68 Rhodora [APRIL 
OrEGon: J. C. Nelson, no. 1832. Wasuinaton: W. N. Suksdorf, 
no. 1001. British CoLUMBIA: J. Macoun, no. 54677. 
Forma RHODANTHA Fernald, Ruopora xxiii. 86 (1921). A form 
with pinkish flowers, found in Quebec. 
Forma ALBIFLORA (Farwell) Fernald, RHopora xxiii. 86 (1921). 
S. lateriflora var. albiflora Farwell, Mich. Acad. Sci. Ann. Rep. xix. 
249 (1917). A form with white flowers. 
4. S. BoLANDERI Gray. Erect, tall and very slender, virgulate or 
branched from below, 1.5—5.5 dm. high, leafy, pubescent or short-hairy : 
leaves broadly obovate, obtuse, sessile, crenate, or the upper nearly 
entire; corolla nearly as in S. antirrhinoides, but white or creamy in 
color and dilated at the throat, 10-15 mm. long; lips subequal: nut- 
lets yellowish, with slender papillae.—Proc. Am. Acad. vii. 387 (1867). 
—River-bottoms, etc., in California from Plumas County southward.! 
The following are characteristic. H. M. Hall, no. 696 (M); G. Hansen, 
no. 448 (M); C. R. Orcutt, no. 429 (M); A. Eastwood, no. 4199. 
Var. californica (Gray), n. comb.  Differs from the above in being 
very finely puberulent, somewhat more rigid; all but sometimes the 
lowest pairs of leaves entire, petioled; the corolla mostly white, 
sometimes tinged with blue, 15-18 mm. long.—S. californica Gray, 
Syn. Fl. ii. 381 (1878). Including S. viarum Heller, Muhlenbergia, 
i. 32 (1904).—In CALIFORNIA from Amador County northward to 
Tehama County. The following represent the variety. J. D. Hooker 
& A. Gray, Calaveras County, 1877; A. A. Heller, nos. 5786, 7020, 
12379; E. Braunton, no. 1047 (M); T. Bridges, no. 304; J. Torrey, no. 
406; C. F. Sonne, no. 286 (M); A. Eastwood, no. 1530; M. E. Jones, 
no. 13485 (M); J. P. Tracy, no. 2297. 
This variety includes a number of forms intermediate between S. 
Bolanderi and S. antirrhinoides. In fact it might well be regarded as 
a hybrid of these two. In the main it has more of the characters of 
the former than of the latter and hence is referred here rather than to 
S. antirrhinoides as at first done by Gray. Fruiting material is too 
poorly represented for good comparison. 
5. Š. TUBEROSA Benth. Fic. 12. Mostly simple and erect, fre- 
quently with many leafy stems from a common base, or even decum- 
bent, villous to nearly glabrous, 2.5-15 cm. high, or, when trailing, 
up to 3.5 dm. long: leaves villous or nearly glabrous, petioled, broadly 
ovate, with few coarse crenations; base rounded, truncate or sometimes 
cuneate: flowers short-pedicelled, solitary in the upper axils: corolla 
dark-blue or purple, rarely curved, 1-2 cm. long; the lips subequal: 
calyx villous: nutlets with projections somewhat muriculate, dark- 
brown when fully mature.—Lab. Gen. et Sp. 441 (1832-1836).— 
Foothills or valleys throughout California and southern Oregon. 
The following specimens are representative. CALIFORNIA: W. H. 
! One sheet is from Indian Valley, Plumas County, J. G. Lemmon, autumn, 1886; 
the rest from Amador Co, southward. 
