CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES. 115 



Cal. Acad. VII. 89, is a stouter, nearly erect form with leaves 

 only laciniate-toothed. 



Sierra Nevada, in the Yosemite Valley, and southward; 

 collected first by Dr. Gray, later by Mrs. Curran. 



The larger form is from Fresno County, Dr. Gustaf Eisen. 



M. alsinoides, Beuth. 1. c. 



Glabrous: stems slender and at length diffuse, 3 — 12 

 inches long: leaves broadly ovate, an inch, more or less 

 long, on margined petioles, thin, with salient teeth : corolla 

 3 — 6 lines long; lower lip often with a red spot: calyx nar- 

 rowly oblong, oblique at the orifice; the sharp teeth very 

 short. — Gray, 1. c. 



Oregon and British Columbia, in wet, shady places. 



M. montioides, Gray. 



Dwarf, I — 3 inches high, glabrous: leaves linear-spatulate, 

 attenuate at base, sessile, entire, equalling or exceeding the 

 slender pedicels: calyx-teeth ovate-oblong, equal: corolla 

 large, golden yellow; throat elongated and narrow, purple- 

 dotted; lower lip densely bearded. — Proc. Am. Acad. VII. 

 380, excepting the plant with "corolla parva, calyce 

 paullo longiore;" which is apparently good 31. rubellus, 

 Gray. 31. rubellus, var. latiflorus, "Watson, Bot. King, 226; 

 Gray 1. c. 31. barbatus, Greene, Bull. Cal. Acad. I. 9. 



High Sierras in the central part of California, aud east- 

 ward in Nevada. A small plant with very disproportionate- 

 ly large corollas, in this respect resembling the first section 

 of Eunanus; nevertheless, in all respects a true Mint alas and 

 very distinct from M. rubellus, Gray. 



M. Pulsiferae, Gray. 



Viscid but not pubescent, erect, a span high, loosely 

 branching: leaves broadly ovate to lanceolate-oblong, den- 

 ticulate or entire, a half inch or more long, on margined 

 petioles, surpassed by the slender, ascending pedicels : calyx 

 with equal, ovate-triangular teeth : corolla a half inch long, 

 yellow, or purplish. — Proc. Am. Acad. XI. 98, & 1. c. 



