrimis aut radicalibus repandis lyratisve, su- premis sublineari-oblongis ; racemis elongatis sparsifloris ; pe- dicellis se2pe secundis, fructiferis recurvis; silicula vix aut ne vix stipitata globosa glabra oligosperma parva stylo tenui bre- viore vel subzequali; seminibus immarginatis.—V. angusti- folia, Scheele, in Linnea, 21, p. 584, non Nutt. — Dry and stony or light soil, growing sparsely in the grass, San Antonio and New Braunfels. March, in flower; April and May, in fruit. Also around Austin, Mr. Charles Wright. —'The most slender species; with diffusely spreading stems, from four to eight inches long, and short, spathulate or oblong-spathulate leaves. ‘The flowers are not larger than those of V. gracilis, which it most resembles, and from which it is at once distin- guished by its nearly or quite estipitate silicles, pendulous on the recurved pedicels. The pods are a line, or little more, in diameter. 331. V. eracitis, Hook, Bot. Mag. t. 3533. Muskit Flats, in wet or low, grassy places, New Braunfels. April, May.—Stems upright or nearly so, slender, from 8 to 16 148 : Plante Lindheimeriane. inches long. The pods, in the stronger specimens, are twice as large as in Hooker’s figure and description.! (216.*) Drapa puatycarpa, Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 108. This is not the same as No. 216 (D. cunezfolia) of the former 1 VESICARTZ Boreali-Americanze Synoptice Disposite. Sect. I. Vesicarrana, DC. Silicula globosa, raro pyriformis, valvis membranaceis inflatis. ; § 1. Annue seu biennes. * Seminibus marginatis; stylo silicula (estipilata) dimidio vel ultra breviore ; JSoliis caulinis basi sepe auriculatis et subamplexicaulibus. 1. V. cranpirtora (Hook. Bot. Mag’. t. 3464): caulibus pube brevi subcinereis ; foliis seepe sinuato-pinnatifidis dentatisve; stylo silicula 2-3-plo breviore. V. brevi- styla, Torr. § Gr. Fl. 1. p. 102 (vide Suppl. p. 668.) The septum is not veinless, as is said by Don, but has a midnerve stretching from the apex towards the base, as is usual in the genus. 2. V. auricutata (Engelm. & Gray, Pl. Lindh. No. 217, p. 82): caulibus pe- dunculisque hirsutis; floribus minoribus ; stylo silicula dimidio brevioribus. * * Seminibus immarginatis ; stylo silicula subequalibus aut longioribus ; foliis omnibus basi angustatis. 1 Silicula vir aut ne viz stipitata, globosa. t Racemo etiam fructifero densifloro; pedicellis erectiusculis vel subpatentibus. 3. V. DENSIFLORA, (sp. nov.) Vide supra, No. 328. 4, V. ancustirouia, Nult. in Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p.101. Vide supra, No. 326. 5. V. Saortu, Jorr. g Gr. Fl. 1. p. 102.— The silicles, in the specimen of Herb. Torr., the only one I have ever seen, are nearly all sterile and imperfectly grown; hence their small size in proportion to the length of the style. In one pod, however, although remarkably small for the genus, I found a single ripe (marginless) seed, nearly filling the cell; in this case the style was no longer than the silicle. The species, although not sufficiently well known, is unlike any other here enumerated. tt Racemo sparsifloro; siliculis nutantibus. 6. V. REcuRvATA, Engelm. Vide supra, No. 530. 1 t Silicula breviter stipitata obovato-globosa seu pyriformi; foliis caulinis sub- repandis, 7. V. Nurratiu (Torr. § Gr. Fil. 1. p. 101): subcinereo-puberula ; filamentis basi ampliatis; silicula pyriformi juxta basim constricta. 8. V.repanpa (Nutt. in Torr. & Gr. l. c.): glabrata; floribus majoribus ; fila- mentis e basi dilatata sensim angustatis; silicula immatura subglobosi-obovata. — There are no specimens with full-grown silicles, while those of V. Nuttallii are alto- gether fruitful, with no good flowers. There is much reason to suspect that the two belong to one species. V. Nuftallii usually has a shorter but distinct stipe to the pod; but in one of the original specimens the stipe is fully as long as in V. gracilis. TTT Silicula manifeste stipitata, eracte globosa. t Floribus saturate flavis. 9. V. eraciuis (Hook. Bot. Mag’. t. 3533): glabrata, erectiuscula; foliis lanceola- ‘tis subintegerrimis; racemo laxifloro elongato; pedicellis elongatis patentibus ;_ sili- cula glabra stipite duplo longiore stylo pl. m. breviore.— The silicles of Berlandier’s and Drummond’s specimens are, as described and figured by Hooker, “not larger than hempseed.” In those of Lindheimer, where the whole plant is stronger, and in Plante Lindheimeriane. 149 distribution. Thickets, New Braunfels, &c. February. D. Reemeriana, Scheele in Linnea, 21, p. 583, would seem to be cultivated specimens, the silicles are considerably larger. The stipe is sometimes almost as long as the pod; sometimes scarcely half that length. 10. V. Gorponi (sp. nov.): tomentuloso-canescens; caulibus diffusis ; foliis sub- integerrimis, infimis. subspathulatis, superioribus lanceolatis vel linearibus; racemo fructifero laxo; pedicellis brevibus patentibus ; silicula glabra breviter stipitata stylo subduplo longiore. — On the Canadian, in the Raton Mountains, Mr. Gordon, (communicated by Dr Engelmann.) April; in flower and fruit. — This is, perhaps, a perennial species, but the root appears more like that of a biennial. The plant is sil- very-hoary, with a stellate pubescence; except the pods, which are very smooth, and two lines in diameter. Flowers not larger than those of V. gracilis, more crowded. The unripe seeds are not at all margined. ££ Floribus albidis ; siliculis nutantibus. 11. V. patina (Torr. § Gr. Fl. 1. p. 668, Suppl.): pube minuta lepidoto-stellata sub- cinerea ; caulibus adscendentibus ramosis ; foliis oblongis plerisque laciniato-dentatis basi attenuatis, radicalibus sublyratis ; racemo laxifloro; pedicellis fructiferis recurvis ; silicula globosa glabra leviter stipitata stylo tertia parte longiore.— V. grandiflora B. pallida, Torr. § Gr. Ll. c. p. 101. — The corolla is said, by Dr. Leavenworth (who alone has met with this plant) to be “‘ white.” §2. Perennes (Argentee seu incane.) * Seminibus levissime marginatis ; silicula substipitata stylo breviore. — 12. V. Encetmannu, Gr. Gen. Ill. ¢. 70. Vide supra, No. 325. * ® Seminibus immarginatis ; silicula stipitata stylo duplo longiore. 13. V. LinDHEIMERI, sp. nov. Vide supra, No. 327. * ® *® Seminibus immarginatis ; silicula non aut viz stipituta. t Stylo silicula equilongo v. longiore. $ Caulibus elongatis decumbentibus ; foliis spathulatis ; silicula glabra. 14. V. arGyR#A, sp. nov. Vide supra, No. 329. ¥} Caulibus abbreviatis suffruticosis ; foliis angustis ; silicula glabra. 15. V. Fenpcerti, Gray, Pl. F'endl. p. 9. 16. V. STENOPHYLLA (sp. nov.): humilis, cano-argentea, multiceps; foliis anguste linearibus gracilibus confertis; racemo multifloro denso; silicula membranacea gla- berrima stylum e#quante. — On the Rio Grande, Texas, Mr. Charles Wright. Mon- terey and Aguaneuva, Northern Mexico, Dr. Gregg, Dr. Edwards.— The specimen of Mr. Wright is the most characteristicone. From a thick, ligneous caudex it bears several], more or less woody branches, a span high, densely leafy, and terminated by a very compact raceme of golden yellow flowers, nearly as large as these of V. grandi- Jfiora. The plants of Gregg and Edwards are less condensed, and with smaller flow- ers. The leaves are an inch or more, the lower over two inches in length, entire, or the lower sparingly toothed; and the pods, also, are twice the size of those of V. Fendleri. Specimens intermediate between the two may perhaps occur. $4 Cawlibus herbaceis erectis vel adscendentibus ; silicula globoso-obovata incana. 17. V. Lupoviciana, DC. Syst. 2, p. 297; Hook. Fl. Bor.-Am. 1, p. 48. V. glo- bosa, Desv. Jour. Bot. 3, p. 171 & 184, ex char. Tt Stylo silicula globosa glabra vel stellato-puberula, 2 - 3-plo longiore. 18. V. arctica, Richards. Appx. Frankl. Journ.; Hook. l. c. JOURNAL B. 8. N. H. 20 150 Planta Lindheimeriane. a form of the same species, or perhaps of D. cunezfolia. To the latter, as a slender form, or to D. micrantha, would seem to belong D. filicaulis, Scheele, l. c. CAPPARIDACE:. 332. Povanisia TRACHYSPERMA, Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 669 ; Gr. Gen. Ill. 1. t. 79, & Pl. Fendl. p. 10. Sandy soil, on the Colorado and Pierdenales. July, October. This differs from P. uniglandulosa, as I have formerly remarked, princi- pally in the smaller size of the flowers. It is likely to prove only a northern form of that species. POLYGALACEZ. 333. Potyeata LinDHEIMERI (sp. nov.): pubescens ; cau- libus e radice incrassata lignea plurimis foliosis ; foliis alternis subsessilibus coriaceis utrinque reticulatis nitidis cuspidato- mucronatis, imis obovatis, superioribus gradatim ovatis oblon- gis et lanceolatis ; racemis terminalibus demumque lateralibus laxifloris ; rachi geniculato-flexuosa bracteis parvis ad nodos 3 persistentibus squamosa ; pedicellis brevissimis ; sepalo supe- riore bracteiformi a flore. subdistante alis spathulatis vix di- midio brevioribus ; carina imberbi crista calcariformi aucta ; capsula immatura pilosula.— Rocky declivities of the upper Guadaloupe and Pierdenales. June, August. Also met with by Mr. Wright, from the Colorado to the Rio Grande. — Root not unlike that of Krameria lanceolata, long, covered with a thick reddish bark. Stems a little woody at the base, Sect. II. Aryssorpes, DC. Silicula ovata, valvis convexis rigidiusculis. 