Contributions to Canadian Botany. 473 



canescent and vary somewhat from the type as to foliage, 

 but they do not appear to be separable from M. nasutus. 



MiMULUS LUTEUS, L. 



There are some thirty or forty sheets of Mimidus, 

 labelled M. luteiis, in our herbarium. These include many 

 forms and varieties, and we l)elieve several species, but we 

 find it impossible even with Dr. Greene's " Miniulus 

 luteus and some of its allies " in hand to satisfactorily 

 separate and determine our specimens. They cover a 

 wide range — from the Cypress Hills, Alberta, through the 

 Eocky Mountains and British Columbia north to the 

 Aleutian Islands, including Unalaska, the locality from 

 which seeds of M. Langsdorffii were taken to Europe, but 

 the various forms so intergrade that our present know- 

 ledge does not enable us to definitely and finally separate 

 them. 



Orthocarpus pallescens, Gray. 



Lower Arrow Lake, Columbia River, B.C. {Dr. G. 31. 

 Daicson. John Jlacoun.) First collected by Dr. Dawson in 

 1889 and referred to Castillcia pallida. New to Canada- 



Pedicularis contorta, Benth. 



New stations for this rare plant are Mt. Aylmer, Devil's 

 Lake, Eocky Mountains, alt. 6,000 ft. {John Macoun.) 

 Toad Mountain, Kootanie Lake, B.C., alt. 6,000 ft. {Jas. 

 M. Macoun.) 



Pedicularis racemosa, Dougl. ; ]\Iacoun, Cat. Can. Plants, 

 Vol. I., pp. 368 and 572. 



Common on sub-alpine slopes throughout British 

 Columbia. Near the road to Union Mines, Comox, 

 Vancouver Island ; Mount Mark, Y.I., alt. 3,000 ft. 

 {John Macoun.) Not before recorded from Vancouver 

 Island. 



