Wooton: THE LARKSPURS OF NEw Mexico 39 
appressed-pubescent ; follicles * cylindrical, 12-15 mm. long, finely 
pubescent and viscid ; seeds dark brown, irregularly oblong to tri- 
angular, scarcely winged. 
The typical material comes from the upper slopes of the White 
Mountain Peak at elevations of from 3,200 m. down to about 
2,500 m. The specimens seen are: 
White Mt. Peak, Aug. 1, 1901, Wooton. 
Townsend’s no. 26 (referred to in footnote), Aug., 1898. 
Head of South Eagle Creek, Aug. 11, 1899, Turner 192. 
Near Gilmore’s Ranch on Eagle Creek, Wooton, July 14, 
1895, and Wooton & Standley, Aug., 1907, nos. 3661 and 3490. 
This is the common species of the higher altitudes of the 
White Mountains of Lincoln Co., and may shade gradually into 
D. novo-mexicanum, Extreme forms of the two species are amply 
distinct. It has the habit of that species but also shows some rela- 
tion to D. Sapellonis in color of flowers, pubescence, and color of 
leaves. 
10. DELPHINIUM SapeLtonis Cockerell, Bot. Gaz. 34: 453. 1902 
Type locality : ‘ Beulah, Sapello Cafion,”” New Mexico. 
This is apparently the common species of the extensive moun- 
tain region which lies between Santa Fé and Las Vegas. The 
following specimens were seen : 
U.S. Nat. Herb., sheet zo. 473,057, the type specimen. 
Mountains near Las Vegas, July, 1881, Vasey. Two sheets, 
U.S. Nat. Herb. os, 2780 and 125,892. 
Two other sheets collected by Professor Cockerell at Beulah. 
Gallinas Cafion, near Las Vegas, July, 1908, Bartlett 294. 
Upper Pecos River, Sept., 1904, Bartlett 49. 
Upper Pecos River, Aug. 6, 1898, Maltby & Coghill 130. 
Pecos River, National Forest, Winsor Creek, July 28, 1908, 
Standley 4579. 
Sandia Mountains, New Mexico, Oct., 1883, Bige/ow, probably 
belongs here. 
11. Derpuintum CocKEerELiu A. Nelson, Bot. Gaz. 42: 51. 1906 
Type locality: ‘“ Baldy Mts., Elizabethtown, N. M.” 
This seems to be a rather rare species, which occurs in the 
* The type specimen is without fruit ; the description of the follicles is drawn from 
a specimen collected by Townsend in the same locality in the summer of 1898, 
