REVISION OF CAPNOREA. 51 
western mountains. But in the herbaria exist, under this name, 
the types of several thoroughly distinct species. 
10. C. FuLcRATA. Closely allied to C. pumila, though by no 
means dwarf, the leaves and peduncles commonly 3 inches high 
or more: rootstock erect, short and stout, an inch long or less, 
commonly thickest at the premorse base: leaves apparently not 
depressed but nearly erect, the elliptical to oblong-lanceolate or 
ovate-lanceolate blade an inch long or more (the narrow petiole 
as long), glabrous on both faces, the margin not ciliate, but with 
a broad line of closely appressed almost silky hairs: peduncles 
about equalling the leaves: calyx with one broad ovate leaf-like 
segment embracing the other four, these lance-linear, all obtuse 
and shortly appressed-silky along the margin: corolla open- 
_ Campanulate, the lobes broad, deep and rounded, the whole an 
inch broad in expansion, the undivided portion silky-villous 
within; anthers oblong-linear, twice as long as usual in the 
genus, and versatile. 
A fine well-marked species known to me in but a single sheet 
of specimens preserved in the U. S. Herbarium, and purporting 
to have come from somewhere in the State of Washington, by 
the hands of G. R. Vasey, in 1889. 
11. C. Nervosa. Near the last, somewhat like it in size, but 
more slender, the thin leaves obviously of quite another texture ; 
rootstock more branched and root-like, not premorse: leaf with 
larger elliptic blade distinctly venulose, both faces glabrous, the 
margin beset with a sparse but rather long silky pubescence: 
segments of calyx not notably dissimilar, their margins sparsely 
long-ciliate, the undivided portion usually densely long-villous : 
corolla an inch broad, open-campanulate, silky-villous at base 
within: anthers elongated as in the last. 
Wet meadows at Moscow, Idaho, L. F. Henderson, 13 May, 1894- 
12. C. HIRTELLA. Dwarf; the stout erect premorse rootstock 
about 14 inches long, the leayes and peduncles not longer ; her- 
