594 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM. 



Range: Colorado and northern New Mexico. 



New Mexico: Pecos Baldy; Truchas Peak; Baldy. Meadows in the mountains, 

 Arctic- Alpine Zone. 



14. Castilleja angustifolia (Nutt.) Don, Hist, Dichl. PI. 4: 616. i 837 !^^ 

 Euchroma angustifolia Nutt. Journ. Acad. Phila. 7: 46. 1834. ^#^ r 



Type locality: "Native in dry prairies on the borders of the Little Godding 

 River, near the source of the Columbia." 



Range: British Columbia to California and northern New Mexico. 



New Mexico: Aztec; southeast of Tierra Amarilla. Open hills, in the Upper. 

 Sonoran Zone. 



15. Castilleja organorum Standley, Muhlenbergia 5: 86. 1909. 



Type locality: Rocky sides of the Organ Mountains not far from Van Pattens 

 Camp, New Mexico. Type collected by Standley, June 6, 1906. 



Range: Organ Mountains of New Mexico, in the Upper Sonoran Zone. 



16. Castilleja lauta A. Nels. Bull. Torrey Club 27: 269. 1900. . . 

 Type locality: Dunraven Peak, Yellowstone Park. JflUtfff 

 Range: Montana to northern New Mexico. &' r' 



New Mexico: Near Chama {Standley 6842). Marshes in the mountains, in the 

 Canadian Zone. 



17. Castilleja trinervis Rydb. Bull. Torrey Club 28: 26. 1901. 



Type locality: Headquarters of Sangre de Cristo Creek, Colorado, rir 

 Range: Colorado and northern New Mexico. fl 



New Mexico: Near Chama (Standley 6841). Marshes in the mountains, in the 

 Canadian Zone. 



18. Castilleja austromontana Standi. & Blumer, Muhlenbergia 7: 44. 1911. 

 Type locality: Pine woods at Mannings Camp, Puncon Mountains, Arizona. 

 Range: Mountains of southern New Mexico and Arizona. 



New Mexico: Mogollon Mountains; East Canyon. Transition Zone. 



19. Castilleja inconstans Standley, Muhlenbergia 5: 83. 1909. 



Type locality: Winsors Ranch, on the headquarters of the Pecos River, New 

 Mexico. Type collected by Standley (no. 4000). 



Range: Mountains of northern New Mexico. 



New Mexico: Santa Fe and Las Vegas mountains; Tunitcha Mountains; Chama. 

 Transition and Canadian zones. 



What appears to be a hybrid between either this or C. confusa and one of the yel- 

 low-bracted species was discovered by Prof. T. D. A. Cockerell at Harveys Ranch 

 near Las Vegas and described as C. confusaXacuminata. 1 This was later renamed 

 C. X porterae.' 2 A number of plants with orange instead of scarlet bracts have been 

 noticed at the type locality of the species. 



20. Castilleja confusa Greene, Pittonia 4: 1. 1899. 



Type locality: "Of the more southerly or southwesterly Colorado Rocky Moun- 

 tains, and those of adjacent New Mexico." 



Range: Mountains of Colorado and northern New Mexico. 



New Mexico: Chama; Jemez Mountains; Santa Fe and Las Vegas mountains; San- 

 dia Mountains; Baldy. From the Transition to the Hudsonian Zone. 



19. ORTHOCARPUS Nutt. 



Erect annuals, 40 cm. high or less, with alternate simple or pinnatifid leaves, and 

 yellow, purple, or white flowers in terminal crowded bracted spikes, the bracts often 

 colored; calyx tubular or tubular-campanulate, 4-cleft, the lobes about equal; corolla 



1 Bot. Gaz. 29: 280. 1900. 2 Cockerell, Nature 70: 319. 1904. 



