MAMMALS OF THE MEXICAN BOUNDARY. 35 



Grande peak; altitude, 2,545 meters, or 8,350 feet. Agave sonorm 

 (Torrey) Mearns "^ covers the foothills of the Pajaritos and Guada- 

 lupe mountains like a carpet, making travel difficult; and Agave 

 deserti Engelmann is likewise troublesome on portions of the east 

 slope of the Coast Range mountains of California. 



Several species of Epliedra^ greenish, wide-spreading bushes re- 

 lated to the conifers, occur in greater or less abundance throughout 

 the boundary strip. ! 



Vines and climbing plants are not abundant. Grapes, however, are 

 numerous in the Texan Tract, and also occur in moist canyons in the 

 mountains of the P^elevated Central and Pacific Coast tracts. Forms 

 of the Virginia creeper {Part/wnocissi/s qiiinqiie folia) and trumpet 

 flower are found in similar places in Texas and the Elevated Cen- 

 tral Tract. Several species of Convolvidus and I pommay and legu- 

 minous climbers occur in abundance in moist places. The Texas 

 matrimony vine {Lycium torreyi Gray) grows luxuriantly along the 

 Rio Grande, a pale species {Lycium pollid^>m Miers) occurs in the 

 Elevated Central Tract, and still another species of Lycium was 

 found in great abundance along the Sonoyta River, in Sonora. 

 Climbing milkweeds of the genus PhUihertcUa are of common occur- 

 rence along tlie streams, often ascending to the tops of bushes and 

 small trees. With them clematis or virgin's bower is not infre- 

 quently associated, and several species of gourds of the genera 

 Cucrrrhita, ^ipodaiif/io'a, and IhcrriUea cover otherwise* bare spaces 

 of ground or entAvine themselves in the edges of thickets. 



Canes and coarse rushes are mostly confined to the edges of the 

 Rio Grande, Yaqui, and Colorado rivers, and other water-loving 

 plants are likewise of rare occurrence. Anemopsis, or '' yerba mansa " 

 of the INIexicans, grows Avherever there is permanent water with 

 marshy banks, and is the commonest paludose plant of the inte- 

 rior. On the coasts of the ocean and Gulf of California are numerous 

 pulp3''-leaved plants said to have been derived from the Asiatic side 

 of the Pacific, among them a bush ranging from the Gulf of Califor- 

 nia up the alluvial bottom lands of the Colorado and Gila rivers as 

 far as Adonde. A very rank growth of wild hemp and amaranth 

 also extends up the Colorado bottom nearly to the mouth of the Gila 

 River. The cocklebur {Xanthiiim) and Datura are also character- 

 istic plants along streams. 



The greasewood {At/iplex) , of which there are several species, is 

 a very characteristic plant of the Lower Sonoran life zone, and so 

 is the creosote bush {C'orUlea tridentata) . 



The region is famed for its spiny shrubs. Of such, the leguminous 

 genera Acacia, Prosopii<^ Rohinia^ Mimosa, and Paroseda are usually 



(iAfjare f/eriiiiii flora sonorre Torrey, Bot. Mex. Bound., 1859, p. 214. Agave 

 schottii Engelmann, Trans. St. Louis Acad., Ill, 1873, p. 305. 