19. V. aueina, Nutt. in Torr. G Gr. Fl. 1. p. 102; Gr. Pl. Fendl. p. 9. V. lasiocarpa, Hook. ined. (Vide Bot. Mag. sub t. 3464) isunknowntome. I have seen no Texan species with other than glabrous fruit. V. argentea, Schauer in Linnea, 20, p. 720, when the mature fruit is known, may prove to be a species of Synthlipsis. V. didymocarpa, Hook., and V. Geyeri, Hook. constitute the genus Physaria. The Iberis, n.sp.? Torr. in Ann. Lyc. New York, 2, p. 166, from Dr. James’s Collection, is Dithyrea Wislizeni, Engelm. in Wis. Rep. p. 96, which has recently been met with, in flower only, on the Upper Canadian, by Mr. Gordon. Planta Lindheimeriane. 151 branching, a span to a foot high, clothed with a soft spread- ing pubescence. Leaves from 5 to 10 lines long, coriaceous, minutely pubescent but shining, with a prominent midrib, the veinlets conspicuously reticulated on both surfaces. Racemes gradually prolonged so as to bear from 10 to 20 flowers in the course of the season; the joints of the remarkably zig-zag rachis from one to three lines long. Pedicels shorter than the calyx, 3-bracteate. Upper sepal a little remote from the flower, like a bractlet, ovate-oblong, concave, with the rudi- ment of a gland in its axil. Stamens 8, subdiadelphous. The galea of the carina is beardless, and bears a conspicuous, straight spur on the back in place of a crest. ‘The ripe fruit is unknown. The large upper sepal is persistent at the base of the half-grown fruit, after the others have fallen. All the sepals are deciduous in what I take to be P. ovalifolia, DC., which was gathered on the Leona and Rio Grande by Mr. Wright, as well as by Dr. Edwards and Major Eaton at Mon- terey, &c. KRAMERIACEZ. (13.) Kramerta Lvanceotata, Torr. in Ann. Lyc. New York, 2. p. 168; Gr. Gen. Ill. 2, t. 185, 186. New Braun- fels, among rocks. April, June. “Roots often more than three feet long.” VIOLACEZ. (578.) lonrprum uineare, Torr. in Ann. Lyc. New York, 2, p. 168; Torr. & Gr. Fl.1. p. 145; Gr. Gen. Ill. 1, t. 82. I. stipulaceum, Nutt. in Torr. & Gr. l. c.. Stems much branched from a ligneous perennial root, diffuse, or the branches often erect. Leaves opposite or occasionally alter- nate, entire or remotely serrulate; the lower varying from lanceolate to oblong or obovate; the upper linear, obtuse, usually three or four times the length of the stipules. Seeds turning black. —TI possess no perfectly authenticated speci- mens of I. stipulaceum, Nutt.; but I have good reason to » .. 152 Plante Lindheimeriane. think that it is not specifically different from the plant which was earlier indicated (from a branch, bearing narrowly linear leaves alone) by Dr. Torrey, under the name of I. lineare ; which name I have therefore adopted. The stipules should not have been termed “minute” in JI. lineare, since they are further said to be “ one-third the length of the leaves.” ‘The upper ones are seldom so long as this, while the lower are frequently “half as long as the leaves,” as they are said to be in I. stipulaceum. It is manifest that all our specimens belong to one and the same species. 344. I. uineare, Torr., ramis floriferis erectis strictioribus. I. stipulaceum, Nutt. 7. c. Damp Muskit flats, San Antonio. April. CARYOPHYLLACE. 335. Paronycuta Linpnemmerr (Engelm. ined.): annua, glabra, erecta; caule ramosissimo diffuso in cymas apertas multoties dichotomas diviso; foliis setaceis, superioribus brac- teisque consimilibus mucronatis internodio brevioribus ; calyce basi breviter pubescentibus, laciniis in aristulam lisdem duplo breviorem productis. — Naked, rocky places in high prairies. September. (Also gathered in Western Texas, by Mr. Wright. — Nearly allied to P. setacea, and very similar in aspect, foliage, flowers, &c., but the cymes are more open; the calyx minutely pubescent, instead of strigose-hirsute, at the base; and the awns much shorter than its segments, in- stead of being nearly of their length. The plant is smoother, often six inches high, and very much branched. (222.) P. picnoroma, Nutt. Gen. 1. p. 159; Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 171. High, rocky places, north of New Braunfels. August, October. 336. Sretuaria prostratTa, Baldw. in Ell. Sk. 1. p. 518. Rocky and shaded margins of rivulets, about the Comale Springs, and at New Braunfels; flowering from March to October. (Also Trinity Bay, Mr. Wright.) Plante Lindheimeriane. 153 PORTULACACEZ: (by Dr. Engelmann). (579.) Tavinum aurantiacum (n. sp.): radice tuberosa; / caule adscendente herbaceo ramoso patulo -piteso ; foliis / lanceolatis s. lineari-lanceolatis subsessilibus carnosis; flori- bus axillaribus singulis; pedunculis supra basin articulatis bibracteolatis, fructiferis reflexis; sepalis ovatis acuminatis tricarinatis, fructiferis subpersistentibus; petalis ovatis mu- cronatis; staminibus sub-25; seminibus lineis gyratis carina- tis et striis tenuissimis transversis eleganter notatis. — On the Sabinas, and more abundantly on the Liano, rare about New Braunfels, on rocky soil or almost naked rocks; in flower principally in July and August, but also at other seasons, always after heavy rains. — Root white, fleshy, tuberous, often bifurcated. Stems 8-16 inches long, ascending, much branched. Leaves 11-2 or even 3 inches long, 2—4 lines wide. Peduncle 4—5 lines long. Sepals of the same length ; petals 5 lines long and 3 wide, orange to red; filaments red; style and stigma orange. Seeds elegantly marked, black, larger than in any other North American species. — Distinct from all other species described by De Candolle, by the single flowers. (580.) Tatinum sarMENTOsuM (n. sp.) : radice crassa ; caule prostrato; ramis debilibus sarmentosis ascendentibus foliosis ; foliis carnosis late ovatis cuspidatis basi attenuatis subsessili- bus ; cymis axillaribus bracteatis subtrifloris (rarius compositis) versus apicem laxe paniculatis; floribus longe pedicellatis ; sepalis ovatis cuspidatis membranaceis deciduis; staminibus sub-15; seminibus nigris nitentibus sub lente tenuiter tuber- culatis. — New Braunfels, among shrubs on the banks of the Guadaloupe. July, September. — Stems prostrate ; branches weak, ascending, supported by the shrubs under “ which the plant grows, often 6 —10 feet long ;’”’ —the specimens before me are 2—4 feet long. Lower leaves 2}—3! inches long, 1-1; wide. Pedicels 6—12 and more lines long, thickened at the apex. Sepals about one line long; flowers apparently ae 154 Plante Lindheimeriane. 4—5 lines in diameter, purple. Capsule about one line long, almost globose. Seeds smoother than in any other of our species.’ 1 “ Besides these two species, we have in the flora of the United States, three others very different from these, but nearly related to one another; namely, the well-known T. teretifolium, Pursh, T. calycinum, Engelm. in Wisliz. Rep.; and 7’. parviflorum, Nutt.; all three now in cultivation with me, and well distinguisbed from one another. T'. calycinum is very ornamental; the large flowers have sometimes six to ten petals. “ Mr. Lindheimer has discovered two undescribed species of Portulaca in Western Texas. As these plants are so difficult to preserve and so unsightly when dried, he did not collect specimens for distribution; but from his seeds both were raised by me last season and prove very remarkable plants, one from its near alliance with Portu- laca oleracea, the other from its great difference from that species. I arrange the species of our flora (all of them annuals) in the following manner. PORTULACA. * Spathulate: glaberrimee; caule tereti; foliis spathulatis obovatis ; sepalis alato- carinatis cum operculo capsule maturee deciduis ; petalis flavis emarginatis s. bilobis; capsule annulo circulari tumido. J 1. P. overacea, L.: foliis obovatis spathulatis apice rotundatis; alabastro com- presso oyato acuto; sepalis carinatis; staminibus 7-9; stigmatibus 5 stylum bre- vem superantibus; seminibus minoribus minute sub lente verruculosif nigris. — St. Louis, very common; flowers open in direct sunshine between 9 and 10 o’clock, A.M. August. 2. P. retusa (n. sp.) : foliis cuneatis retusis, seu emarginatis ; alabastro compresso orbiculato obtuso; sepalis late carinato-alatis; staminibus sub-15 (17 - 19, Lindh., in plantis parvulis 7-10); stigmatibus 3-4 stylum eequantibus vel eo brevioribus; seminibus majoribus sub lente echinato-tuberculatis nigricantibus. — Granite region of the Liano in Western Texas. Flowers open in direct sunshine between 83 and 93 A. M. (in St. Louis, in August), always before the common species. — Distinguished from the nearly allied P. oleracea by the broader retuse leaves, and broader calyx; by the larger, more distinctly tuberculated, somewhat paler seeds, much larger style, and shorter and fewer stigmata. Number of stamina variable. In large speci- mens (bushes several feet in diameter, stems at base 6-7 lines thick, prostrate or ascending); the number counted was 15. Stigmata almost invariably 4, rarely 3. * * Lanceolate: glaberrime ; caule angulato; foliis superioribus lanceolatis ; sepa- lis vix carinatis post anthesin deciduis ; petalis plerumque versicoloribus acutiusculis ; capsule ala circulari lata ex calycis basi aucta. 