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PIPER—FLORA OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON. 47 
10a. Mertensia pulchella glauca subsp. nov. 
Herbage slightly glaucous throughout; leaves narrower, usually elliptic, mostly nar-_ 
rowed at base; stems often 2 to 4 from the same tuber; corolla tube more slender. 
SPECIMENS EXAMINED: Hills west of Wenache, Whited 1010, March 31, 1899; type sheet 
no. 366511 in the U.S. National Herbarium; Badger Mountain, Whited, May 24, 1900. 
This may well prove a distinct species, but in the light of rather scanty material is con- 
sidered too close to M. pulchella. 
11. Mertensia oblongifolia (Nutt.) G. Don, Hist. Dich]. Pl. 4: 372. 1838. 
Pulmonaria oblongifolia Nutt. Journ. Acad. Phila. 7: 43. 1834. 
Mertensia longiflora Greene, Pittonia 3: 261. 1898. 
Type Locairy: “Towards the sources of the Columbia River.’ Collected by Wyeth. 
Rance: Washington, Idaho, Montana. 
SPECIMENS EXAMINED: Fort Colville, Lyall in 1861; Upper Columbia, Geyer 316; Cheney, 
Mrs. Susan Tucker in 1890; Hangman Creek, Sandberg & Leiberg 48; Spokane, Lyall in 
1861; Henderson in 1892; Wenache, Whited 1010; Pullman, Piper 1875; Almota, Piper, 
April 7, 1894; without locality, Vasey in 1883. 
12. Mertensia horneri sp. nov. 
Stems 8 to 15 cm. high, glabrous, solitary or rarely 2 or 3, erect. from a shallow-seated 
oblong, black tuber; basal leaves none; cauline 2 to 5, oblong, obtuse, pale and some- 
what glaucous, appressed puberulent above, glabrous beneath, sessile, or the lower ones 
short-petioled, 2 to 3 em. long; lowest leaves reduced and scarious: inflorescence close: 
calyx glaucous, parted nearly to the base, its lobes oblong-lanceolate, very acute, denticu- 
Jate-ciliate on the margin; corolla blue, 10 to 12 mm. long, its tube about twice as long as 
the calyx; filaments dilated, as long as the anthers. 
SPECIMENS EXAMINED: Waitsburg, Washington, Prof. R. M. Horner 366, April 3, 1897, 
the type in the U.S. National Herbarium, sheet no. 318875; Union County, Oregon, Cusick, 
1830, April 13, 1898. 
13. Mertensia pubescens sp. nov. 
Tufted from a stout vertical caudex covered with the dead bases of old leaves; stems 10 
to 15cm. high, leafy to the top; leaves numerous, the cauline inclined to be secund, linear 
or linear-lanceolate, obtuse or acutish, only the midrib evident, 3 to 6 em. long, mostly 
about 5 mm. wide, pubescent on both surfaces, the basal ones attenuate into margined 
petioles about as long as the blades, the cauline sessile and but little reduced upwards; 
panicle short, dense, nodding; calyx lobes lanceolate, acute, coarsely ciliate, glabrous on 
the back, a third to a fourth as long as the corolla tube; corolla blue, the narrow tube 
6 to 8 mm. long, one-half longer than the campanulate limb; filaments dilated, as long as 
the anthers. 
Collected near Waterville, Douglas County, by Airk Whited, 1214, April 23, 1900, the 
type sheet in the U.S. National Herbarium no. 370326. 
Closely allied to M.amoena A. Nelson and JV. bakeri Greene, but distinguished by its 
narrow more pubescent leaves and longer corollas. 
14. Mertensia nutans Howell, Fl. N. W. Am. 491. 1901. 
Type Locariry: “On the north side of high ridges, eastern Oregon and Washington.” 
The type specimen 1s from Klickitat County, Washington. 
RanGe: Washington and Oregon to Idaho and ? Colorado. 
SPECIMENS EXAMINED: Near Granddalles, Gorman, April 20, 1892; Klickitat County, 
Howell, May, 1880; Wenache, Whited 1034; Ellensburg, Whited, April 18, 1897. 
ZONAL DIsTRIBUTION: Arid Transition. 
14a. Mertensia nutans subcalva subsp. nov. 
Leaves minutely strigose above; otherwise as in VM. nutans. 
SPECIMENS EXAMINED: Rattlesnake Mountains, J. S. Cotton, 328, April 29, 1901. 
