Neues aus: Charles V. Piper, Flora of the State of Washington. III. 215 
LVII. Neues aus: Charles V. Piper, Flora of the State 
of Washington. Ill. 
(Ex: Contr. Unit. St. Nat. Herb., XI [1906], 637 pp.) 
(Fortsetzung.) 
80^ Rosa nutkana macdougali (Holzinger) Piper, l. c., p. 335. 
Rosa nutkana hispida Fernald, Bot. Gaz, XIX, 335; 1894, not Rosa 
hispida Moench., 1770. — Rosa macdougali Holzinger, Bot. Gaz., XXI, 36; 
1896. — Eastern Washington to Montana and Oregon. 
81. Drymocallis valida (Greene) Piper, 1. c., p. 342. 
Potentilla valida Greene, Pittonia, III, 20; 1896. — Potentilla glutinosa 
Nutt,; Torr. € Gr., Fl. I, 446; 1840, as synonym. — Drymocallis glutinosa 
Rydberg, Mon. N. A. Pot., 196; 1898. — Potentila fissa major Torr. & Gr., : 
Fl. I, 446; 1840 not P. verna major Wahl. — British Columbia to Wyoming, 
Utah, and Oregon. 
82. Sieversia ciliata (Pursh) Piper, I. c., p. 844. 
Geum ciliatum Pursh, Fl. I, 352; 1814. — Geum triflorum Pursh, 
Fl. II, 736; 1814. — British Columbia to Labrador, southward to Arizona, 
Missouri, and New York. | 
88. Thermopsis montana subspec. ovata Robinson, apud Piper, l. c., 
p. 349. 
Leaflets broader than in T. montana, ovate. — North Idaho and ad- 
jacent Washington and Oregon. 
Specimens examined: Chehalis County, Lamb 1197; Walla Walla, 
Leckenby, June, 1898; Blue Mountains, Piper, July, 1896; Palouse 
City, Moore, June, 1893; Henderson, July, 1892. 
Zonal distribution: Arid Transition, 
The type is Piper 1489, collected on Cedar Mountain, Latah County, 
Idaho. 
84. Lupinus ($ Sericei) piperi Robinson, apud Piper, l. c., p. 353. 
Silky and canescent, leafy at the base; root single, perpendicular; 
stems 1 to 6, scapose, rather stout, simple, erect, curved-ascending, or 
decumbent, covered with a loosely appressed pubescence; leaflets 5 to 8, 
oblanceolate, acute, or acutish, about 3 cm long; petioles 5 to 10 cm 
long; peduncles 7 to 13 cm in length, equaling the showy rather loose 
racemes; pedicels 3 to 4 mm long, tomentose with widely spreading 
hairs; corolla deep blue; the standard broad, entirely glabrous, paler 
toward the center; keel ciliated; pods 20 to 24 mm long, 4 or 5-seeded. 
This species is near L. hellerae Heller, but is paler in color and has 
shorter leaflets, spreading pubescence on the pedicels, glabrous standard, 
etc. Found in gravelly soil. 
Specimens examined: Spokane, Henderson, June 2, 1892, 2338 in 
part; Sandberg & Leiberg, May, 1893; Piper 2730 (type), 2949, 2287; 
Spangle, Piper 2440, 3543. 
Zonal distribution: Arid Transition. 
