46 BULLETIN UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA 



Utricularia vulgaris L. OBigfork. Also found previously by Elrod and Miss 

 Norton. 



Orobanche fasciculata Nutt. Bigfork, Wild Horse Island, Browning, Wild 

 Horse Island (Elrod). 



Orobanche comosa Hook. Hot Springs. 



Plantago major L. Swan Lake, and all the settlements around Flathead 

 Lake. 



Plantago Tweedyi Gray. Deer Lodge Valley, Browning. 



Plantago Purshii R. & S. Common on the low lands throughout. 



Plantago Purshii var. aristata (Mx. Fl. 1 95 as species). Ravalli. 



Galium Aparine L. Missoula, Ravalli. 



Galium Aparine var. Vaillantii (DC.) Koch. Reported from McDonald 

 Lake in the Mission Mountains by MacDougal. 



Galium trifidum Mx. Common from Alta northward. 



Galium asperrimum Gray. Alta, Darby. 



Galium triflorum Mx. Common from Alta northward. 



Galium boreale L. Common from Alta northward. 



Sambucus pubens L. MacDougal Peak, Alta. 



Sambucus melanocarpa Gray. Common from Alta northward. 



Sambucus glauca Nutt. Bigfork and Yellow Bay. 



Sambucus decipiens n. sp. This is what has passed for S. Canadensis 

 throughout the Rocky Mountain region and has been called S. glauca by 

 many because of the remarkably glaucous fruit. It differs from that species 

 in the regular elderberry habit, namely, tufted and short-lived stems and 

 very large leaves, and differs conspicuously from S. Canadensis in always 

 having white-glaucous fruit. Berries 5-6 mm .wide. Joints of stems very 

 prominent. Leaflets oblong-lanceolate, acuminate, smooth. Corymbs with 

 5-7 stout branches, the whole often 4.5 dm. wide and very heavy. Fruit 

 almost black, pleasant. It grows in open clumps normally about 3.5 m. high, 

 but is stouter than the eastern S. Canadensis, has larger leaves, and larger 

 corymbs and fruit which is always glaucous. The type is from my speci- 

 mens from St. Ignatius Mission, others are from the Hot Springs. Other all 

 my material distributed from the West except my Californian material as 

 S. glauca. Middle Temperate life zone. Bavalli, Alta, Mission Creek, Ra- 

 valli. Not S. Neo-Mexieana Wooton which is apparently S. Mexicana. 



Linnaea borealis L. Ever.vwhere in the woods. 



Symphoricarpos racemosus Mx. Common in all localities. 



Symphoricarpos rotundifolius Gray. S. vaccinioides Rydberg. Alta, Ro- 

 nan, Ravalli, Evaro. 



Lonicera Utahensis W'at. FVequent from Alta northward. 



Lonicera involucrata Banks. Common from Alta northward. 



Valeriana sylvatica Banks., V. septentrionalis Rydberg, V. occidentalis 

 Heller. From Alta northward. Common. 



Valeriana Sitchensis Bong. This is well marked in the extreme forms 

 but seems to vary into the above. From Mission Creek to Blackfoot Glacier. 



Echinocystis lobata (Mx.) T. & G. Bigfork and Ravalli. Cult. 



Specularia perfoliata (L.) A. DC. Ravalli, Ronan, McDonald Lake, Mac- 

 Dougal. 



Campanula rotundifolia L. Everywhere. 



Heterocodon rariflorum Nutt. Ronan. 



Lobelia Kalmii L. Rost Lake, Poison Swamp. Also by previous col- 

 lectors. 



Tragopogon porrifolius L. Bigfork. 



Microseris nutans (Geyer) Sch. Mission Creek, Columbia Falls (Wil- 

 liams). 



Hieracium gracile Hook. McDonald and MacDougal Peaks and through 

 the SpL-rry Glacier region. 



