New Species from the Western United States 



By r. A. RYDBE^^G 



JuncuvS Suksdorfii 



Stem about 3 dm, high, strict, hght green, 2-3 mm. in diame- 

 ter ; leaves terete or sh"ghtly flattened, distinctly sei:)tate ; the basal 

 ones short; stem leaves, except the upper ones, often 3 dm. long 

 all with a conspicuous, scarious sheath ; heads in a contracted pan- 

 icle, brown and shining, 5-8-flowered ; bracts ovate, cuspidate- 

 acuminate ; perianth segments subcqual, about 4 mm. long, nar- 

 rowly lanceolate, acute or acuminate ; stamens 6 ; anthers longer 

 than the filaments ; style long-exserted ; capsule dark brown and 

 shining, oblong, acuminate, 3-angled. 



Dr. Watson has labeled this /uuc//s Ncvadcnsu van, to which it 

 may be nearest related if the structure of the flower is taken in 

 consideration. It is different in habit, however, being much stouter, 

 having more numerous and larger heads, and longer leaves. 



Washington: Falcon Valley, I'^^i, Suksdorf, 2iy\ 1885, ^c?o; 

 Spangle, Spokane Co., 1884, /fd^ (all in Gray Herbarium). 



Allium Neo-Mexicanum 



Bulb oblong, membranaceous, crowning a more or less persis- 

 tent rhizome ; coat membranaceous ; scape slender, terete ; leaves 

 narrow, 1-3 mm, wide, apparently almost flat, slightly keeled ; 

 umbel 8— 20-flowered, nodding ; involucre very small ; perianth- 

 segments oblong-ovate, acute, nearly white, without a distinct mid- 

 vein ; stamens and style exserted ; capsule 6-crested. 



This resembles most A. ccminun, but differs in the fewer flow- 

 ered umbel, the narrower perianth-segments, and in the thinner 

 and narrower leaves, which are only slightly keeled. 

 ■ ^ New Mexico: Organ Mountains, 1894,^. O. Wooton; 185 1-2, 

 C. Wright, 191 3. 



South Colorado: 1861, C, C. Pany, j^o. 



Arizona: Tanners Canon, 1892, Dr. T. E. Wiicox, 



Astragalus Cusickii 



Perennial from a creeping rootstock : stem about 5 dm. high, 

 strigose, somewhat branched ; leaves pinnate of 6-9 pairs of linear 



(541) 



