318 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM. 
1. Tellima grandiflora (Pursh) Dougl. Bot. Reg. 14: pl. 1178. 1828. 
Mitella grandiflora Pursh, Fl. 1: 314. 1814. 
Tiarella alternifolia Fisch.; Ser. in DC. Prod. 4: 50. 1830. 
Type Locauity: “On the northwest coast.’’ Collected by Menzies. 
Rance: Alaska to Southern California, west of the Cascades and Sierras. 
SPECIMENS EXAMINED: Montesano, Heller 3862; Clallam County, Elmer 2645; Cascade 
Mountains, latitude 49°, Lyall in 1859; Seattle, Smith 88; Tacoma, Flett 61; upper Nis- 
qually Valley, Allen 7; Silverton, Bouck 73; Roy, Allen 102, May 19, 1889; Klickitat County, 
Suksdorf 12; Horseshoe Basin, Lake & Hull 467; Elmer 743; Cape Horn, Piper 4973. 
ZONAL DISTRIBUTION: Humid Transition. 
2. Tellima parviflora Hook. Fl. Bor. Am. 1: 239. pl. 78. 1833. 
Lithophragma parviflora Nutt.; Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1: 584. 1840. 
Mitella parviflora Dietr. Syn. 2: 539. 1840. 
Type Locatiry: “North California ’’ Menzies. 
Rance: British Columbia to California, eastward to Colorado. 
SPECIMENS EXAMINED: Olympic Mountains, Grant in 1889; Oreas Island, Lyall in 1858; 
Admiralty Head, Piper, April, 1898; Wenache, Whited 1017; West Seattle, Piper 89; 
Rattlesnake Mountains, Cotton, 333; White Salmon, Suksdorf 273; Spokane, Henderson, 
May, 1892; Hangman Creek, Sandberg & Leiberg 32; Fort Colville, Zyadl in 1861; Spokane 
County, Mrs. Tucker; Pullman, Elmer 171; Piper, May, 1893; Hull, May, 1892; Walla 
Walla, Leckenby, April, 1898. 
ZONAL DISTRIBUTION: Arid Transition. 
3. Tellima tenella (Nutt.) Walp. Repert. 2: 371. 1843. 
Lithophragma tenella Nutt.; Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1: 584. 1840. 
Type Locauity: ‘In the central range of the Rocky Mountains, on the banks of the 
Big Sandy and Siskadee rivers of the Colorado of the West, about lat. 42°.” Collected by 
Nuttall. 
Rance: British Columbia to Wyoming, southward to south California and New Mexico. 
SPECIMENS EXAMINED: Wenache Region, Brandegee 761, Wenache, Whited 1017; 
Ellensburg, Whited 261; Falcon Valley, Suksdorf 2724: White Salmon, Suksdorf 272; 
Klickitat River, Flett 1307; Pullman, Elmer 80; Wawawai, Piper, May, 1893, Clarkston, 
Hunter 2. 
ZONAL DISTRIBUTION: Arid Transition. 
Rydberg @ regards our plant as a distinct species under the name Lithophragma bulbi- 
fera, stating that it differs from its immediate allies in being bulbiferous in the leaf axils 
and in having fimbriate instead of entire sepals. 
TELLIMA GLABRA Steud. (Lithophragma glabra Nutt.c), found by Nuttall in the Blue 
Mountains of Oregon, is said by Rydberg to differ from 7’. tenella, which is known only 
from the Rocky Mountains, in having muriculate seeds and pedicels larger than the cap- 
sules. 
CHRYSOSPLENIUM. 
1. Chrysosplenium scouleri (Hook.) Rose, Bot. Gaz. 23: 277. 1897. 
hrysosplenium oppositifolium scouleri Hook. FI. Bor. Am. 1: 242. 1834. 
Chrysosplenvum glechomaefolium Nutt.; Torr. & Gr. Fl. 1: 589. 1840. 
Type Locauity: ‘Columbia River on the North West coast.”’ Collected by Scouler. 
Rance: British Columbia to Oregon in the coast region. 
SPECIMENS EXAMINED: Hoquiam, Lamb 1044; upper Nisqually Valley, Allen 150; 
Nisqually River, //lett 92; Mashel Mountain, Piper 2029, 748; Columbia River, Nuttall; 
without locality, Cooper; Ilwaco, Piper 4992; Quinault, Conard 131. 
ZONAL DISTRIBUTION: Humid Transition and Canadian. 
aN. Am. Fl. 227: 86. 1906. ¢ Torr. & Gr. FI]. 1: 584. 1840. 
b Nom. ed. 2. 2: 665. 1841. dN. Am. FI. 227: 84, 85. 1906. 
