Pentstemon. SCROPHULARIACE^. 261 



long : inflorescence loosely spiciform, leafy below : subsessile and mostly solitary 2-brac- 

 teolate flowers and their bracts or floral leaves commonly alternate : sepals ovate-lanceo- 

 late, pnberulent, slightly if at all glandular : corolla 4 lines long, rather narrow, glabrous : 

 sterile filament glabrous. S. E. California, on Little Olanche Mountain, toward the sources 

 of Kern River, at 10,400 feet, Rothrock. 



P. Lernmoni, Gray. Glabrous up to the pedicels, 2 to 4 feet high, slender, rather 

 remotely leaved : leaves ovate- or oblong-lanceolate, thinnish, acutely and sparsely serru- 

 late, an inch or less long: thyrsus loose, leafy below: peduncles all opposite, slender, few- 

 several-flowered : short pedicels and ovate-lanceolate sepals viscid-pubescent : corolla half 

 inch long, somewhat campanulate-dilated above, viscid or glandular : filament strongly 

 yellow-bearded on one side of the curved apex. Bot. Calif, i. 557. California, from 

 Mendocino to Plumas Co., Kellogg, Lemmon. 



* -1 -I -i -i Corolla (white or purplish) nearly an inch long, oblong-campanulate from the 

 base, hardly at all bilabiate. 



P. frutescens, Lamb. A span or less high from a woody (subterranean'? or prostrate) 

 stock : stems pubescent, leafy : leaves oblong, with somewhat narrowed base, denticulate, 

 glabrous (14- to 3 inches long, 7 to 12 lines wide) : thyrsus terminal, 3-9-flowered : pedicels 

 and lanceolate acuminate sepals villous and viscid : lobes of the corolla short and broad, 

 nearly equal and equally somewhat spreading : lower part of the fertile filaments and 

 most of the sterile one hirsute-bearded. Linn. Trans, x. 250. t. 0, fig. 1; Pursh, Fl. ii. 

 428 (excl. hab.) ; Bcnth. in DC. Prodr. x. 321. " Unalaschka, Pallas." Not since detected 

 there, and perhaps a mistake. Certainly not found "on the north-west coast " by Lewis. 

 (Kamtschatka and Japan !) 



* * * (AMBIGUI.) Anthers glabrous, reniforra, not explanate in age, the line of. dehisceuce stop- 

 ping a little short of the base of the cells : stein suffruticose and leaves thick-coriaceous. 



P. baccharifolius, Hook. Glabrous, or the rigid branches obscurely puberulent, 

 2 feet high, leafy below : leaves oblong, nearly sessile, rigidly and acutely dentate, almost 

 veinless, an inch long; the uppermost abruptly reduced to small ovate bracts of the loose 

 and racemose glandular inflorescence : peduncles 1-3-flowered : sepals ovate : corolla deep 

 carmine-red, an inch long, broadly tubular and with a short moderately bilabiate limb ; 

 upper lip somewhat erect, 2-lobed ; lower recurved and 3-parted : sterile filament naked. 

 Bot. Mag. t. 4027; Gray in Bot. Mex. Bound. 115, & Proc. Am. Acad. vi. 58. S. W. 

 Texas, on the San Pedro River, Wright. 



* * * * (KLMI'GERA.) Anthers glabrous (rarely villous); the cells dehiscent from the base 

 towards but not to the apex, consequently not explanate after dehiscence : corolla tubular, littlo 

 ampliate upward, red: sterile filament mostly glabrous : herbs glabrous and usually glaucescent, 

 glabrous even to the calyx and outside of the corolla, or merely pruinose-puberulent : steins vir- 

 gate and simple: leaves all entire; the cauline sessile or partly clasping : thyrsus elongated 

 and virgate, loosely-flowered, racemiform or paniculate. JElimyera, Reichenb. Elmigera 

 (Benth. in DC. I.e., excl. spec.), Gray in I'roc. Am. Acad. 1. c. 



-l Corolla strongly bilabiate; upper lip erect and concave, 2-lobed at apex; lower reflexed and 

 3-parted: peduncles and pedicels mostly slender. 



P. barbatus, Nutt. Usually tall, 2 to G feet high : leaves lanceolate or the upper linear- 

 lanceolate; the lowest and radical oblong or ovate : sepals ovate: corolla inch long, from 

 light pink-red to carmine ; base of the lower lip or throat usually bearded with long and 

 loose or sparse yellowish hairs : anthers even in the bud divergent, soon divaricate. Gen. 

 ii. 53; Benth. I.e.; Lindl. Bot. Reg. xxv. t. 21, flesh-colored variety; Gray, Proc. Am. 

 Acad. vi. 59. Chclone barbata, Cav. Ic. iii. 22, t. 242 ; Bot. Keg. t. 116. C. rucllioides, Andr. 

 Bot. Rep. t. 34. Elii/ii/cra barbata, Reichenb. in Stcud. Nom. Mountains of Colorado and 

 New Mexico ; and commonly cult. (Mex.) 



Var. Torreyi, Gray, I.e. (P. Torreyi, Benth. in DC. Prodr. I.e.), a tall and usually 

 deep scarlet-red-flowered form, with few or no hairs in the throat ; but in cultivated and 

 even in wild specimens the distinction vanishes. W. borders of Texas to Colorado and 

 New Mexico. 



Var. pubarulus, Gray in Bot. Mex. Bound. 114, is pruinose-puberulent, otherwise 

 like the preceding. Guadalupe Gallon, Arizona, TTiurber. 



Var. trichander, Gray, is also like a low form of var. Tonvi/i, except that anthers 

 are beset with long woolly hairs ! Proc. Am. Acad. xi. 94. S. W. Colorado, Brandegee. 



Var. labrosus, Gray. A low and narrow-leaved form, with almost simply race- 

 mose flowers: corolla apparently red with a yellowish tube; the lips remarkably long (6 