3. P. Lanceo“aTa (n. sp.): sub-erecta; foliis inferioribusspathulatis obtusis, superi- oribus lanceolatis acutis; petalis obovatis s. oblanceolatis acutiusculis s. cuspidatis ; staminibus 7-27; stigmatibus 3-6; capsula turbinata versus apicem ala circulari lata cincta ; seminibus majoribus echinato-tuberculatis cinereis. a. VERSICOLOR ; petalis majoribus obovatis rubris basi flavis; staminibus 12-24; stigmatibus 5-6 linearibus; capsule ala orbiculari plana. 8. MiNoR; petalis minoribus oblanceolatis seepe totis flavidis rarius apice rubellis; staminibus 7-12; stigmatibus 3-4 ovato-oblongis; capsule ala subpentagona un- dulata. Granite region of the Liano, in Western Texas. — Stems in smaller plants a few inches high, erect, with erect branches; in larger specimens a foot or more high, as- Plante Lindheimeriane. 155 LINACEZ. + Linum Boorrn, Planchon in Lond. Jour. Bot. 7, p. 475. Upper Pierdenales, sparsely in sandy prairies—The specimen is entirely in fruit, and has lost nearly all its leaves. Some remarks on this species will be found under No. 581. 337. L. Boorru, 7. RUPESTRE ; caulibus gracilentis; foliis lineari-subulatis ; sepalis paulo latioribus ; capsulis minoribus. —L. rupestre, Lindheimer in sched. New Braunfels, with Cereus cespitosus, growing sparsely on rocky soil or in crey- ices of naked rocks. May.— Stems several, from a firm, probably not really perennial root, very strict and slender, a foot or more high. Petals three or four times the length of thelanceolate-ovate, cuspidate, and glandular-ciliate sepals. 338. L. mutricauLe, Hook. in Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 678; Planchon in Lond. Jour. Bot. 7, p. 185. Upper Pierden- ales; socially in naked, clayey places in open oak woods. October; mostly in fruit. Flowers small, yellow. Styles united almost to the summit. Branches clothed with the minute lanceolate-subulate leaves quite up to the flower; the cending, very much branched. Leaves 3-1 inchlong, 1-3 lines wide. Flowers 4-6 lines in diameter, very pretty in the larger forms, open from 8-9 o’clock, A. M. (St. Louis, August); earlier than any other species. Capsule with the wing, which is formed by the enlarged base of the deciduous calyx, 2-23 lines in diameter. — The seeds of both forms are absolutely identical, so that the difierence in the number of stamina and stigmata, and in the size and color of the flower, cannot constitute them distinct species, as Mr. Lindheimer suggests. He adds that the leaves of @ have an acidulous, and those of # an insipid, mucilaginous taste. *** Teretifolie: ad axille pilose; caule tereti; foliis plus minus teretibus, basi paulo productis ; sepalis membranaceis ecarinatis cum operculo capsule mature de- ciduis ; petalis violaceis; capsulze margine circulari tumido. 4. P. pitosa, L.: sepalis lineari-oblongis, petalis ovato-oblongis obtusis retusis s. emarginatis duplo brevioribus; staminibus 15-25 stigmatibus 5-6 subzequantibus; seminibus minutis nigris opacis minute tuberculatis. Texas, New Mexico, Mexico, ete.— Flowers open from 9-11 or 12 o'clock in bright sunshine, 4-5 lines in di- ameter: stigmata glandular, hairy on the margins only, purple. 5d. P. Gituresu, Hook.: sepalis orbiculato-ovatis petalis orbiculato-obcordatis ter quaterve brevioribus; staminibus numerosissimis (60) stigmatibus sub-5 exsertis longe brevioribus ; seminibus paulo majoribus tuberculatis cinereis nitentibus.—Com- mon in cultivation, and here and there almost naturalized; originally from Cuili. Flowers 20 - 24 lines in diameter, open from 8 or 9 to 2 or 3 P. M. in sunshine. Stig- mata glandular, hairy on the margins and upper surface, yellowish or greenish. 156 Planta Lindheimeriane. margins of the latter aculeolate-ciliate, or in Lindheimer’s specimens nearly smooth and naked. It is probably only an annual, as likewise the next. Mixed with this, in the distri- bution, and probably forming the whole in many sets, are fruiting specimens with the upper leaves sparser and the tips of the branches naked, like a short peduncle. These belong to the following species, if indeed it be different, and to the New Braunfels locality there cited. 339. L. uupsonioipes, Planchon J. c. p. 186. New Braunfels, growing in dense patches, on dry soil, with a rocky substratum, in naked places in the prairies; May; in fruit; (distributed under No. 338). In clayey soil, Agua Dulce on the Matagorda Bay; February, in flower.— The leaves are less approximated and less squamous than in the preceding ; the uppermost sparse on the branches, so that the flower, and especially the fruit, is raised on a manifest peduncle, some- times of more than half an inch in length. The capsules and the flowers are larger; the yellow petals nearly five lines in length. But it too closely resembles L. multicaule, of which it is perhaps only a variety. (581.) Linum Beruanprerr (sphalm. Berendieri), Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 3480; Engelm. & Gr. Pl. Lindh. p.5; Gr. Pl. Fendl. p. 25, No. 84 (non. 85) ; Planchon in Lond. Jour. Bot. 7, p. 473; Scheele in Linnea, 21, p. 596. L. rigidum, g. Berendieri, Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 204. Stony, dry prairies, near New Braunfels) May.— Except in the larger size of the flowers, and the laxer leaves, this species is hard to dis- tinguish from L. rigidum. Both, I believe, are annuals ; but, as they flower through a great part of the year, the root hard- ens, and the base often shows the vestiges of earlier stems, which have perished ; thus giving it somewhat the appearance of a perennial. The styles are united either for two-thirds of their length, or almost to the apex. One of Lindheimer’s specimens in my set (gathered in 1846) not indistinctly shows small stipular glands; while that of the Coll. 1847-8 does not. ‘These glands are equally visible in some of the Plante Lindheimeriane. 157 specimens of No. 85, P/. Fendl., which I should now refer to L. rigidum, Pursh. I believe that I have also noticed them in L. Virginianum; but they do not appear in any of the specimens preserved in my herbarium. ‘The localities from the eastern parts of the United States, cited from Torr. & Gr. Fl. N. Amer. by Pianchon under L. Berlandieri, belong to his L. Boottii, as I suppose does also the whole of what is called L. rigidum in New England, &c. At least this is the case with the plant gathered at New Haven by Oakes, and at Providence by Mr. Olney. The latter is exactly L. Boottii a. Planchon, l. c. As to his L. Boottii g, from Texas, by Lindheimer, I fortunately possess a corresponding speci- men, supplied by Engelmann subsequently to the distribution of Lindheimer’s former collections, and named “ L. rigidum” on a ticket bearing the printed number 118, which number has been erased with the pen. ‘This explains its occurrence in the same way in herb. Hooker. The root is annual. If it be a distinct species, as is most likely, still it appears, from what has already been stated, the stipular glands cannot be entirely relied upon for a character. Planchon has omitted to notice the more or less glanduliferous-ciliate margins of the sepals, which are conspicuous in most cases, and caused the plant to be referred in the Flora of North America, &c. to L. rigidum, to which it is very nearly related. GERANIACEZE. 340. Eropium 'Trxanum (Gr. Gen. Ill. 2, p. 130, t. 150): bienne v. annuum; caulibus diffusis cinereo-puberulis ; foliis glabriusculis cordatis crenatis plerumque 3-lobatis, superiorum lobis lateralibus bifidis, terminali 3—5-fido; pedunculis 3-flo- ris ; floribus vernalibus petalis purpureis sepala scarioso-mar- ginata subulato-mucronata duplo superantibus, serotinis ape- talis; pedicellis calycibusque pube appressa canescentibus eglandulosis ; carpellis hirsutis lineari-clavatis basi pungenti- bus.— Small thickets in prairies above Victoria; and in patches in rocky soil at New Braunfels; March, April. Also JOURNAL B.S. N. H. 21 JAN. 1860. 158 Plante Lindheimeriane. the apetalous state (340, in Coll. 1847-8) ; the particular locality not given. Mr. Wright also gathered it in Texas, where it appears to abound.— From the Californium E. ma- crophyllum, Hook. & Am. (the leaves of which are often less than an inch in diameter,) which it most resembles, this spe- cies is distinguished by its smaller flowers, more deeply lobed leaves, more slender carpels, and the close cinereous pubes- cence of the pedicels and calyx, which are destitute of glan- dular hairs. OXALIDACE®. 341. Oxauis vespertiuionis, Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 679.. Prairies, Upper Pierdenales. October. Also gathered in Western Texas by Mr. Wright. ZYGOPHYLLACEZ. 342. Kauustremia maxima, Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 213; Gr. Gen. Ill. 2, t. 146. Prostrate in clayey soil, near San Antonio. September. (582.) Guatacum aneustirotium, Engelm. in Wisliz. Me- moir, Appx. p. 113; Gr. Gen. Ill. 2, p. 123 (subgen.? Guar- acipium), t. 149. Western Texas, in fruit; the station not given. RUTACEZ. 