WOOTON AND STANDLEY—NEW PLANTS FROM NEW MEXICO. 151 
calyx tips free; calyx tube slender, 30 to 40 mm. long, villous; sepals 15 to 20 
mm. long, sparingly villous; petals white fading pink, about 13 mm. long; 
pistil slightly exserted; capsules ascending, cylindric, 40 mm. long and 2 or 3 
mm. in diameter. villous. 
Type in the U. S. National Herbarium, no. 497937, collected by O. B. Metcalfe 
on a sandbar along the Mimbres River, July 1, 1904 (no. 1054). 
Very like Anogra neomexicana, but with much smaller flowers, clasping, more 
pubescent leaves, longer capsules, and more pubescent stems. 
Anogra ctenophylla Wooton & Standley, sp. nov. 
Biennial, 30 cm. high or less; stems stout, with divergent branches, densely 
and finely cinereous, often with a few long hairs; leaves 35 to 60 mm. long, 
short-petiolate or sessile, deeply pinnatifid almost to the midrib, the divisions 
elliptic-oblong, acute, densely puberulent and more or less hirsute; tips of the 
calyx lobes free in bud; calyx segments 2 cm. long, densely and minutely 
cinereous, sparingly hirsute; petals 35 to 40 mm. long, white; pistil shorter 
than the petals; capsules ascending, cylindric, 35 mm. long, minutely cinereous 
and hirsute. 
Type in the U. 8S. National Herbarium, no. 564751, collected near Zuni, in 1902, 
by Mrs. Matilda Coxe Stevenson (no. 99). 
ADDITIONAL SPECIMENS EXAMINED: Crawfords Ranch, June 21, 1906, Wooton; 
Reserve, July 9, 1906, Wooton; Defiance, June 22, 1883, Marsh 121; Burro 
Mountains, alt. 2,100 meters, August 4, 1906, Blumer 1827; Ruidoso Creek, 
August 20, 1897, Wooton. 
The last two specimens are somewhat doubtful, but probably belong here. 
The species is related to Anogra runcinata, but it has long hairs among the 
appressed pubescence and its leaves are deeply pinnatifid. 
Anogra engelmanni (Small) Wooton & Standley. 
Ocnothera albicaulis trichocalyx Engelm. Amer. Journ. Sci. II. 34: 335. 1862, 
not O. trichocalyr Nutt. 
Anogra pallida engelmanni Small, Bull. Torrey Club 23: 176. 1896. 
The type of this came from Las Vegas, New Mexico, collected by Wislizenus 
in 1846. We have seen only a single additional collection from the State, one 
gathered by Mr. Geo. L. Fisher near Nara Visa in 1910 (no, 54). 
Anogra leucotricha Wooton & Standley, sp. nov. 
Low and spreading or prostrate, with many divergent branches; stems stout, 
densely hirsute, 20 cm. long or less; leaves short-petiolate, 30 to 40 mm. long, 
deeply pinnatifid, the segments triangular-lanceolate and acute, densely strigil- 
lose and somewhat hirsute; calyx tube about 25 mm. long; sepals 15 mm. long, 
finely appressed-pubescent and hirsute; corolla 20 mm. long, white; capsules 
divergent, cylindric, 30 to 40 mm. long, hirsute, 
Type in the U. S. National Herbarium, no. 690235, collected on the San 
Augustine Plains, July 22, 1904, by E. O. Wooton (no. 2735). 
ADDITIONAL SPECIMENS EXAMINED: Willard, August 26, 1904, Wooton; plains 
10 miles east of Horse Spring, June 20, 1892, Wooton. 
Related to Anogra engelmanni, but with deeply pinnatifid and short-petiolate 
leaves and different pubescence. 
Anogra runcinata (Engelm.) Wooton & Standley. 
Oenothera albicaulis runcinata Engelm. Amer. Journ. Sci. II, 34: 334. 1862. 
Anogra pallida runcinata Small, Bull. Torrey Club 23: 175. 1896. 
A common species found in almost all parts of New Mexico in the Lower and 
Upper Sonoran zones. 
60541 °—13——4 
