GRANT—A MONOGRAPH OF THE GENUS MIMULUS 315 
1902, Heller & Brown 5554 (G, M, R. Mt., Stanford, and 
Pomona); near Madison, Yolo Co., 29 April, 1902, Heller & 
Brown 5417 (M, R. Mt., Stanford, and Pomona). 
Plants of this species begin to flower when only a half inch or 
во high, the flowers frequently exceeding the stem in length. 
The capsules vary decidedly, some being short-ovate while others 
are oblong. 
99. M. angustatus Gray, Syn. Fl. №. Am. ed. 2, 2!: Suppl. 443. 
1886; Brandegee in Proc. Calif. Acad. Sei. II. 1: 259. 1888; 
Jepson, Fl. W. Mid. Calif. 403. 1901, and ed. 2, 377. 1911. 
M. Coulteri var. angustatus Gray in Proc. Am. Acad. 7: 38. 
1867. 
M. tricolor var. angustatus Gray in Proc. Am. Асай. 11: 95. 
1876; Bot. Calif. 1: 563. 1876; Syn. Fl. №. Am. 2!: 274. 1878, 
and ed. 2, 1886. 
Eunanus angustatus Greene in Bull. Calif. Acad. Sci. 1: 99. 
1885; Manual Bay Region, 275. 1894. 
: ы . Clarkii Kell. ex Curran in Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci. 1: 259. 
: Short caulescent plants, 4-5 cm. high; leaves numerous, basal, 
linear to spatulate, 1-1.5 em. long, 1-2 mm. broad, glandular- 
villous to nearly glabrous; calyx 5-7 mm. long, gibbous and con- 
tracted over the capsule at maturity, tube viscid-villous, throat 
oblique, teeth unequal or nearly equal, slightly spreading, broad 
and obtuse, from one-fourth to one-half the length of the tube; 
corolla 3-5 em. long, rose-purple, mostly longer than the stems, 
tube glandular-pul t externally, elongated, filiform, 4-8 times 
ULIL 
Ала 
the length of the short funnelform throat, lips subequal, upper 
slightly longer, lower with a large deep crimson spot on each 
lobe and a yellow patch dotted with red down the throat; anthers 
hairy, the filaments of the longer pair pubescent; stigma peltate- 
funnelform with subequal lips; capsule broadly ovate, obtuse, 
thinner near the base and tardily circumsessile; seeds oblong, 
favose-pitted. | 
Distribution: Coast Ranges and foothills of the Sierra Nevada 
Mts. north and east of San Francisco Bay, California. Commonly 
coming up in great abundance in drying depressions where the 
Vater had been standing in pools. 