343. Rurosma Texana, Gr. Gen. Ill. 2, p. 148, t. 155. Stony prairies, with Cactacee, Upper Guadaloupe. March. Also detected by Mr. Wright in Texas, and by Dr. Gregg at Monterey. — Remarkable as the sole representative of the proper Rutacez in America. ANACARDIACEZ. 344. Ruvs Copanuina, Linn. var. teucantHa, DC.: caule 10-pedali; foliis lanceolatis; floribus albis. R. leu- cantha, Jacg. Rocky precipices, New Braunfels. July. 345. R. Copauuina, Linn. var. ranceoLaTA: foliis lanceo- latis subfalcatis seepe elongatis integerrimis vel subserratis ; Plante Lindheimeriane. 159 floribus flavis (pl. submasc. subfoem. fruct.) Rocky soil and high prairies, New Braunfels. July. Plant from two to five feet high. 346. R. Toxicopenpron, Linn. ; Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 218. Thickets and stony prairies, New Braunfels. May, in flower: September, in fruit. ‘Erect, not climbing.” — This is the Rhus verrucosa, Scheele in Linnea 21, p. 592, which is com- pared only with R. aromatica! The ‘“ Verrucee magne sub- rotund atropurpurex lucid,” of the lower surface of the leaves, which suggested the name, are merely exudations of resinous juice caused by the puncture of insects on some leaves only, as Dr. Engelmann has pointed cut. + R. Toxtcopenpron, Linn. var. foliis ramulisque molliter pubentibus. Thickets, New Braunfels. 347. R. (Logapium) rriuopara, Nuit. in Torr. & Gray, Fil. 1, p. 219. Rocky soil, margin of high prairies, New Braunfels; March (in flower); June (in fruit). A slender, much branched shrub, two to five feet high. 348. R. virens (Lindheimer, Mss.): glabella; foliis sem- pervirentibus 3—4-jugis cum impari, rachide nuda; foliolis ovatis oblongisve obtusis v. obtusiuscule acuminatis margine subrevolutis integerrimis corlaceis supra nitidis subtus pallidis sub lente minutim tomentulosis; floribus albidis thyrsoideo- paniculatis ; paniculis axillaribus folio brevioribus ; drupa rubra hirsuta, putamine lenticulari leevi. — Rocky soil, in open places, in Cedar woods, New Braunfels, &c. March; in fruit, August. Mr. Wright sends the same species from Western Texas; and Dr. Coulter collected it at Zimapan, Mexico. A well marked species, of the section Sumac. Leaflets an inch or rather more in length, smooth, except under a lens, soft to the touch, shining above, thick and rigidly coriaceous. MALVACE. + Caturrruoe invotucrata, Gray, Pl. Fendl. p. 14, & Gen. Ill. 2, p. 53, t. 117. Malva involucrata, Torr. & Gray, Fi. 1, p. 226. Oak openings, on the Pierdenales. June. 160 Plante Lindheimeriane. (584.) C. pierrata, Nutt. in Jour. Acad. Philad. 2, p. 181; Gray, Pl. Fendl. l. c., & Gen. Ill. 21, p.53. Nuttallia digitata, Bart. Fl. N. Amer. 2, t. 63, Hook. Exot. FI. 3, t. 171. Nuttallia cordata, Lindl. Bot. Reg. t. 1938. Prairies on the Pierdenales, at the margin of woods. May, June. Also gathered by Mr. Wright. “Root edible, more pleasant than that of Psoralea esculenta,’ Lindh. — One of the most showy species of this handsome genus; the petals, over an inch in length, are beautifully fringed at the summit. The radical leaves are very various. 349. C. pepata, Gray, Pl. Fendl. p. 17, (excl. syn. Nut- tallia digitata, Bart.) & Gen. Ill. 2, p. 53, t. 118. Nuttallia pedata, Nutt. in Hook. Exot. Fl. 3, t. 172. Dry prairies and margin of thickets, near Victoria, New Braunfels, and on the Cibolo, &c. Also abundantly gathered by Mr. Wright. February, April. —In cultivation, this handsome species pro- duces its deep cherry-red blossoms through the whole season, and when supported attains the height of five or six feet. Although it has been confused with the preceding, it is totally distinct from it. It has much smaller flowers, leafy stems, more incised foliage, and a slender, annual or biennial root. . 350. M. Wricutu, Gray, Pl. Fendl. p. 21, & Gen. Ill. 2, p. 60, t. 122. Malva aurantiaca, Scheele, in Linnea, 21, p. 469. Muskit flats, in black and heavy prairie soil. New Braunfels. July. — The stems are rigid, from a more or less ligneous base; the rather large, golden yellow flowers open in the afternoon. The fructiferous calyx is somewhat en- larged, and expanded, and tinged with brownish-red; the carpels in the living plant (raised in the Cambridge Botanic Garden,) are more deeply tinged of the same color. — The characters of a new species, allied to M. coccineum, are sub- joined. 1 MaLVASTRUM PEDATIFIDUM (sp. nov.): caulibus e radice perenni diffusis gracili- bus ramosis ; foliis tripartitis profunde trifidisve pilis stellatis parce hirsutis, segmentis lateralibus bifidis, terminali subtrilobo, omnibus subpinnatifido-incisis, lobulis denti- busve patentibus; stipulis subulatis ; floribus sparsis axillaribus et secus ramulos laxe racemosis ; bracteolis 2 setaceis calyce subduplo brevioribus; carpellis muticis, rostro Plante Lindheimeriane. 161 351. Matvastrum carprinirotium, Gray, Pl. Fendl. p. 22. In sterile soil, New Braunfels, &c. August.—To the syno- nyms cited in the work above-cited, I have to add that of Malva Lindheimeriana, Scheele in Linnea, 21, (1848,) p. 470. The flowers open merely during a few hours of the brightest sunshine. 352. Pavonta Wrieutu, Gray, Gen. Ill. 2, p. 76, t. 130. P. lasiopetala, Scheele in Linn@a, 21, p. 470. Rocky soil in Cedar woods, New Braunfels. -Also gathered in Western Texas, by Mr. Wright, and near Monterey, in Northern Mexico, by Dr. Edwards and Major Eaton. — A low, shrubby species, with handsome, rose-colored flowers, which are larger in the wild than in our cultivated plant, from which the figure in the Genera Illustrata was made. The seeds are glabrous, except a little pubescence at the chalaza ; and in some other respects, also, the species is not very well characterized by Scheele. His name, from its priority in publication, should probably be adopted, although so badly chosen ; for the petals, at most sparingly stellate-pubescent externally, are often nearly or quite glabrous. 353. A. Texense (Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1, p. 231): tomento minuto molli undique velutino-canescens ; caule (2 —4-pedali) paniculato; foliis cordatis acutis vel subacuminatis serratis supra viridulis, ramealibus gradatim minoribus; pedunculis inferioribus petiolum subzequantibus, summis folio longiori- bus; corolla lutea; capsula ovoidea obtusa cinerea 8-loculari apice breviter 8-loba calyce 5-fido demum reflexo multum longiore ; carpellis erectis obtusiusculis muticis +3-spermis. — Prairies, &c. in hard and dry soil, New Braunfels. August, September. Apparently common throughout Texas, and to Monterey, in Northern Mexico, where it was gathered by Dr. brevi complanato membranaceo inflexis.— On the Rio Grande, Texas, in dry soil. Cultivated in the Cambridge Botanic Garden, it flowers through the summer. Stems a foot or less in height, much more slender than in M. coccineum; the flowers smaller and paler (between a buff and a brick-color.) The leaves are not canescent, but green and sparsely stellate-hirsute, and their segments incised or almost pinnatifid ; the lobes are tipped with a deciduous mucro or short seta. 162 Plante Lindheimeriane. Gregg. The expanded corolla is two thirds of an inch in diameter. The larger cauline leaves are from three to four inches long, on petioles of half that length, They are de- scribed in the Flora of North America, from the branches only. 1 do not know the A. Nuttallii.t 354. ApuTILoN HoLoseRicEtM, Scheele in Linnea, 21, p. 471. A. velutinum, Gray, Gen. Ill. 2, p. 67, t. 125. Rocky soil, along the margin of thickets, New Braunfels, &c. August, September. Also gathered by Mr. Wright in West- ern and Southern Texas. — Stem three to six feet high; the larger leaves nearly a foot in diameter, on petioles six to eight inches long, very seldom at all lobed. The deep orange- yellow corolla is over an inch in breadth. The details of the fruit, &c. are well delineated in the plate cited above. The anthers are reniform, in the ordinary manner, not three-lobed, as described by Scheele. ‘The young leaves are quite white ; the older and larger ones greener. The root is said to be *Jioneous and perennial?” in the wild plant. In cultivation it is an annual. | + Seu#ratcea LinpHermerr (sp. nov.): Janoso-tomen- tosa; caulibus decumbentibus basi ut videtur suffruticosis ; ramis floridis assurgentibus ; foliis cordatis seepius rotundatis grosse crenatis indivisis ; pedunculis petiolo longioribus ; brac- teolis involucelli 3 setaceis calycis lobis ovato-lanceolatis acu- minatis dimidio brevioribus; corolla rosea. — Victoria, on the lower Guadaloupe ; margin of thickets on the prairie. 1 Near the southwestern borders of Texas, Mr. Wright obtained specimens of the subjoined species, namely : — ApuTILON WRiGHTII (sp. nov.): caulibus decumbentibus ramosis viscoso-pubes- centibus et pilis gracillimis patentibus villosis ; foliis ovato-cordatis obtusiusculis argute dentatis supra viridulis seabrido-velutinis subtus mollissime niveo-tomentosis ; stipulis subulatis caducis; pedunculis unifloris petiolum e#quantibus vel superioribus folium superantibus; calyce tomentoso 5-partito, laciniis sensim acuminatissimis corollam auream subsequantibus; capsula tomentulosa calyci sequilonga, e carpellis 7 apice subulato-rostratis 3-spermis. — On the Rio Grande and the Seco, Mr. Charles Wright. — Stems one or two feet in length; the leaves from one third to an inch and a half long. Calyx nearly as long as the peduncle. The golden-yellow corolla is over an inch in diameter when fuily expanded. Capsule half an inch long, not inflated, the subulate beaks little diverging. Plante Lindheimeriane. 