36 PITTONIA. 
obtuse, somewhat unequal, l-inch long: corolla pale purple, 
rotate-campanulate, 2—4 lines broad : stamens exserted : seeds 
oval, lightly favose-pitted. 
Island of San Miguel; abundant on grassy slopes of the 
northeast side. 
DIPLACUS PARVIFLORUS. Rigidly shrubby, but flowering at 
from 3 inches to 2 feet high; glabrous and glutinous : leaves 
narrowly ovate or rhombic-ovate, coarsely serrate-toothed : 
corolla an inch long, brick-red, nearly tubular, the small, en- - : 
tire, quadrate lobes very little spreading: stamens exserted. 
North side of the island of Santa Cruz, abundant on open 
rocky slopes, flowering profusely at a height of only three or 
four inches, yet not at all herbaceous. Even when, in shady 
places and better soil, it attains the height of two feet or more, 
the leaves and flowers retain all their characters, thus forbid- 
ding its being dealt with as a variety of D. puniceus. 
EvNaANUS Austinm. Near E. mephiticus, but scentless and 
scarcely viscid, appearing glabrous (glandular-puberulent un- 
der a strong lens), 1—3 inches high, much branched from the 
base: leaves spatulate, a half-inch long or more, entire, with 
3—5 parallel veins: calyx-teeth subequal, triangular, acute : 
corolla yellow, the throat purple-dotted, tube elongated and 
slender, limb broad and irregular: capsule attenuate at apex,. — 
greatly surpassing the calyx. 
Modoe County, 1885, Mrs. R. M. Austin. 
Evnanus Cusick. A span to a foot high, simple or 
branched from the base; leaves broadly ovate, very acute, 
entire, sessile, an inch or more long and nearly as broad: 
calyx-teeth very unequal, triangular-subulate, the very acute - 
tips somewhat recurved : corolla bright red-purple, tube slen- 
der, limb rotate and quite regularly lobed, 6—10 lines in . 
diameter: capsule rot seen.—Mimulus Bigelowii, var. ovatus, 
Gray, Syn. Fl. Suppl. 445, in part at least. 
Oregon and Washington Territory: collected by Cusick 
eas 
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