STANDLEY — LOCALITIES OF PLANTS FROM NEW MEXICO. 219 



Bidens tenuisecta A. Gray, Mem. Amer. Acad. 11. 4: 86. 1849. 



"Margins of Poni ('reek (between Bent's Fort and Santa Fe)," October, 1846, 

 Fendler 449. 



No one has collected in this locality since 1847. 



Bigelovia graveolens appendiculata Eastwood, Proc. Calif. Acad. III. 1: 74. 

 pi. 6. 1897. 

 = Chrysothamnus appendiculatus (Eastw.) Heller. 

 "White Sands," T. D. A. Cockerell. 



Bigelovia graveolens latisquamea A. Gray, Proc. Amer. Acad. 8: 645. 1873. 

 — Chrysotharnnus latisquameus (A. Gray) Greene, 

 "New Mexico," Bigeloir. 



Brickellia betonicaefolia A. Gray, Smiths. Contr. Knowl. 5: 72. 1853. 

 = Coleosanthus betonicaefolius (A. Gray) Kuntze. 

 "Hills, near the copper mines," Wright 1137 in 1851. 



Brickellia fendleri A. Gray, Mem. Amer. Acad. II. 4: 63. 1849. 



= Eupatorium fendleri A . Gray. 



"Foot of mountains, on the sunny side along the creek, 11 miles above Santa Fe," 

 July, 1847, Fendler 347. 



Abundant on cliffs and in the crevices of rocks in the mountains east of Santa- 

 Fe, flowering in late summer. 



Brickellia rusbyi A. Gray, Syn. FI. I 2 : 106. 1886. 



= Cohosanthus rusbyi (A. Gray) Kuntze. 



"Mountains of New Mexico," //. //. Rusby (other localities and collectors men- 

 tioned). 



Brickellia wrightii A. Gray, Smiths. Contr. Knowl. 5: 72. 1853. 

 = Coleosanthus wrightii (A. Gray) Britton, 

 "Hills, near the copper mines," Wright 1 139 in 1851. 



Bulbostylis annua Nutt. Journ. Acad. Phila. n. ser. 1: 179. 1848. 



=Psathyrotes annua (Nutt.) A. Gray. 



""Rocky Mountains near Santa Fe," William Gambel. 



Such is the locality given by Nuttall, but there is reason to believe that it is incor- 

 rect. The plant seems not to have been collected in New Mexico since, and the 

 genus is one which reaches its fullest development farther west. This species occurs 

 in Utah and Arizona and westward. 



Carduus perennans Greene, Bull. Torrey Club. 25: 125. 1898. 



"White Mountains, at 7,000 feet," August 12, 1897; and in "Organ Mountains," 

 July 7, 1897, E. 0. Wooton. 



Frequent in the White Mountains, on open slopes, but of rare occurrence, appar- 

 ently, in the Organs. 



Carpochaete bigelovii A. Gray, Smiths. Contr. Knowl. 3: 89. 1852. 



"On the boundary between Mexico and New Mexico," Bigeloir. 



Just what locality Doctor Gray understood by this I can not say, but certain state- 

 ments of his in the second part of Plantae Wrightianae lead one to believe that the 

 original specimens were collected either in the Organ Mountains or at the Copper 

 Mines. In the herbarium of the New Mexico Agricultural College there are speci- 

 mens from the Organ Mountains, only, and it seems probable that it was in these 

 mountains that Bigelow first collected the plant. Here it is one of the commonest 

 of the spring flowers, blooming in April and May, frequenting the drier slopes and 

 more open parts of the canyons. 



