1924] 
GRANT—A MONOGRAPH OF THE GENUS MIMULUS 241 
Hansen 471 (M. and Stanford); Bear Valley, Calaveras Co., 
6000 ft. alt., Aug., 1892, Hansen 462 (М and Stanford); Big 
Oak Flat Road, below Crocker's, 19 July, 1918, Ferris 1459 
(Stanford); Conness Creek, Yosemite Park, 7800 ft. alt., 20 
July, 1911, Jepson 4480 (Calif.); Yosemite, 1883, Meehan 
(Phil); Mt. Hoffman, 8500 ft. alt., July, 1901, Evans (Stan- 
ford апа Pomona); Chilmalua Creek, Mariposa Co., 12 Aug., 
1895, Congdon (Stanford); Matterhorn Cafion, Sierra Nevada 
Mts., 8800 ft. alt., 20 July, 1909, Jepson 3367 (Calif.); above 
Pumice Flat, Madera Co., 22 Aug., 1918, A. L. Grant 1567 
(M); Carson Pass, 8300 ft. alt., 23 Aug., 1918, Jepson 8111 
(Calif.); region of Dinkey Creek, Fresno Co., 5300 ft. alt., 
25 June-15 July, 1900, Hall & Chandler 352 (M and Stanford) ; 
Huntington Lake, Fresno Co., 7200 ft. alt., 16 July, 1917, A. L. 
Grant 1116 (М and Calif.); Daugherty Meadow, North Fork 
Kaweah River, 26 July, 1896, Dudley 1430 (Stanford) ; vicinity 
of Alta Peak, Sequoia National Park, 6000-8000 ft. alt., 1 Aug., 
1896, Dudley 1553 (Stanford); Langworthy’s near North Fork, 
Sierra National Forest, 16 July, 1912, Abrams 4950 (Stanford) ; 
King’s Canyon road west of Carson, 31 Aug., 1901, Steinmetz 
(Stanford). 
M. Lewisii exhibits wide variations in the size of the leaves 
and in the length of the corolla-tube, but in a long series of speci- 
mens all intermediate stages may be found. M. roseus Dougl. 
18 doubtless a synonym of M. Lewisii, though the descriptions 
and many of the old colored plates indicate that the pedicels 
were shorter than the leaves. In the specimens of Douglas at the 
Gray Herbarium, the pedicels are longer than the leaves whereas 
in the one at the New York Botanical Garden some pedicels are 
longer and some are shorter than the leaves. This latter speci- 
men, together with those of M. E. Jones 6486 from Rush Creek, 
Utah, Rose 1310 from Oregon, and Cusick 1727 from eastern 
on, are the only ones having short pedicels that have been 
Seen by the writer. Occasionally white or yellowish-white 
flowers are collected, Merrill & Wilcor 1072, Macbride & Payson 
9731, Suksdorf 5779, and Hansen 471 being good examples of 
these color forms. 