163 February; just beginning to blossom. Stems a foot long. Leaves one or two inches broad ; the soft pubescence appear- ing as if deciduous with age. Calyx deeply 5-cleft; the lobes half an inch long. ‘The expanded corolla about two inches in diameter. Stamineal column stellate-hairy. Styles 17-—18, clavate at the tip; the stigmas truncate rather than capitate. Ovules two or three in each cell. Fruit not seen. 355. Sipa Fiticauis, Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1, p. 232. S. fili- formis, Moricand, Pl. Nouv. Amer. p. 38, t. 25. High and dry prairies and sunny declivities, New Braunfels, &c. June, August. — Prostrate, in patches, producing very numerous slender and branching stems from a perennial and somewhat ligneous root. These, when young, are beset with long, spreading hairs, which are so slender that they often escape notice, and are also deciduous from the older stems. Hence our Texan plant is doubtless the S. filiformis of Moricand, gathered at Tampico by Berlandier. Moricand’s name is a little the earlier published; but it appears from Steudel that there is a prior S. filiformis of Jacquin, which has been over- looked.? (583.) S. pHysocatyx (sp. nov.): caulibus e radice car- nosa crassa plurimis decumbentibus ramosis strigosis; follis carnosulis ovato-oblongis crenato-dentatis basi 5—7-nerviis 1 Sida anomala 8. Mexicana, Moricand, l. c. p. 36, t. 24, also from Tampico, is S. fasciculata, Torr. g Gray, Fil. 1, p. 231, which has recently been gathered in Western Texas, by Mr. Wright. The corolla, in dried specimens, is pink or rose- color, as is also said by Moricand, and the short, tufted stems spring from a stout pe- rennial root. Another species, indicated by Dr. Engelmann, I know only from a fragment, namely : — Sipa HETEROCARPA, Engelm. Mss.: “stellato-pubescens; caule erecto ramoso; foliis basi subcordatis obtusis crenato-dentalis, inferioribus lanceolatis, superioribus linearibus; tubercule subbasi petioli subspinoso; petiolis brevibus stipulas setaceas et pedicellas solitarias s. fasciculatas superantibus ; carpellis 5 nigris divaricato-birostratis apice pubescentibus latere tenuiter rugulosis, dorso membrana tenui evanescente clau- sis.—Road-sides, waste places, Houston, Texas, with S. spinosa. Annual? Flowers in August and September. Distinguished from S. spinosa by the narrower dentate- crenate (not xerrat:) leaves, and smaller black (not light brown) carpels, rugulose (not lacunose-reticulated) on the sides, with a prominent point on the back, broader, shorter, more divaricate, not erect beaks. The seed escapes through the back, not through the regular opening at the top.” 164 Plante Lindheimeriane. subcordatis petiolo subduplo longioribus supra pilis simplicibus subtus pilis 3—5-partitis appressis parce strigosis, infimis ro- tundatis, summis sublanceolatis acutis ; stipulis subulatis ; pedunculis axillaribus unifloris petiolo brevioribus fructiferis nutantibus; calyce 5-partito membranaceo inflato 5-alato clauso pedunculum adequantibus, segmentis late ovatis quasi cordatis; corolla flavida vix exserta; ovario carnoso arcte depresso 10-lobo pruinoso demum in carpella 10 rotundata intus subrosirato-producta mutica semini conformia nitida minute reticulata calyce maximo vesicario inclusa secedenti- bus.—On the Liano. A well-marked species, apparently allied to S. physalodes, Pres’; the calyx strikingly inflated, like a Physalis; the corolla inconspicuous and opening only for a short time in direct sunshine. It has been cultivated during the past summer in the Botanic Garden, and it forms a conical and fleshy perennial root. Specimens have been gathered by Mr. Wright, and others in Southern Texas, by Wislizenus, south of El Paso del Norte, and by Dr. Gregg in Northern Mexico.’ 1Three other undescribed Texan species have been detected by Mr. Wr ght namely : — Sipa TRAGIZFOLIA (sp. nov.): humilis; caulibus (e radice perenni?) suberectis petiolisque pube stellata subglutinosa velutinis setisque patentibus gracillimis hispidis ; foliis ovato-oblongis angulato-cordatis grosse dentatis penninerviis basi 5—7-nervatis supra parce subtus molliter pubescentibus petiolo gracili (pollicari) vix duplo longio- ribus, superioribus acutis; stipulis setaceis; pedunculis axillaribus unifloris petiolum — subzequantibus; corolla supra calycem villosulum paulo excedente; carpellis 10 glabriusculis apice obtuso bipartibilibus summo dorso bicorniculatis. — Raised in the Botanic Garden, Cambridge, from seeds gathered in southern Texas by Mr. Charles Wright. The foliage is not unlike that of Tragia urticzefolia. Corolla fugacious, half an inch in diameter. Carpels short, beakless, bimucronate or bicorniculate on the back near the apex. S. FILIPEs (sp. nov.) : furfuraceo-canescens ; caule erecto paniculato gracili: foliis brevissime petiolatis lanceolatis basi cordatis dentato-serratis obtusiusculis supra velu- tino-pubescentibus subtus ramulisque cano-tomentosis nunc fulvis vel ferrugineis ; stip- ulis setaceis petiolum excedentibus ; pedunculis unifloris capillaribus (2-3-pollicari- bus) foliis longioribus paulo sub flore pendulo articulatis; corolla (purpurea?) caly- cem subduplo superante; carpellis 7 reticulato-rugosis muticis superne pubescen- tibus dorso canaliculatis bivalvibus. —On hills above Austin, Texas, Mr. Charles Wright. Also near Monterey, Mexico, Dr. Edwards and Major Eaton (in Herb. Torrey).— Base of the slender stems wanting, but apparently it is entirely herba- * eeous, of two or three feet in height. The leaves are from one and an half to two Plante Lindheimeriane. 165 356. Metocuta pyramipata, Linn.; Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 683; Gray, Gen. Ill, 2. t. 134. Upper Guadaloupe, on rocky soil. August. 357. Hermannra Texana, Gray, Gen. Ill. 2. p. 88. t. 135. Rocks, on the Upper Guadaloupe; in flower; and in high rocky prairies on the Salado River ; in fruit, October, (585.) — This interesting accession to our flora has also been found on the Rio Grande by Mr. Wright, and in Northern Mexico, by Dr. Gregg. Since the figure above cited was published, the plant has flowered in the Cambridge Botanic Garden. I must remark that the cinnabar-colored corolla is convolute and erect, not at all spreading at any period, as is represented in the figure, which was made from a dried specimen. The plant is suffruticose, with a thickened ligneous root. VITACEZ. 358. V. rupestrRis, Scheele in Linnaa, 21. p. 591. V. populifolia, Lindh. ined. Dry, rocky bed of the Cibolo, Upper Guadaloupe, and other streams; also in rocky prairies on the Pierdenales; flowering in May; the fruit ripe in July, August, and September. — Like his other species, this is by inches long, half an inch or less in width, and much like those of Sphzralcea angusti- folia. The peduncles are remarkably long and slender, and curved towards the apex, near the articulation, so that the flower and fruit are pendulous. The calyx is 5-cleft to the middle ; the lobes rather obtuse. The expanded corolla is only about four lines in diameter. It is said by Mr. Wright to be “blue;” in the dried specimens it is dark purple. — The species is probably allied to S. venusta, Schlecht. S. CUNEIFOLIA (sp. nov.): cano-tomentosa, humilis; caulibus e basi fruticulosa assurgentibus ramosissimis ; foliis parvulis rotundato-cuneiformibus flabellato 3 - 5-ner- viis crenato-dentatis repandisve utrinque concoloribus ; stipulis linearibus petiolum subzequantibus; floribus (flavis) brevissime pedunculatis folio brevioribus ; carpellis 5 pubescentibus membranaceis turgidis apice inter rostra brevia mollia demum bival- vibus; semine globoso.— In subsaline soil, Texas, about thirty-five miles north-east of Eagle Pass, on the Rio Grande, September, Mr. Charles Wright. — A well-marked, low, procumbent species, in foliage and habit not unlike a Hermannia. The soft, downy leaves are only about half an inch in length and breadth, on petioles of three or four lines long; the flowers are solitary, or often clustered in the axils, and some- times scarcely exceed the petioles. The yellow corolla is twice the length of the ca- lyx, and is half an inch in diameter when expanded. The ovate carpels are membra- naceous, slightly inflated ; the seed is proportionally large and spherical, as in Abuti- lon, with the micropyle somewhat rostellate. JOURNAL B, 8. N. H. 22 JAN. 1350, 166 Planta Lindheimeriane. no means well characterized by Mr: Scheele. According to Lindheimer it is called Mountain Grape, and covers large tracts of rocky soil. It does not climb, but the stems are upright, and only two or three feet high. The branches are small, and the berries, of the size of peas only, are black, very sweet, and the most grateful as well as the earliest ripened grape of Texas. Dr. Engelmann informs me that he met with the same species in Western Arkansas, growing in similar situations. Also that a specimen exists in Michaux’s Herbarium, on the same sheet with V. riparia. The leaves are somewhat glaucous, and in appearance between those of V. riparia and V. vulpina, but much smaller than in either. 