.Scrophulariaceae. 471 



Pedicularis lanata (Willd.) Cham. & Schlecht. 



Alcohol-material from Greenland (Amerdlok, 15. 7. 1884, 

 leg. Th. Holm; Kingartak, 25.7.86, leg. Ryder; Proven, 

 24. 6. 1888, leg. Myhre). 



Herbarium-material from Greenland, King William's 



Land, Ellesmere Land, Arctic North America, Nova Zembla 



and Arctic Siberia. 



Lit.: Lange, 1880, p. 76; 1887, p. 262; Nathorst, 1883, p. 10; 

 Warming, 1886, pp. VII, VIII, 21, 44, 47 and 54; 1888, pp.59, 74, 

 87 and 104; 1890, pp. 206, 208, 210 and 213; Rosenvinge, 1892, 

 p. 687; 1896 (I), p. 68; Hartz, 1894, p. 45; 1895 (I) p. 306; 1895 (II), 

 p. 372; Kruuse, 1898, pp. 350, 373, 380, 394 and 398; 1906, p. 249; 

 1911, pp.103, 132, 196 and 207; Abromeit, 1899, p. 44; Ekstam, 

 1899, pp. 7, 32, 37, 40, 48, 49 and 50; Knuth, 1899, p. 193; Anders- 

 son and Hesselman, 1901, p. 16; Eastavood, 1902, p. 291; Porsild, 

 1902, pp. 114, 178; 1910, pp. 259, 267 and 270; 1912, pp. 382 and 385; 

 1920, p. 143; Simmons, 1902, p. 29, tab. II, figs. 1—3; 1906, pp. 124, 

 137 and 164. 



Spot-bound, sympodial hemicryptophyte of the semi- 

 rosette type ; like the foregoing closely related species, it has 

 a thick, scantily branched main root of long duration; ad- 

 ventitious roots are probably, as a rule, only slightly deve- 

 loped. As P. hirsiita, this species can form large and dense 

 tufts. 



It appears that the first л' -egetative- stage may be con- 

 fined to two years, so that the main axis of the young plant, 

 after the formation of two consecutive leaf-rosettes, can, in 

 the third summer, form a shoot-portion with elongated inter- 

 nodes, although a comparatively weak one, terminating in 

 an inflorescence. Generally, the necessary vegetative-stage 

 preceding the flowering is, no doubt, of longer duration. The 

 vegetative stage of the innovation-shoots extends as a rule 

 over 2 years. 



P. hirsuta and P. lanata differ essentially from each 

 other by the fact that the latter has no specially-developed 



