OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. 95 



oribus. — California, on dry hills in Lake Co., August, 1882, Pringle. 

 — A most distinct species, with short and obtusely lobed bracts and a 

 short corolla. 



CoRDYLANTHUS, § 4. DiCRANOSTEGiA. Calyx monophyllus (pos- 

 ticus), bi[)artitus, segmentis ovatis acuminatis uninerviis. 



CoRDYLANTHUS Orcuttianus. Humilis, hispidulus, crebre folio- 

 sus; foliis etiam floralibus pinnatipartitis, lobis linearibus ; floribus glo- 

 meratis ; corolla flavesceute, labiis requalibus latis ; filamentis glabris ; 

 antheris longiorum bilocularibus, loculo infero remoto fere casso, brevi- 

 orimi gracilibus anthera sterili bipartita aureo-hirsuta instructis. — 

 Lower California, about 70 miles below the U. S. boundary, //. C. 

 Orcutt and son. The specimens are only 6 inches high, mostly 

 branched from the base, but it probably grows taller. It forms a 

 peculiar section in the genus ; the calyx evidently cousisting of a 

 posterior deeply two-parted sepal. 



Lentlbiilariacece. 



Utricularia occidentalis. Facie inter U. minorem et U. inter- 

 mediam ; caulibus foliisque prloris ; scapa spithamaia 3-5-flora ; pedi- 

 cellis post anthesin subpatentibus ; eorolhe labio superiore palate 

 inferioris rotuiidati {lin. 3-4 longi latiquo) pauUo longiore, calcare lato- 

 conico aciitiusculo lin. 2 longo adscendente. — Washington Territory, 

 in Falcon Valley, W. N. Suksdorf, coll. 1880, 1883. 



Verbenacece. 



Verbena Arizonica. V. cnnescenti proxima, e radlce perenni 

 multicaulis ditfuso-patens, humilis, canescenti-hirsuta ; foliis omnibus 



O. PACiiYSTACiiYus, Gray. Low, stouter ami tlie inflorescence flensely inibri- 

 cato-spicate, puberulcnt and above somewhat hirsute-pubescent; bracts (iiicli or 

 more long), with one or sometimes two pairs of elongated lateral lobes, niiiUlle 

 lobe oblong: calyx half the length of the corolla, deeply 2-cIeft, and the divis- 

 ions cleft to the middle into subulate lanceolate lobes: corolla over an inch 

 long; galea with uncinate tip, surpassing the lip: anther-cells linear lunate, 

 acute at base. — Thus far collected only by E. L. Greene, in Siskiyou Co., 

 California. 



+- +- Corolla yellow (as rightly said Pursli) ; bracts below more herbaceous, 

 less reticulated the summit of the oldong middle lobe purple. 

 O. LiNEARiFOLics, Benth. {Barisia tennifulia,'Pnrsh.) Strict, branching at 

 summit, sparsely hirsute or hispid, especially the margins of the 3-5-lobed 

 bracts : calyx half the length of the corolla, its lobes with a pair of elongated 

 subulate teeth : corolla two-thirds inch long, narrow ; galea with small uncinate 

 tip a little surpassing the lip: anthers oval. — Rocky Mountains in Montana 

 to Oregon, first coll. by Lewis and Clark. 



