418 RYDBERG: Rocky MOUNTAIN FLORA 
Hlomalobus camporum Rydb. loc. cit., in part. 
Perennial with a cespitose caudex ; stems decumbent, about 1 
dm. high, strigose ; leaves 5-8 cm. long ; stipules ovate, scari- 
ous, 2-3 mm. long; leaflets g-15, elliptic to linear, 5-15 mm 
long, I-3 mm. wide, glabrous above, sparingly strigose beneath ; 
peduncles 4-6 cm. long; racemes short, 3—8-flowered; calyx 
strigose with black hairs; tube campanulate, about 2 mm. long; 
teeth about 1 mm. long, subulate; pod sessile, strigose, straight, 
12-18 mm. long, 3 mm. wide 
This species is intermediate between 7. od/ongifolius Rydb. and 
H1, diwvergens (Blankinship) Rydb. Baker’s specimens from North 
Park were referred to the latter, which the present species resem- 
bles in general habit and the pod; but it is a greener plant, the 
leaflets being glabrous above and only slightly strigose beneath. 
The smaller size, and the smaller pod of a different shape, separate 
it from 1. oblongifolius. 
Cotorapo: East slope of Rabbit Ear Range, 1894 (type dis- 
tributed from the State Agricultural College of Colorado, collector 
not given); Forks of Poudre and Big South, 1894; North Park, 
1897, C. F. Baker ; Steamboat Springs, 1903, Osterhout 2774. 
Homalobus paucijugus sp. nov. 
_ Perennial with a cespitose caudex, bushy; stems 1-2 dm. 
high, sparingly strigose ; leaves numerous, 5-10 cm. long ; leaf- 
lets 1-5, the lateral ones lanceolate to linear-subulate, 1 cm. or 
less long, glabrous above, sparingly strigose beneath, or none; 
the terminal one 1-2 cm. long, linear or linear-oblanceolate, grad- 
ually tapering into the rachis ; stipules scarious, ovate, 2-3 mm. 
long; peduncles 3-6 cm. long; racemes short, 3—6-flowered ; 
calyx strigose with black hairs; tube campanulate, about 2 mm. 
long ; teeth subulate, fully 1 mm. long ; legume 12-15 mm. long, 
2mm. wide, straight, strigose. 
This species resembles H. decurrens in the peculiar terminal 
leaflet, but differs in the few small and narrow lateral leaflets, the 
small size of the plant, the small flowers and the small pod. It 
grows at an altitude of nearly 3000 m. 
Urau: Big Cottonwood Cafion, in sheltered places near the 
summit of the divide between Lake Solitude and Twin Lakes, 
1905, A. O. Garrett 1580. 
The species confused with H. tenellus and usually included in 
it may be distinguished by the following characters : 
