GENUS 31. 



FIGWORT FAMILY 



2. Castilleja indivisa Engelm. Entire-leaved 

 Painted-cup. Fig. 3834. 



Castilleja indivisa Engelm. ; Engelm. & Gray, Bost. 

 Journ. Nat. Hist. 5 : 255. 1845. 



Winter-annual; stem villous-pubescent, usually 

 simple, 8'-i8' high. Leaves sessile, parallel-veined, 

 linear to linear-lanceolate, i'-4' long, iJ"-3" wide, 

 entire, or rarely with 2-4 lateral lobes; no tuft of 

 basal leaves; bracts dilated, obovate to spatulate, 

 bright red; flowers sessile, about i' long or less, 

 not longer than the bracts; calyx cleft as in the 

 preceding species, and corolla similar. 



In sandy soil, Kansas to Texas. Spring. 



3. Castilleja minor A. Gray. Small-flow- 

 ered Painted-cup. Fig. 3835. 



Castilleja affinis var. minor A. Gray, Bot. Mex. 



Bound. Surv. 119. 1859. 

 Castilleja minor A. Gray, in Brew. & Wats. Bot. Cal. 



i: 573- 1876. 



Annual, villous-pubescent; stem slender, strict, 

 simple, or with i or 2 erect branches, i-2* 

 high. Leaves all linear-lanceolate and entire, 

 parallel-veined, sessile, acuminate, 2'-$' long, the 

 bracts similar, smaller, red or red-tipped, very 

 narrow, equalling or longer than the short-pedi- 

 celled flowers; calyx green, cleft on both sides to 

 about the middle, the lobes lanceolate, acute, en- 

 tire, or 2-toothed; corolla yellow, 6"-io" long, its 

 upper lip much longer than the small lower one ; 

 capsule oblong, acute, 6"-8" long. 



In moist soil, Nebraska to New Mexico, west to 

 Nevada and Arizona. Indian-pink. May-July. 



4. Castilleja acuminata (Pursh) Spreng. 

 Lance-leaved Painted-cup. Fig. 3836. 



Bartsia acuminata Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept. 429.- 1814. 

 Castilleja acuminata Spreng. Syst. 2 : 775. 1825. 

 C. septentrionalis Lindl. Bot. Reg. pi. 925. 1825. 

 Castilleja pallida var. septentrionalis A. Gray, in 

 Brew. & Wats. Bot. Cal. i : 575. 1876. 



Perennial, glabrous or loosely tomentose above ; 

 stems slender, commonly clustered, 6'-2 high, 

 usually simple. Leaves sessile, 3~5-nerved, mostly 

 quite entire, the lower linear, the upper lanceo- 

 late, acuminate or acute at the apex, somewhat 

 narrowed at the base, 2'-4' long; bracts oblong, 

 oval, or obovate, obtuse, dentate, or entire, yel- 

 lowish, greenish-white or purple, as long as the 

 sessile flowers; calyx cleft on both sides to about 

 the middle, the lobes lanceolate, usually again 

 2-cleft ; corolla 6"-8" long, its upper lip 2-4 times 

 au long as the lower; capsule oblong, 6"-8" high. 



In moist soil, Newfoundland and Labrador to 

 Hudson Bay, the mountains of- New England, On- 

 tario and Minnesota. Plants previously referred to 

 this species from farther west are now regarded as 

 distinct from it. June-Aug. Pale painted-cup. 



