Antirrhinum. SCROPHULARIACE^E. 253 



A. vagans, Gray, 1. c. Very diffuse, sparsely setose-hirsute and often glandular, vary- 

 ing to nearly glabrous : leaves from lanceolate to oblong-ovate, thickish : Mowers compara- 

 tively large (half inch long) : sepals or at least the large and mostly oblong upper one 

 equalling the tube of the corolla ; the others linear : style slender, as long as the capsule. 

 Watson, Bot. King, 216, t. 21, fig. 5. A. Coulter ianum, var. appendiculatum, Durand, 1. c. 

 11, 1. 11. California, common through the western part of the State. 



Var. Bolanderi, Gray, 1. c., a form with broader and thinner leaves, those of the tor- 

 tile branchlets orbicular, and unusually large posterior sepal, grows mainly in the shade 

 of Redwoods. A. Breweri, var. oval/folium, Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. 1. c. 375, from the upper 

 part of the Sacramento River, may be a depauperate form of this, with shorter calyx, 

 approaching the following. 



A. Breweri, Gray, 1. c. Slender, at first erect, a foot or two high, minutely or softly vis- 

 cid-pubescent : leaves from oblong-linear to oval (half to an inch long), obtuse : pedicels 

 shorter than the calyx: flowers small; the tube of the corolla (only 3 lines long) con- 

 siderably longer than the moderately unequal sepals, rather narrowly saccate at base: 

 style subulate, glandular, at length strongly deflexed, rather shorter than the capsule. 

 California, common from Lake Co. to Plumas Co. and northward. 



= = Peduncles more conspicuous : tube of the corolla not longer than the widely spreading lips, 

 merely gibbous at base : the weakly tortile branchlets bearing small leaves. 



A. Nuttalliaiium, Bentll. Softly viscid-pubescent, sometimes glabrous below, at 

 length diffusely much branched, 1 to 3 feet high : leaves ovate or subcordate (the largest 

 an inch long), nearly all distinctly petioled : peduncles or at least the lower ones longer 

 than the flowers, sometimes longer than the leaf and disposed to be tortile : sepals shorter 

 than (or the ovate or oval posterior one equalling) the tube of the violet-colored corolla 

 (this 2 or 3 lines long) : palate very prominent : seeds almost alately costate. DC. Prodr. 

 x. 592; Gray, 1. c. Common through S. California, near San Diego, &c. 



Var. effusum, Gray. Slender stems climbing over bushes by tortile leafy branchlets, 

 reaching 4 or 5 feet high : filiform peduncles mostly twice the length of the leaves : ribs 

 of the seeds less wing-like. Bot. Calif, i. 022. S. E. California, in the Mohave region, 

 Parry, Lcmmon, Palmer. 



A. KLingii, "Watson. Slender, mostly erect, a span to a foot or more high, somewhat 

 hairy at base, above nearly glabrous : leaves from narrowly lanceolate to linear; the upper- 

 most minute : pedicels at length equalling or exceeding the sparsely glandular calyx : corolla 

 small (2 or 3 lines long, dull white) ; its tube half the length of the linear-oblong poste- 

 rior sepal and about equalling the other sepals ; the lips small : persistent style short and 

 subulate, glabrous, half the length of the slightly oblique globular capsule : seeds favose- 

 tuberculate. Bot. King, 215, t. 21, fig. 1-4. N. W. Nevada to Utah, Watson, Lemmon, &c. 



4. MAURA.NDELLA, Gray, 1. c. Capsule and calyx equal or nearly so : seeds 

 as in preceding: corolla with prominent palate partly or quite closing the orifice : 

 herbs with entire or lobed leaves (all but the lower alternate), destitute of pre- 

 hensile branchlets, but mostly climbing by tortile filiform petioles or peduncles, 

 or by both, mainly glabrous. Maurandia Antirrhiniflorce, Benth. in DC. I.e. 



* Annuals, with mostly lanceolate or linear short-petioled leaves, but long and filiform prehensile 

 peduncles: calyx rather shorter than the globose capsule. 



A. strictum, Gray, 1. c. Erect, nearly simple, a foot or two high : lowest leaves ovate- 

 lanceolate ; upper ones linear, or the upper floral filiform, much shorter than the tortile race- 

 mose peduncles: corolla violet-purple (nearly half inch long), with hairy palate and gib- 

 bous base: capsule crustaceous, tipped with a straight style of equal length. Manrandia 

 stricta, Hook. & Am. Bot. Beech. 375; Benth. 1. c. California, near Santa Barbara, 

 Douglas, Brewer. 



A. Cooperi, Gray, 1. c. Climbing 2 to 4 feet high by the long filiform peduncles (of 2 or 

 3 inches in length) : very slender stems at length much branched: lowest leaves ovate or 

 oblong; the others linear; upper floral minute: corolla bright yellow (half inch long), 

 conspicuously saccate at base, with hairy palate : style deciduous from the nearly mem- 

 branaceous capsule: seeds rough-rugose and with 3 or 4 corky ribs. Ravines near Fort 

 Mohave, S. E. California, Cooper, Almend'mjer. S. Utah, Parry. 



