60 PRIMULACE.E. Douglasia. 



* * Flowers solitary terminating the leafy shoots : tube of the corolla barely equalling the calyx: 

 leaves more or less'imbricated in the manner of D. VitaliaiM. 



D. montana, Gray. Pulvinate-cespitose, an incli or two high, nearly glabrous : leaves 

 subulate, minutely somewhat ciliate, 2 lines long, somewliat interruptedly inibricate-clus- 

 tered : pedicel not longer than the flower, 1-2-bracteolate near the calyx: corolla-lobes 

 cuneate-obovate, 2 lines long. — Proc. Am. Acad. vii. 371. — Rocky Mountains around 

 Helena City, Montana, M. A. Brown. Owl Creek Mts., Wyoming, J. D. Putnam. 



5. ANDR/OSACE, Tourn. (Ancient Greek name of some sea-plant or 

 zoophyte, curiously transferred to these little jilants of the mountains.) — Small 

 annuals or perennials, of various habit, numerous in species in the Old World, 

 few in the colder regions of the New : A. summer. 



* Perennials, pniliferously branched at base and cesjiitose : leaves rosulate-imbricatcd at the base 

 of the niany-tiowered scapes : capsule usually few-seeded : uiubel several-tlowered. 



A. Chamaejasme, Host. Leaves in more or less open rosulate tufts, from lanceolate 

 to oblong-spat ulate or ovate, carinatc-1-nerved (3 to 6 lines long), at least their margins 

 with the scape (1 to 3 inches high) and somewhat capitate umbel villous with many-jointed 

 hairs : corolla white with yellowish eye (3 or 4 lines in diameter). — Koch, 8yn. ed. 2,671 ; 

 Hook. n. ii. 119. A. carinatu, Torr. in Ann. Lye. N. Y. i. 30, t. 1 ; Sweet, Brit. Fl. Card, 

 ser. 2, 1. 106. A. villosa, var. Intl/ulia, Ledeb. Fl. Alt. ; Herder, Bot. Eadde, iii. 118. Indeed 

 it may pass into A. villosa, L. — Alpine region of the Rocky Mountains from Colorado 

 northward to the arctic coast, Behring Straits and islands. (N. F,. Asia to Eu.) 



* * Annuals, acaulescent, with slender root, an open rosulate circle of leaves, and naked scapes, 

 bearing an involucrate few-many-Howcred umbel: capsule many-seeded: corolla white, small. 



•i— Calvx-tube obpyramidal in fruit, whitish with conspicuous green teeth, which mostly surpass 

 the capsule. 



A. OCCidentalis, Pursh.. Minutely pubescent, not over 3 inches high : radical leaves 

 and those of the conspicuous involucre oblong-ovate or spatulate, entire, sessile : scapes 

 diffuse : bracts of the involucre ovate or oblong : lobes of the calyx triangular-lanceolate : 

 oblong or deltoid, as long as the tube, still longer in fruit, foliaceous : lobes of the corolla 

 oblong, shorter than the calyx. — Fl. i. 137; Nutt. Gen. i. 118. — Banks of the Missouri 

 from the mountains down to St. Louis, and extending down the Mississippi, and into Illi- 

 nois : also Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico. 



A. septentrionalis, L. Almost glabrous : leaves lanceolate or oblong-lanceolate, nar- 

 rowed at base (often into a sort of winged petiole), from irregularly denticulate to laciniate- 

 toothed : scapes erect, usually numerous, 2 to 10 inches high : bracts of the small involucre 

 subulate : ujnbel several-many-flowcred : pedicels filiform, mostly long : lobes of the calyx 

 mostly shorter than the tube, rather shorter than the obovate lobes of the corolla, from 

 triangular to subulate-lanceolate, acute. — Lam. 111. t. 98, f. 2; Fl. Dan. t. 7 ; Bot. Mag. 

 t. 2021. A. elonrjata, Richards., not L. ^1. Uncurls, Graham in Edinb. Phil. Jour. 18291 — 

 Rocky Mountains, both high alpine (and small), and at much lower elevations, New Mexico 

 and Nevada to the arctic sea coast : also N. W. coast. (Kamtschatka to Eu. ) 



Var. SUbulifera. Lobes of the calyx slender-subulate, as long as the tube, surpass- 

 ing the corolla. — Rocky Mountains near Boulder City, Colorado, //. G. French. San 

 Bernardino, California, Parrij & Lemmon. 



•1— -1— Calvx-tube hemispherical in fruit ; the short teeth barely greenish and rather shorter than 

 the globular capsule. 



A. filiformis, Retz. Glabrous: leaves, scapes (1 to 4 inches high), and pedicels nearly 

 as in the preceding or more capillary: flowers less than a line and globose capsule only a 

 line long: calyx-teeth broadly triangular, shorter than the very small corolla. — Obs. ii. 

 10; DCrProdr. viii. .53 ; Reichenb. Ic. Germ. xvii. t. 61 ; Gray, in Proc. Acad. Philad. 1863, 

 70. — Rocky Mountains, from Colorado and Utah to Wyoming. (N. Asia.) 



6. TRIENTAL.IS, L. StAR-FLOM^ER, ClIICKWEED-WmXERGREEN. 



(Latin, for the third of a foot high.) — Low and ghibrous perennials; the simple 

 stem, from liliform rootstock somewhat tuberous-thickened at apex, bearing scat- 



