STANDLEY LOCALITIES OF PLANTS FROM NEW MEXICO. 213 



Castilleja inconstans Standley, Muhlenbergia 5: 83. 1909. 



"At Winsor's Ranch, on the headwaters of the Pecos River," June 29, 1908, 

 Standley 4000. 



Castilleja integra A. Gray in Torr. Bot. Mex. Bound. 119. 1859. 



"Organ Mountains, cast of HI Paso," Wright (undistributed), Bigelow. 



One of the commonest species of the southwest. It is very abundant in the type 

 locality at the lower levels. It is altogether possible that what Doctor Gray referred to 

 as the Organ Mountains are those now known as the Franklin Mountains, for the Organ 

 range proper is not "east of El Paso," but north, and the Franklin and San Andreas 

 ranges, the one lying to the south and the other to the north of the Organs, were not 

 given separate names at that time. 



Castilleja Integra intermedia Cockerel!, The Southwest, Cooper 2: 134. 1900. 

 "Near Rowe," T. D. A. Cockerell. 



Castilleja organorum Standley, Muhlenbergia 5: 86. 1909. 



"On the rocky sides of the Organ Mountains not far from Van Patten's Camp," 

 June 9, 1906, Standley. 



Castilleja wootonii Standley, Muhlenbergia 5: 84. 1909. 



"At Gilmore's Ranch on Eagle Creek in the White Mountains," August 25, 1907, 

 Wooton & Standley 3411. 



Conobea intermedia A. Gray in Torr. Bot. Mex. Bound. 117. 1859. 

 "Dry hills around the Copper Mines," Wright 1485 in 1851. 



Maurandia wislizeni A. Gray in Torr. Bot. Mex. Bound. 111. 1859. 



"Along the Ilio Grande below Dona Ana," Wislizenus in 1846. 



This handsome vine is common in sandy soil in the Rio Grande Valley in this 

 locality. 



Mimulus cordatus Greene, Leaflets 2: 5. 1909. 



"Bear Mountain, near Silver City," O. B. Metcalfe in 1903. 



Mimulus rubellus A. Gray in Torr. Bot. Mex. Bound. 116. 1859. 



"Wet ravines of the Organ Mountains and Copper Mines," Bigelow, Wright 1494 in 

 1851. 



In the Organ Mountains this is a not infrequent plant, occurring chiefly in wet 

 places in the bottoms of the canyons, but also on drier open slopes; flowering in early 

 spring. 



Pedicularis angustissima Greene, Leaflets 1: 151. 1905. 

 "Mogollon Mountains." August 14, 1903, O. B. Metcalfe AW. 



Pedicularis centranthera A. Gray in Torr. Bot. Mex. Bound. 120. 1859. 



"New Mexico, and on Hen More," April, Bigelow. 



Why the locality should be stated thus I do not know, for Ben Moore is in New 

 Mexico, 



Pedicularis fluviatilis Heller, Minn. Bot, Stud. 2: 33. 1898. 



"In a meadow 9 miles east of Santa Fe," Heller 3639 in 1897. 



A plant very common in the mountains east of Santa Fe, very close to P. canadensis 

 and hardly separable from that species. 



Pedicularis mogollonica Greene, Leaflets 1: 151. 1905. 

 "Mogollon Mountains," August 14, 1903, 0. B. Metcalfe AW. 



Pentstemon caudatus Heller, Minn. Bot. Stud. 2: 34. 1898. 



"Barranca, Taos County," Heller 3580 in 1897. 



This is considered a variety of P. angustifolius Pursh by Dr. Louis Krautter in his 

 paper, "A Comparative Study of the genus Pentstemon." 



