WOOTON AND STANDLEY—FLORA OF NEW MEXICO, 387 
KEY TO THE SPECIES. 
Petals 20 to 30 mm. long.......... 2.2.22 eee eee cece eee 1. K. grandiflora. 
Petals 12 mm. long or less. 
Beak not longer than the body of the fruit, usually shorter.. 2. K. brachystylis. 
Beak much longer than the body of the fruit. * 
Leaves strongly hirsute and paler beneath; beak glabrous 
or Nearly 80....... 22... cece eee eee cee ee eee eee eee 4. K. hirsutissima. 
Leaves glabrous beneath or nearly so, of about the same 
color on both surfaces; beak finely puberulent. 
Plants prostrate; petals 5 to 7 mm. long, barely exceed- 
ing the sepals; carpels bluntly tuberculate..... 3. K. parviflora. 
Plants erect; petals 7 to 12 mm. long; carpels sharply 
tuberculate...........0..2 2. eee eee e eee eeee 5. K. laetevirens. 
1. Kallstroemia grandiflora Torr.; A. Gray, Pl. Wright. 1: 28. 1852. 
Type Locauity: ‘Borders of the Gila,’”’ Arizona or New Mexico. 
RanGE: Arizona and New Mexico. 
New Mexico: Carlisle; Mangas Springs; Florida Mountains; Organ Mountains; 
Little Burro Mountains. Dry hills, in the Upper and Lower Sonoran zones. 
2. Kallstroemia brachystylis Vail, Bull. Torrey Club 24: 206. 1897. 
TYPE LocaALity: Mesa near Las Cruces, New Mexico. Type collected by Wooton. 
RanaeE: Arizona to Western Texas and southward. 
New Mexico: Carrizo Mountains; Chama River; San Juan; Santa Fe; Mangas 
Springs; Albuquerque; Organ Mountains; Mesilla Valley; Pecos; Canada Valley. 
Dry plains, in the Lower and Upper Sonoran zones. 
3. Kallstroemia parviflora Norton, Rep. Mo. Bot. Gard. 9: 153. pl. 46. 1898. 
TYPE LOCALITY: Agricultural College, Mississippi. 
RanGE: Mississippi to New Mexico and Arizona, and southward. 
New Mexico: Santa Fe; Socorro; Kingston; Organ Mountains; San Luis Moun- 
tains; Gray; Nara Visa; Raton; Rio Frisco; Tularosa; Dayton; Tucumcari. Dry hills 
and plains, in the Upper Sonoran Zone. 
4, Kallstroemia hirsutissima Vail in Small, Fl. Southeast. U. 8. 670. 1903. 
TyPE Locality: Plains south of the White Sands, New Mexico. Type collected 
by Wooton (no. 564). 
Ranae: Kansas and Colorado to Texas and Mexico. 
New Mexico: Plains south of White Sands; Socorro; Albuquerque; Santa Fe; 
Redrock; south of Roswell; Lakewood. Dry plains, in the Lower and Upper Sonoran 
zones. 
5. Kallstroemia laetevirens Thornber, Contr. U. 8. Nat. Herb. 16: 143. 1913. 
TYPE LocALITy: Hanover Mountain, New Mexico. Type collected by J. M. Hol- 
zinger in 1911. 
RanGE: Arizona and New Mexico. 
New Mexico: Farmington; Hanover Mountain. Dry hills and plains, in the 
Upper Sonoran Zone. 
75. KOEBERLINIACEAE. Junco Family. 
1. KOEBERLINIA Zucce. Junco. 
Much branched leafless shrub, 1 meter high or less, rarely 2 meters; stems of hard 
wood, green, the oldest blackish, each branch ending in a sharp thorn; leaves reduced 
to small scales; flowers slender-pediceled, in small lateral racemes on short peduncles; 
sepals 4, 1 mm. long; petals 4, twice to 3 times as long, greenish white; stamens 8, 
shorter than the petals, the filaments enlarged in the middle; fruit a spherical black 
berry about 6 mm. in diameter. 
