Neues aus: Flora of the State of Washington. III, 217 
glabrous; keel ciliolate; ovary 5 to 7-ovuled; pods spreading, pubescent, 
3 to 4 cm long, 9 mm wide, about 4-seeded. — Dry grounds. 
Specimens examined: Columbia River, west Klickitat County, Suks- 
dorf 110, May 3 (in flower), June (in fruit), 1883; same locality, moun- 
tain sides, Suksdorf 109, May 2 (in flower) June (in fruit), 1883; 
same region and collector, April 24 (in flower) June (in fruit), 1886; 
Wenache, Whited 1032, April 23, 1899; sandy hillsides west of Wenache, 
Whited 1033, May 2, 1899. 
90. Lupinus ornatus subsp. bracteatus Robinson, apud Piper, l. c., 
p. 355. 
Braets much exceeding the buds, often recurved, somewhat per- 
sistent, much more conspicuous than in the typical form. — Gravelly 
prairies. Bearing much the same relation to the typical form of Lupinus 
ornatus Dougl. as. subspecies plumosus Robinson does to L. leucophyllus 
Lindi., and no more constant, 
Specimens examined: Spokane, Henderson 2338 in part; Piper 2728, 
2823, 2947; Almota, Piper 2939, 
91. Lupinus alpicola (L. F. Henderson in herb.) Robinson, apud Piper, 
l. c., p. 355. 
Stems several fróm a thickish caudex, scaly at the base, erect, 
30 to 50 em high, simple or nearly so, leafy, covered by a fine short 
closely appressed pubescence; petioles slender, erect, all but the upper 
exceeding the 7 or 8 leaflets; these linear-oblanceolate, acute, finely 
sericeous-pubescent on both surfaces, 2,6 to 3,6 cm long, 2 to 5 mm 
broad; racemes mostly terminal on the stems, shortly peduncled, loosely 
flowered, 7 to 10 cm long; bracts lanceolate, sericeous-pubescent, rather 
short, when persisting not equaling the tomentulose pedicels; petals 
purplish blue; standard suborbicular, sparingly villous near the middle 
dorsally; keel strongly ciliated; pods lance-oblong, acute, silky, 2,4 to 3 em 
long, 4 or 5-seeded. —- Flowering in August. 
Specimens examined: Washington, Mount Adams, Henderson 1387; 
Suksdorf 111; Oregon, north side of Mount Hood, Howell. 
92. Lupinus ($ Saxosi) subalpinus Piper & Robinson, 1, c., p. 356. 
Lupinus arcticus S. Wats. Proc. Am. Acad., VIII, 526, 1873, as to 
plant of Lyall, not as to aretic elements. 
Erect or somewhat decumbent, spreading-villous; stems simple, 25 to 
40 cm high, leafy; leaflets spatulate-oblanceolate, rounded or obtuse at 
the apex, villous beneath, sparsely so or rarely quite glabrous above, 
3 to 4,2 em long; raceme terminal, 10 to 15 cm long, many-flowered, 
borne on a stoutish peduncle 3 to 5 cm in length; pedicels slender, 4 to 
8 mm long, spreading-pubescent; flowers large and showy; petals 12 to 
16 mm long; the standard glabrous; the keel entirely glabrous or with 
traces of ciliation; pods linear-oblong, about 3,5 cm in length, obliquely 
sharp-pointed, 7 to 9-seeded. 
Specimens examined: Cascade Mountains to Fort Colville, Lyall 
1860; dry slopes on Mount Rainier, Piper 463, 4114; E. C. Smith 463; 
Wenache, Washington, Whited. 
