1920.] NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA. 183 



anterior lip 5-7 mm. long, 4-5 mm. wide, narrowed at base, hooded 

 almost entire length (sac strongly upcm^ving against hood) ; exter- 

 nally glabrous or finely puberulent proximally, within glabrous. 

 Filament none or very short. Anther with the two sacs separated 

 on two arms of the connective, each (including sac) about 1.5 mm. 

 long; posterior sac .6-.7 mm. long, whitish, opening throughout, 

 fertile, concealed within hood; anterior sac shorter, projecting into 

 orifice, partially or wholly sterile. Style 1 mm. long. Capsule 

 nearly globose, finely pubescent with glandless hairs; not seen 

 mature. 



Type, along streamlet, edge of forest, ''Rosalito," (between 

 Murillo and Paramo de Ruiz), Tolima, altitude 2800-3100 meters, 

 collected in flower December 17, 1917, F. W. Pennell 3119; in Herb. 

 New York Botanical Garden. 



Along streamlets, edge of forest, at an altitude between 2800 and 

 3100 meters. Temperate zone of eastern slope of Cordillera Central, 

 in Tolima. 



16. Fagelia chelidonioides (H. B. K.) Kuntze. 



.Calceolaria chelidonioides H. B. K., Nov. Gen. et Sp., 2: 37S. 1818. "Crescit 

 in radicibus mentis Javirac prope Quito, alt. 1500 hex. [ = ca. 2850 m.] 

 [Humboldt & Bonpland]." 



Fagelia chelidonioides (H. B. K.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. 2: 459. 1891. 



Fagelia diversifolia Pennell, in Addisonia4: 73, pi. 153. "Type . . . collected 

 on a moist bank at Chipaque, Department of Cundinamarca, Colombia, at 

 an altitude of about 8700 feet, August 23, 1917, my number 1320, and is 

 preserved in the hebarium of the New York Botanical Garden." Specimens 

 seen later appear to unite this with the plant from Ecuador. 



Stem erect or ascending, 3-9 dm. tall, little branched, sparsely 

 pubescent, more so about nodes, with few-celled gland-tipped hairs. 

 Leaves 4-15 cm. long, the blades acute to acuminate at apex, the 

 lower ovate and shallowly pinnately lobed, irregularly serrate- 

 dentate, the upper pinnately lobed nearly to the midrib with two or 

 three pairs of oval or ovate, irregularly doubly serrate-dentate 

 segments, (the odd terminal segment largest), 3-10 cm. long, 2.5- 

 7.5 cm. wide, each on a petiole 1-5 cm. long, slightly margined, 

 glandular- pubescent, proximally slightly expanding and clasping the 

 stem, usually slightly connate with that of opposing leaf; green 

 above, pale green beneath, with scattered pubescence on both 

 surfaces. Corymb leafy-bracted at base (the two primary flowers 

 developed), its secondary branches elongated, several times dividmg 

 and bracted throughout with reduced leaves. Peduncles and pedi- 

 cels finely pubescent with few-celled gland-tipped hairs. Calyx 

 7-8 mm. long, the lobes ovate, acuminate, slightly serrate (the 



