

CATALOGUE OP SPECIES. 1C9 



a purple-tipped palate, while the lemon -yellow corolla in our species has very few .and 

 inconspicuous, if any, purple dots. In both species of the genus there is found to 

 be a rudiment of the fifth stamen, similar to tlie rudiments of the other two abortive 

 ones. 



The plant was first observed in Long Valley on the same day on which we entered 

 Death Valley, and afterward in the southern part of the Funeral Mountains, near 

 Saratoga Springs; on the mountain slope east of Resting Springs; in Furnace Creek 

 Canon ; in the Vegas Wash ; in Johnson (No. 547), Hall, and Surprise canons, Panainiut 

 Mountains; and in a canon of the Inyo Mountains, near Swansea. 



Antirrhinum filipes Cray, Bot. Ives Fxped. It) (1860). Type locality, "desert 

 arroyos," along the Colorado River. 



Between Ash Meadows and Furnace Creek Ranch (No. 459), and in Johnson Canon, 

 Funeral Mountains (No. 525). About the base of the plant in our specimens are 

 borne cleistogamous fertile dowers, the corollas of which scarcely exceed their calicos. 

 The dowers borne above have corollas of the normal size, about 15 mm. long. From 

 specimens bearing only cleistogamous flowers the plant was evidently first described, 

 while other specimens collected later near Fort Mohave, Arizona, bearing large co- 

 rollas, were described ' as A. cooperi. 



Scrophularia californica Cham. Linmea, ii. 585 (1827). Type locality, "ad por- 

 tum St. Francisci." 



Observed in Surprise, Willow Creek (No. 959), and Mill Creek canons, Panamint 

 Mountains; near Crystal Spring, Coso Mountains (No. 912); and in the valley of 

 Kern River, between Walker Pass and Caliente. In the ultramontane station the 

 plant grew near the line between the Upper Sonoran and Lower Sonoran zones. 



Pentstemon acuminatus Lindl. Bot. Reg. xv. 1285 (1829)— Dougl. in herb. Type 

 locality, "barren sandy plains of the Columbia." 



Black Canon, White Mountains (No. 1793). Our specimens arc but 20 to 30 cm. 

 high, and the bracts of the inflorescence are not so conspicuously developed as they 

 usually are in the species. 



Pentstemon antinhinoides Beuth. in DC. Prodr. x. 594 (1846). Type locality, 

 "in California." 



On the south slope of the San Bernardino Mountains (No. 105). 



Pentstemon azureus parvulus Gray, Syn. Fl. ii. pt. i. 272 (1878). Type locality, 

 "northern part of California, in maintains above Jackson Lake, at 8,0J0 feet." 

 Near Mineral King, Sierra Nevada (No. 1463). 



Pentstemon breviflorus Lindl. Bot. Reg. xxiii. t. 1946 (1837). Type locality 

 Californian. 



Between Walker Basin and Caliente (No. 1095). 



Pentstemon bridgesii Gray, Proc. Amer. Acad. vii. 379 (1868). Type locality of 

 Bridges's specimen not specifically given ; of Inlander's specimen, " Yosemite Valley," 

 California. 



Near Mineral King (No. 1443). 



Pentstemon centranthifolius Benth. Trans. Hort. Soc. Lond. scr. 2. i. 481 (1835), 

 under Chelone; Benth. Scroph. Ind, 7 (1835). Type locality Californian. 



On tho south slope of the San Bernardino Mountains (No. 121) and in the Canada 

 do las Uvas (No. 1113). 



Pentstemon confertus procerus (Graham) Edinb. New Phil. Journ. vii. 348 (1829), 

 as /'. procerus— Dougl. MS. Type locality not specifically given. 



In the high Sierra Nevada (Nos. 1449, 2019, 2138), and the White Mountains (No. 

 1810). This plant has passed for many years under the name Pentstemon confertus 

 ccsruleo-purpureus. 



iRroc. Amer. Acad. vii. 376 (1808). 



