(Vor. 11 
242 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 
53. M. Eastwoodiae Rydb. in Bull. Torr. Bot. Club 40: 483. 
1913; Fl. Rocky Mountains, 779. 1917. 
M. cardinalis Eastw. in Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci. П. 6: 312. 
1896, not Dougl. 
Plants usually densely woolly-canescent; stems terete, short, 
more or less procumbent, from a creeping rootstock or from short 
stolons; leaves broadly obovate or oblong, 2-5 еш. long, .5-2 em. 
wide, acute, coarsely and saliently dentate along the upper half, 
tapering to а broad sessile base, the lower leaves sometimes 
spatulate or cuneate, frequently reddish on the lower surface; 
flowers few, mostly solitary; pedicels slender, usually longer than 
the leaves; calyx somewhat funnelform, 2.2-2.7 em. long, teeth 
triangular, acute or subulate, ciliate, slightly unequal, 4-6 mm. 
long; corolla 3.5—4 cm. long, crimson, tube broadly funnelform, 
exserted less than twice its length, more or less tinged with 
yellow, throat ampliate, upper lip erect, lower erect or somewhat 
spreading, lobes nearly equal, emarginate; stamens much ex- 
serted, anthers yellow, densely bearded; style and stigma nearly 
as long as the corolla, stigma narrowly oblong to spatulate; 
eapsule unknown. 
Distribution: in wet, shaded places in Utah, Nevada, and 
izona. 
Specimens examined: 
Utah: along San Juan River, near Bluff, 3600-7000 ft. alt., 25-29 
Aug., 1911, Rydberg & Garrett 9883 (N. Y., TYPE, and R. Mt.); 
Springdale, 4000 ft. alt., 16 Мау, 1894, Jones 5349 (U. 5. and 
Pomona). 
Arizona: abundant, but only in complete shade in wet caves OF 
recesses under cliffs, on wet walls, Navajo Reservation, July, 
1916, Vorhies (G, N. Y., and M); Betatakin ruin, Navajo 
Indian Reservation, 9 July-24 Aug., 1919, Clute 128 (В. Mt.). 
Nevada: Wheeler’s Expedition, 1872, no collector given (U. SJ. 
This species is peculiar in producing stolons by means of W. 
the plant propagates itself. These stolons, according to Ву dberg, 
root freely at the nodes. 
54. M. primuloides Benth. Scroph. Ind. 29. 1835; DC. 
10:372. 1846; Hook. Fl. Bor. Am. 2: 100. 1840; Regel, 