359. V. mstivauis, Michx. Fil. 2. p. 230: var. tomento albo, nec fulvo. Shady banks of streams, New Braunfels, &c.; flowering in May; the fruit ripein August. ‘ Climbing high trees. Berries of the size of peas, in large bunches, very black ; the taste vinous and pleasant. Flowers very odor- ous.” Lindh. — Under the name of “ V. candicans, (n. sp.,) Engelm. ined., 1 have from Lindheimer, as also from Mr, Wright, Texan specimens of what appears to be a variety of V. Californica, Benth., with the leaves somewhat less dentate and more densely tomentose underneath. + Viris (Cissus) mvcisa, Nutt. in Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 243. New Braunfels, climbing on Muskit trees. July— September. — Leaves thick and remarkably fleshy. + V. vuneina, Linn.; Torr. & Gray, 1. ce. V. rotundi- folia, Michz. Fl. 2. p. 231. New Braunfels. April. ACERACEZ. 360. Necunpo aceromwes, Mench.; foliis adultis molliter pubescentibus. New Braunfels; and banks of the Comale. March, in flower. August, in fruit. MALPIGHIACE. 361. Gatpnimia Lintrotia (Gray, Gen. Ill. 2. p. 196. t. 173): humilis; caulibus gracilibus e basi pubescente herba- Plante Lindheimeriane. 167 ceis glabellis; foliis glabris glaucescentibus lanceolatis vel linearibus subsessilibus (infimis seepe oblongis vel ellipticis in petiolum angustatis) juxta basim utrinque uniglandulosis re- pando-subdenticulatis vel integerrimis ; racemis laxis ; pedi- cellis basi articulatis; petalis flavis cito rubris. — Rocky hills and prairies of the Upper Guadaloupe. July — September. Also found by Mr. Wright; and in Northern Mexico by Dr. Edwards and Major Eaton. Stems from one to two feet in height.? SAPINDACEZ. 362. Aiscutus Pavia, 8. piscotor, Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 252. Pavia discolor, Pursh. Banks of the Comale Creek, March. “Shrub 6—10 feet high: flowers red or yellow.” 363. Unenapra speciosa, Endl. Atakt. Bot. t. 36, & Nov. Stirp. Dec. p. 86; Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p.684; Gray, Gen. Ill. 2. p. 211, t. 178, 179. U. heterophylla, Scheele in Linnea, 21. p. 589; sphalm. pro U. heptaphylla, Scheele, l. c. 22. p. 352. In bottom-woods, New Braunfels. March; sometimes flowering again in August. ‘“ Shrub 3 to 20 feet high, with many long stems, 1 to 3 inches thick, branching only at the top. Fruit sweet and pleasant, but emetic.” Lindh. Its pop- ular name is Spanish Buckeye. — “ The fertile flowers and the fruit, although for several years known to us, have not until now been illustrated or described, except by Adolf Scheele, who has published a description, from Lindheimer’s speci- mens, in the Linnea, during the past year. The flowers 1 On the southwestern border of Texas, Mr. Wright has detected a Malpighiace- ous plant, which proves to be a third species of Aspicarpa, namely : — ASsPICARPA HYSSOPIFOLIA (sp. nov.): caulibus e radice lignescente plurimis erectis (6-12-pollic.) ; foliis lineari-lanceolatis basi rotundatis subcordatisve sessilibus ; pedi- cellis axillaribus solitariis ; petalis rotundatis eximie crispato-fimbriatis. — On the Rio Grande and Rio Seco, Texas, Mr. Charles Wright.— Leaves scarcely an inch long, one to two lines wide; the midrib and margins hispid-ciliate. Flowers about one third the size of those of A. Hartwegiana; the petaliferous ones scattered in the axils (not umbellate at the summit of the stem), and fructiferous, either two or three car- pels ripening. These are much as.in A. Hartwegiana, but smaller, more upright and acute, deeply umbilicate at the insertion. Fruit from the abnormal, apetalous flowers not seen. 168 Plante Lindheimeriane. which Endlicher happened to examine were pentapetalous, which is not the more usual case; and he erroneously states the plant to form a large tree, whereas it is commonly a slen- der shrub, of five or ten feet in height, or at most a small tree. Misled by these discrepancies, and by the differences of the two kinds of flowers, and, it would seem from his description, happening to possess tetrasepalous as well as tetrapetalous flowers (although there are five sepals in all my Lindheimerian and other specimens,) Mr. Scheele has wrongly introduced a second species, under the name of U. . heterophylla. The leaflets vary from five, or even three, on the earlier leaves, to seven.” Gen. Jil. l. c.—In seedling plants, raised in the Cambridge Botanic Garden, I have noticed a lusus of the earliest leaves, in which the leaflets are confluent. (586.) U. speciosa, Endl. Finer specimens of both sexes ; from New Braunfels. (587.) Sapinpus mareinatus, Willd.; Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 255; Gray, Gen. Ill. 2. t. 180. New Braunfels. June, (in flower.) RHAMNACEZ. 364. Zizypnus optusirotia, Gray, Gen. Ill. 2. p. 170. t. 163. Rhamnus obtusifolius, Hook. in Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 685. Paliurus Texanus, Scheele in Linnea, 21. p. 580. Bottom woods of Comale Creek, New Braunfels, &c. ; com- mon. A shrub or small tree, with slender shoots and green- ish-white bark; several times flowering between March and September. No. (588) is the same plant in flower, and in ripe fruit, the fruit ripening the season after flowering.! 1 Another species, gathered by Dr. Gregg between Matamoros and Mapimi, may ” be thus characterized : — ZiZYPHUS LYCIOIDES (sp.nov.): glabrata; ramis valde spinosis; foliis oblongo- ‘linearibus parvis integerrimis coriaceis ; pedunculis brevissimis 3 -5-floris; drupa sub- globosa monosperma. — The sharp and straight thorns are from one to two inches in length: the specimen shows no stipular spines. Leaves halfan inch long, one or two lines wide, obtuse. Fruit, of the size of that of the Buckthorn, said by Dr. Gregg to be black and edible. Plante Lindheimeriane. 169 365. Cotuprina Texensis: caule ramosissimo, ramulis divaricatis cinereis ; foliis elliptico-cuneatis oblongisve glandu- loso-denticulatis breviter petiolatis alternis plerumque in nodos fasciculatis supra pubescentibus nunc glabratis subtus sericeo- villosis fulvis penniverviis basi trinervatis ; pedunculis fascicu- latis paucis petiolo longioribus calyceque (laciniis patentibus) villosis. — Rhamnus? Texensis, Torr. & Gray, Fil. 1. p. 263. — Prairies and borders of woods on the Guadaloupe and Comale. (Also communicated by Mr. Wright.) Flowers in May; fruits in June. — Shrub 2 to 5 feet high, rigid. Leaves three fourths of an inch long. Pedicels two to four together from the centre of the cluster of leaves, two or three lines long in flower, in fruit becoming half an inch or more in length. Calyx-tube adherent to the ovary and filled with the broad annular disk; the lobes widely spreading, broadly tri- angular-ovate, nearly herbaceous. Petals unguiculate, shorter than the subulate-filiform filaments, scarcely equalling the calyx. Styles three, sometimes four, united at the base, stigmatose on the inner face above. Ovary immersed in the adherent disk. Fruit dry and capsular at maturity, tricoc- cous, somewhat three-lobed, globular, girt at the base by the persistent and adherent base of the calyx, three-seeded. Seeds lenticular, plano-convex, shining. Cotyledons plane; albumen very thin. This shrub, of which we at length are provided with complete specimens, has nearly the flowers of a Zizyphus, but the fruit of a Ceanothus. It appears to be a genuine Colubrina. 366. Conpauia opovata, Hook. Ic. Pl. t. 287; Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 685; Gray, Gen. Ill. 2. t. 164. “On slopes, near watercourses; common from Matagorda Bay to New Braunfels. — Shrub, or small tree, sometimes 20 to 30 feet high, with a trunk one foot in diameter. Flowers very sparse. August, September. THe wood dyes blue. Called here Blue-wood or Logwood.” No. (589) is the same plant, in flower and fruit. 170 Plante Lindheimeriane. + Ceanotuus ovatus, Bigel. Fl. Bost. ed. 2. p. 92. C. ovatus, Desf. Arb. 2. p. 381. Rocky heights, along the Pierdenales and Sabinas. June (in fruit.) | LEGUMINOS. (590.) Victa Leavenwortau, Torr. & Gr.l.c. W. Texas. 367. Puasrouus retusus, Benth. Pl. Hartw. No. 59, p. 11. P. maculatus, Scheele in Linnea, 21. p. 465. On rocky or gravelly soil in the dry bed of the Cibolo River. June, September. “Prostrate; the stems often running for twenty feet.” In cultivation it is more or less voluble. The leaflets are thicker in texture and more reticulated than those of P. perennis, not acuminate, but obtuse or many of them retuse. They are more dilated at the base than in my specimen of Hartweg’s plant, but otherwise, there is little perceptible dif- ference. Mr. Wright met with it all the way to the Rio Grande, and Dr. Wislizenus in Chihuahua. + P. piversirotius was found on the Liano; and Aptos rusEeRosA and Curroria Mariana on the Pierdenales. 