

152 BOTANY OF THE DEATH VALLEY EXPEDITION. 



Phlox caespitosa Nutt. Journ. Acad. Phila. vii. 41 (1834). Type locality, "Flat- 

 Head river, on the sides of dry hills." 



No. 1801, from the White Mountains, is the same as No. 890 of the King Survey, 

 slightly glandular-hairy on the leaves, and decidedly so on the calyx tuhe. No. 

 1968, from the vicinity of Panaca, Nevada, is not all glandular. The plants are not 

 the P. <>(V8pito8a coiidensafa of Gray, nor the plant that is called in the botany of the 

 King Survey P. rigida. They are taken, therefore, to belong to the type form of the 

 species. No. 890 of the King Survey was so referred. The type specimens of our 

 species of Phlox are widely scattered and I have not had access to them. 



No. 2072, from above timber-line in the Sierra Nevada, near Mount Whitney, is 

 referred doubtfully to this species. The leaves of this plant are glandular-pubescent 

 throughout, while the rootstocks are very slender, almost filiform, and fiexuous. 



Phlox douglasii Hook. Fl. Bor. Amer. ii. 73 (1838). Type locality, "N. W. 

 America: common on the limestone range of the Blue Mountains [Oregon], and on 

 the Rocky Mountains, near the coniines of snow." 



At high altitudes in the Sierra Nevada (Nos. 1416, 1548, 1830, 2000). 



Phlox gracilis (Dougl.) Bot. Mag. hi. t. 2924 (1829), under Gilia; Greene, Pittonia, 

 i. 141 (1887). Type localities, "on the banks of the Spoken river, and on high 

 grounds near Flathead river, in North-West America." 



Near Willow Creek, Panamint Mountains (No. 703). Professor Greene's reference 

 of this plant, so long considered an anomalous Collomia, to Phlox, as a close relative 

 of P. drummovdu, appears entirely correct. 



Phlox longifolia stansburyi (Torr.) Pot. Mex. Bound. 145(1859), as P. tpetiota 

 atawburyi; Gray, Proc. Amer. Acad. viii. 255 (1870). Type locality, "gravelly hills 

 near the Organ Mountains, New Mexico," and "San Luis Mountains." 



In the Panamint Mountains (Nos. 744, 2027, 2041), California, and about 30 kilo- 

 meters east of Panaca, Nevada (No. 19(59). 



Collomia grandiflora Lindl. Bot. Reg. xiv. under t. 1166 (1828)— Dougl. MS. 

 Type locality 1 , "in the northwest of North America, in all the country bordering on 

 the river Columbia, as far'to the eastward as the valleys of the Rocky Mountains, 

 but not beyond that great dividing ridge." 



Near Mineral King (No. 1452) and Mammoth (No. 1826), both in the Sierra Nevada. 



Collomia linearis Nutt. Gen. i. 126(1818). Type locality, "near the banks of 

 the Missouri, about the confluence of Shian River, and in the vicinity of the Arika- 

 ree village, in moist places." 



Near Benton , (No. 1814). 



Linaiithus androsaceus (Benth.) B >t. Reg. xx. t, 1710 (1831), under Lcptosiphon; 

 Greene, Pittonia, ii. 258 (1892). Type locality Californium 

 In the valley of the Kuweah River (Nos. 1315, 1461). 



Linaiithus aureus (Nutt.) PI. (iamb. 155 (1848), under Gilia; Greene, Pittonia ii. 

 257(1892). Type locality, "Santa Barbara." 



At the eastern base of the Coso Mountains (No. 908), and in Owens River Valley 

 (No. 1776). 



Linaiithus breviculus (Cray) Proc. Amer. Acad. xii. 79 (1876), under GUh; 

 Greene, Pittonia, ii. 259 (1892). Type locality, "on the Mohave River, B. E. Cali- 

 fornia." 



Near Crystal Spring, Coso Mountains (No. 9:4). 



1 Loc. eit. t. 1174. ~~ 



