RYDBERG: Rocky MOUNTAIN FLORA 409 
“Atragene pseudo-alpina diversiloba var. nov. 
A peculiar form with merely ternate leaves, the segments of 
which are more or less cleft or lobed, some rounded at the apex ; 
staminodia conspicuous, spatulate or oblanceolate. 
This may be a distinct species, but the material is too scant. 
The most striking character is the conspicuous staminodia, which 
in the species are narrowly linear or more often lacking. 
Cotorapo: Mountains near Denver, 1869, B. H. Smith (type 
herb. Columbia University). 
“ Stanleya glauca sp. nov. 
Tall, perfectly glabrous, 4-6 dm. high, bluish green; lower 
leaves 1-1.5 dm. long, more or less pinnatifid with linear-lanceo- 
late or oblong lobes, the terminal usually much longer than the 
. rest; upper leaves usually entire, linear-lanceolate ; racemes 3-4 
m. long, sometimes branched below; sepals and petals lemon- 
yellow ; the former oblong, about I Cth long, deciduous ; petals 
of about the same length, long-clawed ; claws more or less pubes- 
cent, about twice as long as the oblong blades ; fruiting pedicels 
about I cm. long, more or less spreading ; stipes about 1.5 cm., 
slender ; pod proper about 5 cm. long and 1.5 mm. thick, some- 
what arcuate, but neither tortuose nor torulose ; seeds oblong, dark 
brown, minutely pitted. 
This species is perhaps most nearly related to S. integrifola 
James, which, however, differs in the following respects : the stem 
lower, leaves thicker and broader, oval or broadly oblanceolate ; 
the lower, if lobed, with broad and short lobes; claws of the 
petals broader at the base, shorter, scarcely longer than the oblong 
spatulate blades. .S. glauca grows on the dry hills and table 
lands at an altitude of 1,200-2,500 m 
Cotorapo: Prairie, Entrance Soldier’s Cafion to Sulphur 
Springs, 1895, /. H. Cowen (type); McElma Cajion, 1901, /. &. 
Vreeland, 871; plains near Fort Collins, 1896, C. S. Crandall ; 
near Badita, 1900, Rydberg & Vreeland, 6120 ; Dixon Cajion, 1899, 
- Mancos, 1898, Baker, Earle & Tracy, 412; Pueblo, 
to; Gardin of the Gods, 1894, Z. A. Bessey ; Pike's Peak, 1894, 
I. F. Alten. 
’ Schoenocrambe decumbens sp. nov. 
Stem slender, decumbent, 2-3 dm. long, as well as the whole 
plant perfectly glabrous, more or less branched ; leaves narrowly 
