SOME CASTILLEIAS OF THE PARVIFLORA GROUP. 47 



with)- Valley of the Virgen near St. George, Utah, 1874 (C. C. 

 Parry No. 153); Bear Vallev, Utah, 1877 (Edvv. Palmer, No. 

 388 J); Black Hills, Wyoming, July 4, 1872 (E. L. Greene, No. 

 1); Pacific Springs, Wyoming, 1873 (C. C. Parry). Specimens 

 from Inghams Mt, Latah Co., Idaho, June 12, 1892 (Lake and 

 Hull, No. 572), have the pubescence of the species but leaves 

 approaching var. Bradburii. 



Var. hispida. Plant much coarser throughout than C. angws- 

 Ufolia: stems stout, 4 or 5 dm. high, very pilose especially above 

 with long hairs, becoming less pubescent with age : leaves 5 to 8 cm. 

 long, rather rigid, covered on both sides with strongly scabrous more 

 or less appressed short hairs, the margins and veins bearing longer 

 pilose-hispid pubescence; lower leaves lance-attenuate, entire; upper 

 becoming oblong or even obovate, cleft above the middle into three 

 lobes, the middle lobe lanceolate, either acute or obtuse, the two 

 lateral lobes narrower and shorter, ascending or slightly divaricate : 

 bracts rather broader and shorter than the upper leaves, with softer 

 pubescence, mostly 5 (rarely 7) -cleft, the tips variously shaded 

 with yellow and red : calyx 2.5 or 3 cm. long, the reddish or yellow- 

 ish segments either acute or obtuse: corolla 3 to 4 cm. long, the 

 galea I little more than half the length of the tube, and much ex- 

 ceeding the short lower lip (2 mm. long) with its unequal ovate- 

 oblong involute lobes.— C. coccinea, Lindl. Bot. Reg. t. 1136, not 

 Spreng. C. hispida, Benth. in Hook. Fl. Bor.-Am. ii.|105.-t-De- 

 scribed by Bentham from Northwestern specimens of Douglas, 

 Scouler, Tolmie, and Gairdner. The following specimens agree 

 well with Lindlev's plate: Hall and Harbour, No. 411; on rocky 

 hillsides, Almota, Washington, May 27, 1893 (C. V. Piper, No. 

 2323); Blue Mts., Walla Walla Co., Washington, in fruit, July, 

 1896 (C V. Piper, No. 2435) ; rocky hillsides on Hatwai Creek, 

 Nez Perces Co., Idaho, April 30, 1892 (Sandberg, MacDougal, and 

 Heller, No. 76). Other specimens, as Watson's No. 810 from Par- 

 ley's Park, Utah, Coville and Funston's No. 554 from Panamint 

 Mts., California, and pale-flowered specimens collected by Sandberg 

 on hillsides in Nez Perces Co., June, 1892, are somewhat inter- 

 mediate between this and true C. angustifolia. Sandberg, Mac- 

 Dougal and Heller's No. 450 from hillsides at the head of Little 