368. Gatactia Texana: procumbens, subvolubilis, cine- reo-tomentosa, trifoliolata; foliolis ovalibus retusis setaceo- mucronatis supra cinereo-puberulis subtus sericeo-canescenti- bus; racemis paucifloris folio brevioribus petiolum raro supe- rantibus ; legumine eximie falcato sericeo folia excedentébum\|€ —Lablab Texanus, Scheele in Linnea, 21, p. 467. — New Braunfels. August. Root ligneous. Leaflets 1 to 1} inch long, in appearance intermediate between those of G. mollis and G. canescens, less whitened beneath than in the latter. Flowers little larger than those of G. mollis, with hirsute, more attenuated and longer calyx-lobes. Legumes 2% inches long, linear, strongly falcate, densely silky, 9—10-seeded. I do not observe the muricate-tuberculate sutures mentioned by _ Scheele. Seeds oval, chestnut-colored, with a brown hilum, not strophiolate. The species is nearest allied to what I take to be G. mollis, Micha. Mr. Scheele, with his usual wisdom, provisionally refers the plant (without fruit) to Lablab ! Plante Lindheimeriane. 171 369. Ruynonosta Texana, Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 687. New Braunfels; prostrate, or climbing over bushes. August. It has the aspect of a Galactia. 370. Gavactia canescens, Benth. Comm. Legum. Gen. p. 62; Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1. p. 288, & p. 687. Heterocarpza Texana, Scheele in Linnea, 21, p. 467. Rocky soil, New Braunfels. June,September. ‘ Often flowering a second time after the rains in September, as is the case with many other plants.” — Stems creeping; many of the racemes becoming subterranean, and bearing globular, membranaceous legumes which are filled by a single large seed; while the legumes which fructify above ground are linear-oblong, canescent, and 4—5-seeded; as is mentioned in the Fl. N. Amer. p. 687. On this Mr. Scheele has founded his new genus Heterocar- pea, which he thinks is very distinct from any other known! (591.) G. HETEROPHYLLA (sp. nov.): cano-sericea; cauli- bus gracilibus e basi suffruticosa decumbentibus; foliolis oblongis subcuneatis obtusis retusisve mucronulatis, aut 3 late- ralibus a terminali paulo remotis brevissime petiolulatis, aut in plurimis 4 —5, accessoriis cum lateralibus digitatim insertis ; racemis brevibus paucifloris ; calycis laciniis triangulari-oblon- gis sericeis corolla multo brevioribus, superiore bidentato ; legumine puberulo recto inferne angustato 3 —6-spermo. — On the Liano, October. — Remarkable for its prevailingly 4 —5- foliolate leaves, although some in each specimen are only 3-foliolate ; the additional leaflets are mostly rather smaller than the others, and inserted with the lateral pair. Stems 6 to 20 inches long. Leaflets half an inch long, thickish, silky- canescent, especially underneath, with a closely appressed and silvery pubescence ; the veins rather prominent underneath. Stipules subulate: stipels deciduous. Peduncles 1 —4-flow- ered. Corolla nearly half an inch long, fully twice the length of the calyx; the vexillum appears to have been pale yellow! the other petals rose-color. Legume 1} inches long. Seeds, style, &c. as in the genus to which I refer this in some respects anomalous species. 172 Plante Lindheimeriane. 371. Sespanra macrocarpa, Muhl.; Torr. & Gr. Fl.1. p- 293. Banks of Comale Creek. August, September. (592.) Tepnrosia LinpuHeimert (sp. nov.): caule pros- trato nunc adscendente flexuoso ramoso pube brevi tomentu- loso; foliolis 7-13 late obovatis cuneatisve sepe retusis mu- cronulatis subtus preesertim incano-sericeis; stipulis brevibus subulatis; racemis laxe multifloris; lobis calycis subulatis tubo sublongioribus ; legumine pube brevi densa velutino. — Muskit prairies, on the Liano. August. (Also gathered by Mr. Wright in Western Texas.) Stems rather stout, 3 or 4 feet long, from a tuberous and ligneous root. Leaflets 8 to 12 or sometimes 18 lines in length, roundish-obovate or broadly cuneiform ; the pairs rather distant on the rachis. Raceme 7-9 inches long, exceeding the leaves, 20—30-flowered. Corolla nearly as large as that of T’. onobrychoides, over half an inch broad, purple. 372. Psoravea cusprpaTa, Pursh. Fl. 2, p. 741; Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1, p. 688. P. cryptocarpa, Torr. & Gr. l. c. p. 301. P. Reemeriana, Scheele in Linnea, 21, p. 463.1 New Braun- fels; sparsely on rocky prairies. May, June. “Flower entirely blue.”” — The caudex or root often bears a globular tuber, as in P. esculenta, &c. The spikes become oblong or cylindrical, and looser in fruit ; the bracts are ovate-oblong or obovate, and abruptly cuspidate-acuminate ; the calyx is some- what gibbous, and its lower lobe soon elongated; points in which the species is not quite correctly described in the Flora. The legume is utricular, membranaceous and fragile. (593.) PsoraLea cypHocaLyx (sp. nov.): striguloso-sub- cinerea, caulibus e caudice lignescente tuberifero erectis sim- plicibus; foliis digitatis 3—5-foliolatis; foliolis linearibus (majoribus 3-pollicaribus) mucronulatis supra glabratis nigro- glandulosis; stipulis subulatis; spicis longiuscule pedunculatis 1 The Indigofera Lindheimeriana, Scheele in Linnea, I. c. is evidently I. Anil, L. 8. polyphylla, DC., which I have from Texas by Mr. Wright (although neither Dr. Engelmann nor I have received it from Mr. Lindheimer,) and also from South Caro- lina, where, according to Mr. Ravenel it occurs not uncommonly in cultivated fields. Plante Lindheimeriane. 173 interrupte multifloris fasciculis approximatis; bracteis ovatis acuminatis; calycis tubo valde obliquo postice saccato pedi- cillum bis terve excedente, lobis lanceolatis acuminatis mar- gine albo-villosis, superioribus ultra dimidium coalitis. — Rocky prairies on the Cibolo and Pierdenales, growing sparsely. May, June (in flower.) —Caudex perpendicular, dilated below the summit into a globular tuber, of nearly an inch in diameter. Stem 2 to 3 feet high, simple, or sparingly paniculate at the summit. Lower petioles nearly as long as the leaflets ; the latter 2 or 3 lines wide. Spikes dense, one or two inches long. Flowers apparently pale purple, fully half an inch in length; the pedicels scarcely a line long. Calyx conspicuously glandular; the tube remarkably one-sided, nearly straight on the lower side, but strongly gibbous-saccate or almost calcarate on the upper! The free apices of the nine filaments are very short, all antheriferous; five of them spatulate, the four intermediate triangular and _ shorter. Ovary glabrous. Fruit not seen. (594.) P. nypocma, Nutt., var. scaposa: pedunculis petio- los v. folia equantibus, 11-2! unc. longis. — Stony soil, hills on the Pierdenales, near Fredericksburg. April. (Western Texas, Mr. Charles Wright.) — Tuber globular or pointed upwards, sending forth a slender caudex, beset with membra- nous scales. From the Canadian River we have specimens gathered by Mr. Gordon, which are intermediate, as to the length of the peduncle, between the Texan plant and that described by Nuttall. 373. P. rLoripunpa, Nutt. in Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 300. Prairies on Comale Creek. In black, clayey soil, New Braunfels, ‘growing in patches, many stems from the same base, forming a large and dense bush.” June. — May not this rather than P. obtusiloba (of which Mr. Wright has sent characteristic specimens from Texas,) be the P. tenui- jlora of Pursh and Nuttall ? 374. EysennarpTiA amMorPHorpEes, H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 6. p. 491, t. 592; Schauer in Linnea, 20, p. 747. E. JOURNAL B.S. N. H. 23 JAN, 1850. 174 Plante Lindheimeriane. Drummondii, Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 690, sine descr. E. Texana, Scheele in Linnea, 21. p. 462. — Rocky precipices, Upper Guadaloupe. August. Also gathered by Mr. Wright. ‘Shrub 4 to 7 feet high.” Vexillum barely emarginate. Style little curved at the apex. Ovary with two collateral ovules. Legume linear and arcuate or sabre-shaped, com- pressed, 5 or 6 lines long, sessile, glandular, dotted, with a single oblong seed pendulous from near the apex, empty below, agreeing with those of E. amorphoides, as described by Schauer, and as observed in Mexican specimens of Coul- ® ter’s Collection. ‘The foliage is rather smoother, the vexillum less notched, and the style less hooked than in the Hartwe- gian specimens of E. amorphoides ; but those of Coulter and of Dr. Edwards are intermediate ; so that I have no reason to think that the Texan plant is a distinct species. ‘The tenth stamen is scarcely free in either. All the specimens show an oval gland near the apex of the style.—A second species, however, with a 4-ovulate ovary, gathered by Dr. Wislizenus, has been characterized by Dr. Engelmann, as below. + Amorpua FruTicosa, Linn.; var. subglabra; foliolis el- lipticis retusis supra nitidis. — On a creek near F'redericks- burg. June.—One of the forms of this polymorphous spe- cies, nearly the same as the A. nana, Bot. Mag. t. 2112. (595.) A. rruticosa, Linn.; var. subglabra; foliolis ob- longis seu lineari-oblongis. A. Lewisii, Lodd.! Cat. — New Braunfels. Like the last, except that the leaflets are narrower and seldom retuse. I know of no constant characters for distinguishing A. glabra, Desf., A. Caroliniana, Croome, 1 “E, spinosa (n. sp.): fruticosa; ramis squakgosis rachidi spicarum persistente AA lignosa spinosis; foliis 6-8-jugis ; foliolis minutis ovatis acutis adpresse pilosis ; spicis paucifloris; calycis obconico-campanulati dentibus triangularibus obtusis insequali- bus; vexillo profunde bilobo; staminibus subdiadelphis; ovario 4-ovulato et stylo apice uncinato pilosis.