8 



PLANTJE WRIGHTIANJE. 



VI. 



/ 



ripe, pretty strongly 4-ribbed, two of the ribs marginal and two lateral, and with four 



ually less conspicuous ribs alternate with 



Anemone Caroliniana, Walt 



Torr 



Gray, Fl. 1. p. 12. Mountain 



Paso, April, in fruit 



Myo 

 March. 

 low. 



Ran 



L 



(1304.) 

 Low bottoms of the Rio Grande 



San Elizario 



(130 



Also gathered on the Rio Santa Maria, Chihuahua, by Dr. Big 



JNCULUS DiTARicATUS, SckranJi^ Bairsche Fl. 2. p. 104. R. circinnatus, 

 Sibth. Fl. Ox. p. 175 ; Coss, ^ Germ. Atlas Fl. Par. t. l, f, 9. R. aquatilis, Auct. 



Bed 



Amer, 

 (835.) 

 United States 



of the Limpia (June), and of the Mimbres, New Mexico, Aug. 



This is the only species of the section Batrachium that I have seen in the 



E. Cymbalaria, Pursh, ; Torr. §• Gray, Fl. \. p. 17. Sandy bottom of the Rio 



Grande, near El Paso ; April, July. 



(836.) 



This is quite like the plant of the 



coast of the Northern United States. I doubt if Hartweg's No. 1, and Fendlefs 

 No. 7, referred to R. tridentatus, H. B. K., are distinct. 



R. ArriNis, R. Br. ; Hook. Fl. Bor.-Am. l. p. 12. t. 6 (fig. sinistr.). Hills along 

 the Coppermine Creek, New Mexico ; Aug. (837.) — This is a slender form of the 

 species, quite different from Fendler's No. 8, with the radical leaves deeply cleft or 

 parted, and the cauline mostly 3-parted, into very narrow linear divisions. In 

 these specimens the head of fruit is nearly as short as in R. auricomus; but the 

 carpels are rounder and less margined. 



R. REPENS, Linn. var. macranthus, Gray, Pl. Lindh. 2. p. 141, 8f Pl. Wright p. 

 7. R. macranthus, Scheele. Margins of the Limpia; June. (838.) — These are 

 taller and stouter plants than those of Lindheimer, on which Scheele founded his 

 R. macranthus, and are particularly remarkable for the great number of densely 



carpels, the edges of which are thicker and the styles longer than in 

 Scheele's plant. Had R. macranthus been founded on the present form, I should 

 hardly have ventured to suppress it ; but the fruit of the Texan plant is just that 

 of R. repens, var. Marilandicus ; some genuine specimens of which Mr. Wright 

 collected on the Mimbres, New Mexico. (839.) 



Delphinium azureum, Michx. Along the Limpia, near its head ; June. (840). 

 D. vimineum, Do», is only a coarser-leaved form of the present species, and D. 

 virescens, Nutt, is another. 



D. siMPLEX, Dougl in HooJc. FL Bor.-Am. 1. p. 25 ; Benth. Pl. Hartw. p. 295. 



Stony hills near the copper mines, Santa Rita del Cobre, New Mexico 



A pretty large form of the 



D. variegatum, Toi 



(841.) 



Gray (D. grandiflo 



rum, Hook. ^ Arn. Bot. Beech.), is D. decorum, Benth. Pl. Hartw. No. 1631, and 

 doubtless also of Fischer and Meyer. 



F 



Thalictrmn deblle, Buckley in Sill Jour. 45. p. 175, or a plant which I can dlstinguish from it only 

 by ihe stronger ribs to the fruit, was formerly sparingly gathered in Texas by Mr. Wright, and also at San 

 Felipe hy Drummond (Coll. III. No. 3, bis, in herb. Hook.) 



T. clavatum, liook. Fl. Bor.-Am. 1. p. 2, non DC. (T. Richardsonii, Gray, in Sill. Jour. 42. p. 17), 

 is the same as T. sparslflorum, Turcz. ; Ledeb. Fl. Ross. 1. p. 5, as is shown by orlginal spcciraens in 

 the Hookerian herbarium. 



; 



^a 



