1889,] NEW YOKE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES. 65 



ANACAEDIACE^. 



Rhus aromatica, Ait., var. trilohata (Nutt.), Gray. Fort Verde 



(338). 

 Rhus glabra, L. Fossil Creek. (272). 



LEGUMINOS^. 



Thei'mopsis montanaj Nutt. Baker's Butte (80). 



Lupinus argenfeus, Pursh. San Francisco Mts. (21): Baker's 



Butte (74); Bishop's Creek (343). 

 Melilotus Indica (L.), All, Fort Verde (324). 

 Trifolmm involucratum, Willd. Mogollon Mts. (53). 



HosACKiA Mearnsii, h. sp. Perennial, herbaceous, densely silky 

 canescent all over; stems branched, 6-8 inches high ; leaves 

 3-5-foliolate, petioles short ; leaflets obovate-cuneate, obtuse 

 or even truncate at the apex, one-quarter inch long, three- 

 eighths inch wide, stipules very minute and gland-like; pedun- 

 cles slender, about two inches long, two to four flowered; 

 flowers three-fourths of an inch long, orange-red and showy, 

 pod silky canescent, about the length of the flowers, tipped 

 with the smooth, persistent style, which is over an eighth of an 

 inch long, and in some cases has the stigma still remaining. 

 Fort Verde (342), 



Hosaclcia puberula, Benth. Fort Verde (295). 



Hosachia Wrightii, Gray. Fort Verde (262) ; Baker's Butte 

 (91). 



Dalea formosa, Torr. Fort Verde (11), 



Robinia Neo-Mexicana, Gray. Mogollon Mts. (129), 



Astragalus candicans, Greene. Fort Verde (297). 



Astragalus decumbens (Nutt,), Gray, Bishop's Creek (350). 



Astragalus Missourietisis, Nutt, Fort Verde (345). 



Astragalus Nuttallianus, DC, Fort Verde (335), 



Astragalus Patter soni. Gray? Fort Verde (154, 163 and 303). 



Vicia Americana, Muhl. Little Squaw Peak (146); Baker's 

 Butte (98), 



Lathy rus decaphyllus, Pursh. (L. polymoi'phus, Nutt.). Fort 

 Verde (167). 



Lathyrus Arizonicus, 71. sp. Glabrous throughout; stems 

 slender, angular, less than a foot long; leaflets one or two 

 pairs, sessile, or nearly so, linear-lanceolate, one to two inches 

 long, one-quarter inch wide, entire, venose, especially below; 

 stipules ovate, acuminate, about one-quarter inch long, ped- 

 uncles one or two flowered, one inch long; flowers half an inch 

 long, white. Summit of mountain, north of wagon-pass over 

 Mogollon Mountains at Mehren's Eanch, May 27, 1887 (57), 



Cologania longifolia. Gray. Mogollon Mts. (107). 