— On Lake Encinillas, north of Chihuahua, Dr. Wislizenus ; in flower, August and September. — A rough looking, in many respects, remarkable shrub, 2-3 feet high, with black bark. Leaves 4 to 6 or 7 lines long: leaflets 1-13 lines long. Spikes an inch long, with a stout persistent rachis: flowers at first white, then rose-colored : uppermost (vexillary) filament shortest and almost free, adhering to the tube only at its base: style strongly hooked.” — Engelm. Mss. Plante Lindheimeriane. * 175 A. nana, Nutt., Bot. Mag., and A. levigata, Nutt. from A. fru- ticosa. The A. Romeriana, Scheele in Linnea, 21. p. 461, is doubtless a form of A. fruticosa or of A. paniculata. 375. Datea LaxirLora, Pursh. Fl. 2. p. 741; Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 307. D. penicillata, Moric. Pl. Nouv. Amer. t.45. Dry and rocky prairies, between the Rio Colorado and Guadaloupe. June, in flower. September, in fruit. + D. rogonarnera, Gray, Pl. Fendl. p. 31. On the Liano. October.—Stems a span high, numerous, from a thickish, apparently perennial root. Vexillum violet-pur- ple. + D. aurea, Nutt. Gen. 2. p. 101. Dry prairies, Upper Guadaloupe. June. + D. nana; Torr. in Gray, Pl. Fendl. p. 31. Post-Oak- openings, on the Pierdenales. June. Also gathered by Mr. Wright on the Rio Grande, and by Mr. Gordon on the Ar- kansas. 376. D. rrutescens (sp. nov.): glaberrima; caulibus lig- nescentibus ramosis glandulis tuberculiformibus raris obsitis ; foliolis 6—8-jugis glaucescenti-eruginosis obovatis retusis obcordatisve manifeste petiolulatis subtus (rachique in foliis summis submarginata) grosse glandulosis; spicis paniculatis brevibus paucifloris ; bracteis coriaceis ovatis muticis glandu- losis calycem vix equantibus caducis; tubo calycis sessili glabro glandulis magnis cerinis ornato, dentibus brevibus tri- angulato-subulatis margine villosis; corolla violacea, carina maxima vexillo plus duplo longiore. — Rocky hills, and high plains, along the margin of thickets, on the Guadaloupe, Sabinas, and Pierdenales. July, August. (Western Texas, and on the Rio Grande, Mr. Charles Wright. Monterey, N. Mexico, Dr. Edwards in Herb. Torr.) This is a shrubby species, a foot or two in height, and totally distinct from D. citriodora, for which I at first mistook it. ‘The flowers are more like those of D. nutans, but they are much fewer, sessile, the calyx remarkably glandular; the leaflets are of a different form, not at all crenate; and there is a gland, 176 Plante Lindheimeriane. instead of a subulate stipel, on the rachis at the insertion of each leaflet.! (596.) AsrracaLus caryocarpus, Ker, Bot. Reg. t. 176; Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 331. Clayey soil, near Victoria. February, in flower. Also (598) in Western Texas, in flower and fruit. (597.) A. Mexicanus, Alph. DC. Pl. Rar. Hort. Genev. not. 5. p.17.t. 3. A. trichocalyx, Nutt. in Torr. & Gray, Fl.l.c. Prairies on the Lower Guadaloupe, west of Victoria. February, in flower. — This and the last species, although often confounded in herbaria, are manifestly distinct in the living state. A. caryocarpus has more strigose and somewhat canescent, oblong or linear-oblong leafiets, close and fine hairs on the calyx, sometimes blackish, a violet purple corolla, the flower about two thirds of an inch long, and ovate pointed legumes, which are seldom more than two thirds of an inch in diameter. A. Mexicanus is a larger plant in all its parts, with smoother and greener foliage; the leaflets varying from roundish-obovate to oblong; the flowers an inch long; the calyx villous, (often very densely) with soft, white hairs; the corolla barely tinged above with pale violet, or nearly white ; and the very turgid globose-ovoid legumes are obtuse and over an inch in diameter.’ | 1 Petalostemon virgatum, Scheele in Linnea, 21, p. 461, is plainly the No. 42, Pl. Lindh. and No. 137, Pl. Fendl., viz. a pubescent variety of P. violaceum, perhaps connecting that species with P. decumbens. The leaves in some specimens are in- deed 7-foliolate, in others both 5-foliolate and 3-foliolate.— Trifolium Reemerianum, Scheele, 1. c. is manifestly the T. amphianthum, Torr. § Gray, FV. 1. p. 316. 2 This Texan plant is clearly De Candolle’s A. Mexicanus; but Dr. Engelmann thinks it distinct from the A. trichocalyx, of Missouri; on account of the still larger and pale purple flowers, and shorter calyx-teeth. The remarks above are chiefly founded on living plants of A. trichocalyx and A. caryocarpus, raised from seeds furnished by Dr. Engelmann from St. Louis. Mr. Wright has communicated specimens of a new Texan species of Astragalus, and also seeds from which the plant has been raised, during the past summer in the Cambridge Botanic Garden. AstTraGALUs WRiGHTII (sp. nov.): annuus, pumilus, hirsuto-canescens; caule subsimplici ; stipulis subulatis liberis ; foliolis 3- 5-jugis oblongis acutiusculis; pedun- culis folio longioribus paucifloris; floribus capitatis; calyce hirsutissimo, lobis lineari- subulatis attenuatis corollam violaceam superantibus Jegumine oblongo hirsuto sub- tereti fere biloculari 6-4-spermo dimidio brevioribus.— Texas, near Austin, Mr. - Plante Lindheimeriane. 177 (599.) Zornia TeTRapHytua, Michx. Fl. 2. p. 76. Post- Oak openings west of the Pierdenales. June. (600.) Lupisus Texensts, Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 3492. New Braunfels. Not distinct, I fear, from DL. subcarnosus. 377. Cercis occrpentatis (Torr. ined.): frutex; foliis subreniformibus obtusissimis ; leguminibus oblongis obtusissi- mis breviter apiculatis vix stipitatis. — C. Siliquastrum, var. Benth. Pl. Hartw. No. 1706, p. 307. — Var. fioribus etiam paulo minoribus, foliis supra nitidioribus. C. reniformis, En- gelm. Mss. Rocky plains of the Upper Guadaloupe. March, in flower; June, with ripe fruit. A shrub, forming thickets, never becoming a tree.— This is entirely distinct from C. Canadensis ; but does not differ from the Californian plant of Fremont and of Hartweg, except that the flowers are a little smaller still, being no larger than those of C. Canadensis, and the full-grown leaves are rather thicker and more shining above. The Texan and the Californian plants agree in their short and scarcely stipitate pods (only 2 or 23 inches long, and two thirds of an inch broad,) which character, with the size of the flowers, would seem abundantly to distinguish it from C. Siliquastrum, the legumes of which, including the manifest stipe, are six, or at least five inches in length. (Dr. Charles Wright. — The plants from seeds sown in the spring blossom from midsum- mer to autumn. Stem a span high, seldom branched. Leaflets 4 lines long, the upper surface sparsely, the lower densely beset, like the stem, &c., with villous- hirsute loosely appressed hairs. Peduncles in fruit 2 or 3 incheslong. Legumes half an inch long, densely hirsute, straight, rather acute, tipped with the short style, often carrying away the inconspicuous corolla upon its apex as it enlarges, nearly erect, only three or four produced in each capitulum, scarcely twice the length of the persistent subsessile calyx. Bracts subulate, the lower resembling the calyx-lobes.— Mr. Wright has also detected Oxytropis Lamberti, Pursh, in Western Texas; and likewise a unifoliolate Desmodium, namely : — Desmopium Wricuti (sp. nov.): caulibus gracilibus ramosis puberulis; foliis . unifoliolatis breviter petiolatis; foliolo membranaceo oblongi-ovato obtuso basi subcor- dato fere glabro; stipulis stipellisque subulatis minimis; racemis rats omento if yA 3-4-articulato breviter stipitato, articulis inzequilateris ovalibus. — Austin, Fp: Mr. Charles Wright.— Stems one or two feet high. Leaves veiny, wale and minutely pubescent underneath, mucronulate ; the lower two inches long, on petioles half an inch long; the upper successively narrower and smaller, on shorter petioles. Legume less than an inch long; the stipe as long as the stamineal tube. 178 Plante Lindheimeriane. Gregg has gathered fruiting specimens of the same plant in the high lands near Saltillo, Mexico, in 1848.) — Dr. Engel- mann states that it is peculiar to the limestone districts of Middle 'Texas. 4 378. SopHora (Srypunovopium) arrinis, Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 390. Margin of Cotton-wood groves along the Rio Colorado, above Bastrop: August (in fruit); also near New Braunfels and San Antonio, common; April, in flower. — ‘¢ A small tree, 10 to 12 feet high, the trunk 4 to 8 inches in diameter, rarely a small shrub; the annual shoots with green bark, fragile; the wood very heavy.” Leaflets less than an inch long, nearly of the same hue both sides, retuse or very obtuse. No. 6Q1 is the same plant, from New Braunfels. 379. SopHora (DermaTorHYLium) speciosa, Benth. Mss. Dermatophyllum speciosum, Scheele in Linnea, 21. p. 459. Sophora sempervirens, Engelm. Mss. ‘‘On the western part of Matagorda Bay, where it forms groves. Also sparsely on rocky hills, margins of Cedar woods along the Guadaloupe, near New Braunfels, &c. 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