REVISION OF CAPNOREA. 49 
not succulent, the leaves remarkably thin, not blackening in 
drying, 2 inches long or more including the short petiole, 
ovate to ovate-lanceolate and elliptical, obtuse, sparsely strigose- 
pubescent on both faces, the margin rather more densely so, yet 
not obviously ciliate, very slender pedicels not equalling the 
leaves, hirsutulous: sepals linear-lanceolate, conspicuously hir- 
sute, more finely so than in other species; corolla open funnel- 
form (perhaps in expansion salverform), the lobes narrow-oval, 
obtuse: filaments attenuate-subulate, the round-oval anthers 
scarcely exserted from the corolla-tube. 
Moscow Flats, Idaho, 12 June, 1894, L. F. Henderson, who 
remarks that it “grows in drier ground than the other species.” 
His label on what is the type sheet in the U. S. Herbarium bears 
his number 2747. 
This very distinct species might quite as well be taken for the 
original O. nana as the preceding; unless its comparative rarity 
be construed as against that view. Its leaf is decidedly more 
like that of the figure. 
8. C. incana. Dwarf; the short oval leaves with a short 
and broad petiole, the whole plant, even the pedicels and calyx, 
canescently villous-strigose : peduncles shorter than the leaves, 
only + to 3 inch long : sepals lanceolate: corolla small, broad-fun- 
nelform ; the segments ovate, obtuse: filaments stout, scarcely 
flattened; anthers round-ovate, erect. 
On moist flats near Monida, Wyoming, 16 June, 1899, A. and 
E. Nelson (n. 5409, as distributed to U. S. Herb., which sheet is 
the type). Being a dwarf species for even this genus, this was 
distributed under the name of C. pumila; but it belongs to the 
typical group with funnelform corollas, and is also well marked 
by its hoariness, ` 
Doubtless to this may be referred a rather less hoary plant, 
with somewhat longer leaves, distributed by Rev. F. D. Kelsey 
from Deer Lodge, Montana, June, 1887. 
I have no doubt that in all the members of the aboye group, 
the underground parts are essentially the same; that there 18 
