Pcdicularis.'] SCR0PHULARINEJ3. 109 



H. P. euphrasioides (Steph.); caule ramoso, foliis pinnatifidis infimis bipinnatifidis 

 laciniis oblongis dentatis, racemis terminalibus laxis, calyce obtuso subtus fisso supra 

 brevissime tridentato, corolla galea convexa bidentata.— Gme/. Sib. 3. L 43. Stev, I c. p. 

 42. Ph. Am, 2, p. 424.— P. Labradorica. i.— P. ramosa. Wormskiold iii Herb, nostr. 



m 



Hab. Moist mossy places. North of the Saskatchawan to the Arctic Sea-shore. Dr Richardson. Woods 

 of Pinus Banksii in the Rocky Mountains. Drummond. Labrador. Kohlmeister, Br Morison. Kot- 

 zebue's Sound. Beechey. Chamisso .—Dx Richardson thus describes the flower from living specimens:— 

 " Cah pedunculatus glabriusculus bilabiatus, sinu superiori obtuso, sinu inferiuri profnndiori acuto labiis uni- 

 dentatis. Con flava, tubo calyce fere duplo longiori ; labio inferiori 3-lobo, lobis rotundatis integerrimis ; 

 galea rostrata decisa bidentata ; pistillo exserto." 



_ 15. P. namia (Bleb.) ; foliis radicalibus longe petiolatis bipinnatifidis, laciniis angustis, 

 scapo erecto subunifolio, spica capitata foliosa, calyce quinquefido pubescente, corollae 

 galea arcuata brevissime rostrata bidentata. Stev. I c. p. 43. L 15. 



Hab. Sitcha. Bongard, who observes that his specimens are the same with the original ones in Bieber- 

 stein's Herbarium from Kamtschatka. 



16. P. Sudetica (Willd.) ; foliis pinnatifidis laciniis lanceoJatis serratis, spica densa, 

 calyce quinquefido, corolliE galea obtuse bidentata. Stev. I. c. p. 44. t. 15.^/ 2. Rich. 

 App. p. 25. cwn descript 



Hab. Bear Lake to the Arctic Sea-coast. Br Richardson. Kotzebue's Sound. Beeches/. Chamisso 



Of this plant Mr Bentham remarks, that the flowers are rather shorter, and the galea rather broader, especially 

 near the base, than in the Sudetian plant. 



§ VL Edentul^. Stev. — Cor. lab. sup. omniiio edeniulo galea brevi, 



17, P. Langsdorffii (Fisch. mst.) ; foliis bipinnatifidis radicalibus copiosis caulinorum 

 rachi dilatata, spica densa lanata, calyce quinquefido corolla quadruple breviore, galea 

 obtusa truncata (nonnunquam sub apice dentata). Stev. I. c. p. 49. L 9./ 2. (1823.) Cham, 

 in Limicea, 2. p. 584.— P. arctica. Brown^ in Parry's First Voy. App. p. CCLXX.—P. 

 purpurascens. Spreng. — P. hirsuta. Rich. App. p. 25. {fide specim. in Herb, nostr.)— ^. da- 

 tiOr ; foliis paucioribus, spica elongata laxiore, galea majore (an spec, distincta?). — 7, 

 spica maxima elongata, foliis bipinnatifidis, segmentis angustis. — P. lanata. Hook, et Arn. 

 in Beech. Bot. p. 128. — an Cham. ? 



Hab. Behring's Straits. Menzies. Langsdorff. Chamisso. (Herb, nostr.) Melville Island. Sir E. Parry. 

 Summits of the Rocky Mountains, abundant. Brummond. — /3. Bear Lake River to the Arctic Sea. Br 



r 



Richardson. — y. Kotzebue's Sound. Beechey. — Chamisso in the Lirmaa (I. c.) considers the more common 

 woolly spiked state of the plant to be a distinct species (P. lanata) : but it is that latter var. which Dr Fischer 

 himself marked in my Herbarium as his P. Langsdo7ffii; and Steven's figure affords an accurate representa- 

 tion of the more usual form of the plant. My var. f^. has a different appearance, and a longer, more in- 

 curved, and blunter upper lip ; whilst uiy var. y. has a short and narrow upper lip, and leaves which are 

 finely cut in a pinnatifid manner. 



18. P. hirsuta (Lmu.)', lanata, caule folioso, foliis pinnatifidis, rachi in petiolum foliaceum 

 dilatata, spica foliosa, calyce quinquefido hirsute, corollae calyce duplo longioris galea 



