454 SUPPLEMENT. 



cluster of 2 to 5 flowers : sepals nearly equal, oblong, sparsely scahcrulous-glandular, hardlv 

 equalling the short-oblong pale yellow (4 or 5 lines long) corolla. — Proc. Am. Acad. xix. 

 94. — Dry hills, Lake Co., California, Primjle. 



C. Nevinii, Gkay. Next to C tenuis, p. 304, anomalous in the division by its essentially 

 one-celled anthers : loosely much branched, villous-pubescent : leaves either 3-parted or en- 

 tire, narrowly linear, not callose-apiculate : flowers scattered along the slender branchlets, 

 nearly naked, much exceeding the subtending floral leaves : corolla yellowish and purplish : 

 four stamens alike, with villous filaments, sometimes a rudimentary second cell to the an- 

 thers but commonly none : seeds smooth, scarious-apiculate. — Proc. Am. Acad. xvii. 229. — 

 San Bernardino Mountains, S. E. California, Nevin, Parish. Also San Diego Co., Orcittt. 



C. maritimus, Nutt., p. 304. Add syn. : Chloropyron palustre, Behr in Proc. Calif. Acad. i. 

 Gl, fide Mrs. Curran in Bull. Calif. Acad. i. 145. Extends north to Humboldt Co., Rattan, 

 and east to San Bernardino Co., in saline soil, Parish. 



§ 4. DiCRANOSTEGiA. Calyx monopliyllous, posterior, 2-parted, the segments 

 ovate, acuminate, one-nerved. — Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. xix. 95. 



C. Orcuttianus, Gray, 1. c. Hirsute or hispidulous, a span to a foot high, very leafy : 

 leaves all piunately parted into narrow linear or filiform lobes : flowers capitate-crowded : 

 corolla yellowish, with broad and equal lips : filaments glabrous ; anthers of the longer pair 

 2-celled, but lower cell remote and hardly polliniferous ; of the shorter pair abortive, reduced 

 to a 2-parted yellow-hirsute rudiment. — Tijuana, a little within the border of Lower 

 California, Orcutt. 



36. PEDICULARIS, Tonrn. 



To division +- -)— **"", p- 306, but needing a new subdivision, add : — 



P. Howellii, Gray. A foot high, with herbage glabrous : stem stout, simple, naked or 

 with some small scales below, above leafy up to the dense cylindraceous spike : leaves 

 oblong (2 inches long) ; some simple and undulate-serrate or entire, on margined petioles, 

 others piunately 3-7-parted or upper lobes more confliient : bracts foliaceous, ovate, mostly 

 acuminate, more or less lanate-ciliate, shorter than the flowers : calyx campanulate, sparsely 

 villous, 5-dentate ; teeth ovate, nearly entire, the posterior and lateral more connate : corolla 

 white or whitish, with exserted tube and a rather long much incurved somewhat rose-colored 

 beak, much like that of P. compiicta, but its truncate tip rather broader; lip small. — Proc. 

 Am. Acad. xx. 307. — N. California, in the Siskiyou Mountains, HotcdI. 



P. Canbyi. Near the Siberian P. compacfa, but with very short-beaked galea : glabrous up 

 to the inflorescence: stem sparsely leafy, 7 to 10 inches high: leaves pinnately divided or 

 parted into 11 or more linear-lanceolate and laciniate-serrate divisions (of about half-inch in 

 length): spike cylindraceous, dense : ovate bracts and irregularly 4-.5-cleft calyx sparsely 

 villous : corolla (half-inch long) yellowish, with exserted tube, and galea with a distinct but 

 short and thickish (line long) porrect truncate beak ; lip very short, almost flabelliform, its 

 three short lobes erose-creiiulate. — Rocky Mountains of Montana, on McDonald's Peak of 

 Mission Range, at 8,400 feet, Canbi/, 188.3. 



P. Furbishiee, Watson. Next to P. lanrmlnta, p. 307, but more allied to the Siberian 

 P. striata : tall (2 or 3 feet high) and rather slender, pubescent or glabrate, sparsely 

 leafy to the rather dense spike : leaves lanceolate, pinnately parted and the short oblong 

 divisions pinnatifid-incised, or the upper simply pinnatifid and the lobes serrate ; uppermost 

 passing into the foliaceous and ovate laciniate-dentate bracts, which are shorter than the 

 flowers : lobes of the calyx 5, rather unequal, linear-lanceolate, entire or with 2 or 3 teeth, 

 about the length of the narrow campanulate tube : corolla ochroleucous, tAvo-thirds inch 

 long, narrow ; galea straight, one third the length of the tube, beakless, the introrse truncate 

 apex bicuspidate, the front almost rectilinear, nearly equalled by the erect truncately 3-lobed 

 lip, which when outspread is nearly flabelliform : capsule broadly ovate : seeds oval, com- 

 pressed, with the thin striate and cellular-reticulate coat wing-like, very much broader than 

 nucleus. — Proc. Am. Acad. xvii. 375. — Banks of the St. John's River, Aroostook Co., 

 Maine, Miss Furbish, and adjacent New Brunswick, Wetmore, Vroom. 



