. Synoptical flora of North America. Botany; Gamopetalae. 148 GUia. Incised, the lobes short; the upper becoming simple, small and entire: branches loosely few-flowered: pedicels shorter than the flower: corolla (7 to 9 lines long) rose-color with violet throat, narrowly funnelforra or even trumpet-shaped; its slender tube fully thrice the length of the calyx : capsule ovoid-oblong. â Lindl. Bot. Reg. ; Gray, 1. c, excl. var. â California, from Monterey southward. ~G. inconspicua, Dougl. Mostly low, a span to a foot or more high, usually with slight woolly pubescence wlien


. Synoptical flora of North America. Botany; Gamopetalae. 148 GUia. Incised, the lobes short; the upper becoming simple, small and entire: branches loosely few-flowered: pedicels shorter than the flower: corolla (7 to 9 lines long) rose-color with violet throat, narrowly funnelforra or even trumpet-shaped; its slender tube fully thrice the length of the calyx : capsule ovoid-oblong. â Lindl. Bot. Reg. ; Gray, 1. c, excl. var. â California, from Monterey southward. ~G. inconspicua, Dougl. Mostly low, a span to a foot or more high, usually with slight woolly pubescence wlien young, and viscid glandular, branching from the base : leaves mostly pinnatifid or pinnately parted, or the lowest bipinnatifid, with short mucronate-cus- pidate lobes ; the uppermost becoining small, subulate, and entire : flowers either somewliat crowded and subsessile or at length loosely panicled and some of them slender-pedicclled : corolla violet or purplish (3 to 5 lines long), narrowly funnelform, with proper tube shorter or slightly longer than the calyx. â Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 2883 (corolla too salverform); Benth. in DC. 1. c.; Gray, 1. c. G. parviflora, Spreng. Syst. i. 626. Cantua parvifiora, Pursli, n. ii. 730. Ipomopsis inconspicua, Smith, Exot. â Wyoming to the western border of Texas, and west to California and British Columbia. Very variable in size and form of corolla, passing into â ^_,^ Var. sinuata, Gray, 1. c. Corolla larger, at least in proportion to the calyx, becom- ing thrice its length, with tube more exserted and throat and lobes more ample. â G. sinuata, Dougl.; Benth. in DC. G. arenaria, Benth. â Oregon and California to New Mexico. Some forms approaching the two preceding. = = Seeds destitute of mucilage and spiricles when wetted, numerous: leaves nearly all radical, barely pinnatifid or toothed; the cauline mainly reduced to small subulate bracts'of the open compound panicle, which is about a span high : some flowers with ve


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Keywords: ., bookauthorgra, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectbotany