REVISION OF ROMANZOFFIA. 37 
3. R. Macoun. Habitof R. Sitchensis, but every way larger, 
the flowering stems 6 to 10 inches long, geniculate and reclining, 
the racemose branches several ; whole plant, and especially the in- 
florescence, pilose-pubescent, many of the hairs straight and 
gland-tipped, these extending to the calyx, but more minutely 
and sparsely : leaves round-reniform, the radical often nearly 2 
inches broad, and with about twice the usual number of shallow 
lobes, but these unequal, all mucronulate; the cauline ones also 
rather long-petioled, but only 5-lobed and of half the size of 
the others: pedicels elongated and filiform, in fruit spreading 
rather than ascending: corolla with a very short tube and a 
broad campanulate limb, this nearly 3 inch broad: capsule some- 
what obcordate, little surpassing the calyx and notably glandular- 
airy. ‘ 
Chilliwack Valley, British Columbia, 29 June, 1901, J. M- 
Macoun, n. 34, 921. A plant of the low country, growing at an 
altitude of only 150 feet above the level of the sea, through far 
inland. The foliage is unlike that of any of the seaboard species 
in that most of the (nine) primary lobes are partly cleft into 
two, so that the leaf is 14 to 18-lobed. 
4. R. RUBELLA. Lower than the last, also less slender, the 
Scapiform stems only 4 to 6 inches high even in fruit, and florif- 
erous throughout, the pedicels stouter and not spreading, the 
whole plant of a reddish-purple hue: leaves short-peduncled;> 
rather fleshy, the round-reniform blade an inch in diameter more 
or less, and with 14 to 18 shallow lobes, nearly or quite glabrous, 
but the petioles and stem more hairy and more glandularly so 
than in the last, as also the capsule, this not at all exceeding the 
nearly or quite glabrous calyx: corolla not seen. 
This is Mr. Macoun’s n. 34,922 from the Chilliwack Valley, 
and is of the low country. In habit, and in character of cap- 
sule as equalling but not surpassing the calyx, the species 
recalls R. Unalaschensis rather than R. Sitchensis, but it is most 
distinct from both, 
