30i> 



Fig. 13. Draba alpina L. 



f. pulvinaia. 



(Specimen from Cape Tscheljuskin 

 collected by F. R. Kjellman).. 



given this name to a plant he 

 afterwards (in Bot. Not. 1873) 

 rightly identified with Draba 

 altaica. 



Draba alpina v. glacialis Kjellm. 

 (Fig. 13) from Cap Tscheljuskin 

 is not, as Kjellman thought, the 

 D. glacialis Adams but a den- 

 sely caespitose, pulvinate form of 

 D. alpina. Quite the same form 

 is found by Jos. Hooker in Sikkim 

 152-18000'. 



Draba Fladnizensis Wulf. 



The leaves are oblong (Fig. 14), 

 lanceolate, entire or rarely with 

 a single tooth , with a thick 

 yellow, on the under surface 

 prominent middlevein , which 

 does not reach the top of the 

 leaves. Generally the leaves are 

 ciliated vi^ith long single or forked 

 hairs, which are turned forward; 

 often they are also more or less 

 hairy on the surfaces with small 

 downy branched hairs; very 

 rarely the leaves are quite gla- 

 brous, and it is then separated 

 from D. crassifolia by the pro- 

 minent middlevein. Stems gene- 

 rally are leafless but now and 

 then a single leaf can be found; 

 it is generally glabrous, but also 

 occasionally hairy, — even very 

 ^'"'""^co&7b?RXt"' ''"'' densely so. Stems thin as in 



Fig 14. 

 Draba Fladnizensis Wulf. 



