(Von. 11 
226 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 
R. Mt., and Pomona); Cosumnes, Eldorado Co., 28 Aug, 
1896, Hansen 1908 (Stanford); Yosemite Valley, 4-12 July, 
1901, G. B. Grant 4245 (Stanford); Mariposa, 30 April, 1895, 
Congdon (Stanford); Crane Flat, Yosemite, 15 Aug., 1872, 
Redfield 6121a (M); Yosemite Falls, 5300 ft. alt., 25 June, 
1911, Jepson 4272 (Calif.). 
This plant is commonly cultivated in American and European 
gardens. The musk-like odor is very characteristic and varies 
in intensity with the time of the day and with the individual 
plants, some appearing to be scentless at one time and fragrant 
at another. Тһе moniliform rootstocks, the main character on 
which Dr. Greene based M. moniliformis, are found on specimens 
of typical M. moschatus. 
46a. Var. longiflorus Gray, Syn. Fl. ЇЧ. Am. 2!: 278. 1878, 
ed. 2, and Suppl. 447. 1886; Curran in Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci. 
П. 1: 263. 1888; Hall, Yosemite Fl. 221. 1912. Pl. 9, fig. 3. 
M. moschatus Maund, Bot. 3: 283, pl. 71. 1829-80, not 
Douglas. . 
M. dentatus var. gracilis Gray in Bot. Gaz. 7: 112. 1882. 
M. moniliformis Greene in Bull. Calif. Acad. Sci. 1:10. 1884, 
and 119. 1885; Gray, Syn. Fl. N. Am. ed. 2, 21: Suppl. 447. 
1886; Eastwood, Fl. South Fork King's River, Sierra Club Publ. 
27: 65. 1902; Hall, Yosemite Fl. 222. 1912; Smiley in Univ. 
Calif. Publ. Bot. 9: 334. 1921. 
M. moschatus var. pallidiflorus Suksd. Deut. Bot. Monatsschr. 
18:154. 1900. | 
Rootstocks often moniliform; stems more nearly erect, com- 
monly viscid-villous, occasionally nearly glabrous; calyx 8-11 
mm. long, teeth nearly equal and shorter than in the species; 
corolla 2-3 cm. long, the tube twice as long as the calyx. 
Distribution: wet places in the mountains from British Colum- 
bia to California. This is the common form in California. 
Specimens examined: 
British Columbia: Chilliwack Valley, 3000 ft. alt., 26 July, 1901, 
Macoun 54474 (M); Kootenai River, 1 July, 1890, Macoun 
(G and M); Port Alberni, Vancouver Island, 27 June, 1916, 
Henry 9054 (G). 
