186 PITTONIA. 
not equalling the corolla: lobes of the corolla obovate, cus- 
pidately acute; gland concealed by the long dense fringe; 
divisions of the crown quadrate, setaceously cleft to near the 
middle. 
Species collected by myself on hills near Santa Rita del 
Cobre, New Mexico, in 1880, and distributed for F. speciosa, 
from which its peculiarly almost ribbed and narrowly ellip- 
tic foliage no less than the floral characters well distin- 
guish it. 
' F. AMPLA. Plant 5 feet high or more and with a narrow 
and subcylindric inflorescence: herbage not pale, but mi- 
nutely hirtellous-scaberulous: lowest leaves 12 to 18 inches 
long including the narrow and distinct petiole, the blade 
obovate-elliptic, acute, 5 inches broad, with a midvein and 
about 6 somewhat divergent lateral veins, none prominent: 
linear-lanceolate sepals only about two-thirds the length of 
the corolla: lobes of the corolla obovate-oblong, obtuse; 
ciliation around the gland rather coarse; divisions of the 
crown cleft unequally and almost to the base. 
Common in the mountains of northern Arizona; here 
described from specimens obtained by myself on Mt. Bill 
Williams, 4 July, 1889. 
! F. MAcROPHYLLA. As tall as the last, or taller, the inflor- 
escence more loose and open, the foliage much larger; 
herbage deep-green, glabrous: lowest leaves 16 to 20 inches 
long, thinnish, broadly oblanceolate, obtuse or only abruptly 
and cuspidately acute, distinctly about 9-nerved, but no 
nerves or veins prominent: sepals equalling or exceeding 
the oblong-obovate petals; copious ciliation slender and 
ong; divisions of the crown cleft to near the base, the 
segments colored at tip like the corolla lurid-purplish. 
Rich hillsides about Pagosa Springs, Colorado, 25 July, 
1899, C. F. Baker. 
