3IO CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES. 



85. Gilia subnuda (Torr. in Herb.) Gray, Proc Am. 

 Acad., viii, 276. 



Type range: "Nevada and Arizona or New Mexico." 

 This is the form with orange flowers tinged with crim- 

 son. It is glandular throughout; the only radical leaf on 

 the single plant seen is obovate, crenate and dentate. 

 Collected near the head of Willow Creek. 



86. Gilia Haydeni Gray, Proc. Am. Acad., xii, 79. 

 Type locality: "High plains of the San Juan, south- 

 western Colorado or adjacent Utah." 



This specimen, collected near the type locality, does 

 not agree so closely with the description as plants pre- 

 viously collected near Mancos, Colorado. 



It is glandular throughout, especially above. The corolla 

 is faded pink (due perhaps to age or poor nutrition) in- 

 stead of bright crimson. The plant looks starved and 

 evidently has put forth a second crop of flowers, as other 

 species of the genus do when a rain succeeds a drought. 



87. Phacelia crenulata Torr., ex Watson, Bot. King's 

 Exped., 251. 



Type locality: "Trinity Mountains, Nevada." 

 One plant was collected in fruit near the head of Wil- 

 low Creek. 



88. Coldenia hispidissima Gray, Proc. Am. Acad., v, 



34°- 

 First described as Eddy a hispidissima Torr., Pac. R. 



R. Rep., ii, 170, t. ix (1855). 



Type locality: " On the Rio Grande about El Paso." 

 Collected on bluffs above the San Juan River, beyond 



Butler Wash, growing on a rocky hillside. 



89. Heliotropium convolvulaceum Gray, Mem. Am. 

 Acad., vi (1857), 403. 



First described as Euftloca convolvidacea Nutt., Trans. 

 Am. Phil. Soc, Ser. 2, v, 190 (1837). 



