558 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM. 



3. Hedeoma oblongifolia (A. Gray) Heller, Muhlenbergia 1: 4. 1900. 

 Hedeoma piperita oblongifolia A. Gray ; Proc. Amer. Acad. 8: 367. 1872. 

 Hedeoma thymoidcs oblongifolia A. Gray, Syn. Fl. 2 1 : 362. 1878. 



Type locality: "New Mexico and Arizona." 



Range: Southern New Mexico and Arizona and adjacent Mexico. 



New Mexico: Fort Tularosa; Hanover Mountain; Middle Fork of the Gila; Dog 

 Spring; Organ Mountains; Shalam Hills. Low mountains, in the Upper Sonoran Zone. 



There is very little doubt that this is the plant Doctor Gray had before him, not- 

 withstanding that the name applies much better to some of the other species. There 

 is also little doubt that this is a plant which Doctor Torrey included in his H. dentata 

 in the Botany of the Mexican Boundary Survey, a reference in which others have 

 followed him, although the two plants are very unlike. The leaves of H. oblongifolia 

 are not oblong; the lower cauline leaves are ovate to elliptic, acute and decurrent, 

 entire, with occasionally a few inconspicuous teeth ; the upper ones are lanceolate and 

 acute. Doctor Gray calls attention to these facts in the descriptions cited above. 



4. Hedeoma pulcliella Greene, Leaflets 1: 213. 1906. 



Type locality: Limestone hills near Kingston, New Mexico. Type collected by 

 Metcalfe (no. 1599). 

 Range: Known only from type locality. 



5. Hedeoma plicata Torr. U. S. & Mex. Bound. Bot. 130. 1859. 

 Type locality: Dry ravines near the Limpio Mountains, Texas. 

 Range: Western Texas to southern Arizona and adjacent Mexico. 



New Mexico: Organ Mountains; Queen; White Mountains. Dry hills, in the Up- 

 per Sonoran Zone. 



6. Hedeoma nana (Torr.) Greene, Pittonia 3: 339. 1898. 

 Hedeoma dentata nana Torr. U. S. & Mex. Bound. Bot. 130. 1859. 

 Type locality: "Rocky hills of the Rio Grande, near El Paso." 

 Range: Western Texas to southern Arizona and southward. 



New Mexico: Hillsboro; Organ Mountains; Tortugas Mountain. Dry hills, in the 

 Upper Sonoran Zone. 



7. Hedeoma ciliata Nutt. Journ. Acad. Phila. II. 1: 183. 1848. 

 Hedeoma sancta Small, Bull. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 1: 287. 1899. 



Type locality: Santa Fe, New Mexico. Type collected by Gambol. 



Range: Colorado to Texas and New Mexico. 



New Mexico: Santa Fe; Gallinas Canyon; Sandia Mountains; Tesuque; Pecos; 

 Magdalena Mountains. Open hills, in the Upper Sonoran Zone. 



We have not seen types of either H. sancta Small or H. ciliata Nutt. and can not be 

 sure that they are the same plant. What we take to be H. sancta seems to be the 

 common plant of this genus in the region about Santa Fe, the type locality of the 

 other species, and is reported by Doctor Rydberg from southern Colorado. Through 

 the kindness of Dr. J. H. Barnhart we have learned that there is every reason to be- 

 lieve that H. ciliata Nutt. was published a short time before H. ciliata Benth. Thus 

 H. ciliata Nutt. would seem to be the proper name for the Santa Fe plant, with II. 

 sancta as a synonym, providing Doctor Rydberg and we have been correct in referring 

 this southern Colorado and northern New Mexico plant to the latter species. 



8. Hedeoma lata Small, Fl. Southeast. U. S. 1040. 1903. 

 Type locality: "On rocky prairies, Texas and New Mexico." 

 Range: Western Texas and New Mexico. 



New Mexico: Carrizo Mountains; Dulce; Aztec; Ramah; Magdalena; Santa Rita; 

 Mangas Springs; mountains west of San Antonio; White Mountains; Organ Mountains; 

 Capitan Mountains; Torrance; south of Roswell. Diy plains and low hills, in the 

 Upper Sonoran Zone. 



