A NEW CALOCHORTUS. 49 
Collinsia concolor. Near C. bicolor, but with few pairs 
of leaves and long internodes, the plant a foot high or more, 
delicately puberulent throughout: leaves 1 to 14 inches long, 
linear or oblong-linear, the margins crenate-serrate, or entire 
and revolute: racemes of few and rather remote verticils: 
ealyx-tube hoary with a long villous-arachnoid pubescence; 
segments oblong, obtuse: corolla red-purple throughout, in 
form like that of C. bicolor, but less than half as large. 
A very distinct new species, presumably from the southern 
part of San Diego Co., California, but sent without label or 
indication of special locality, by R. D. Anlerson. 
Habenaria saccata. Two feet high or more, slender, 
rather conspicuously leafy up to the lax and not long, bracted 
raceme of green flowers: base of the stem with a single 
quite ample subscarious sheath: leaves lanceolate, acute, 
3 or 4 inches long, spreading; bracts of the raceme linear- 
lanceolate, surpassing the flowers: lateral sepals oblong- 
lanceolate, the upper ovate-oblong and shorter: lateral 
petals falcate; lip linear, much longer than the short and 
thick sac-like spur: capsule sessile. 
Lassen Creek, Modoc Co., Calif., Mrs. Austin, 1894. 
A NEW CALOCHORTUS. 
By J. G. Lemmon. 
Calochortus collinus. Glaucous, 3 to 10 inches high, 
from a fibrous-coated bulb (no bulblets); simple or branch- 
ing, lower leaf solitary, exceeding the flowers, 6 to 9 lines 
wide: flowers erect, 2 to 6, racemose, on long (8 to 6 inch) 
pedicels; sepals elliptical, three-fourths as long as the petals, 
abruptly acute or acuminate, greenish-yellow: petals creamy 
white, obovate, slightly concave, 6 to 9 lines long, naked 
above, a few white hairs near the glands, this small, cuneate | 
ciliate and purplish: stamens twice longer than the pistil; 
Mo. Bot. Garden, 
i896. 
