TER aS 
* 
_ * 
“10 _ PLANTZ FENDLERIANZ. 
from two to six on each stem; the smooth pods are exactly spherical, about 2 lines in 
diameter, and on pedicels only one fourth of an inch long. 
41. Drapa cunerrouia, Nutt.! in Torr. & Gray, Fl. 1. p. 108. Bed of Santa Fé 
Creek, in moist and gravelly soil; April and May.* ey 
. D. micrantoa, Nutt. l.c. Sunny side of ravines on the Rio del Norte. In 
fruit; May. 
43. D. aurea, Vahl. Fl. Dan. t. 1460; Hook. Bot.. Mag. t. 2934. Shady declivi- 
ties, along Santa Fé Creek, at the foot of mountains, Xc. ; May to July. — Exactly the 
plant figured by Hooker, from seeds — by Drummond in the Rocky Mountains ; 
but it is apparently a perennial. he 
44, THLASPI COCHLEARIFORME, De. Syst. 2. p. 381; Deless. Ic. Select. ate 52, 
Santa Fé Creek, in the mountains; March to June. 
_ 45, Lepwrum ruperae, Linn. Eastern Mountain range, near Santa Fé. 
46. L. aLyssorpes (sp. noy.): annuum, glabrum ; caulibus diffusis corymboso-race- 
mosis; foliis anguste linearibus mucronulatis basi attenuatis integerrimis, infimis nunc 
pinnato-3 ~ 5-lobatis; racemis densis corymbosis ; petalis orbiculato-spathulatis calyce 
triplo longioribus ; staminibus 6; siliculis ovatis apteris vix emarginatis glabris ; stylo 
brevissimo. — Mountain valleys, from Santa Fé eastward to Rabbit’s Ear Creek; Aug. 
Also recently collected (in the Rocky Mountains?) by Col. Fremont. — Plant 6 to 12 
inches higly; the corymbose branches minutely puberulent, terminated by dense racemes ~ 
of conspicuous pure white. flowers.as large as those of L..montanum, and somewhat 
resembling Iberis odorata. Leaves 13 to 2 inches long, about a line wide, the lowest 
cauline on the larger specimens two lines wide, and often bearing two or four lateral 
lobes, otherwise entire. Radical leaves wanting. Silicles a line in length, smaller than 
those of L. integrifolium and more rhombic-ovate: style thrice the length of the minute 
emargination. 
CAPPARIDACEX. 
47. Cristarerta Jamesn, Torr. § Gray, Fl. 1. p. 124; Gray, Gen. Ill. t. 77. 
Deep, sandy soil, Cimarron River ; Aug. 
7 48. Poanista rrachysperma, Torr. § Gray, Fl. 1. p. 669; Gray, Gen. Ill. t. 79. 
Rather low places, from the Cimarron River to the Rio Colorado. I have elsewhere 
-remarked, that ‘ the verrucose-roughened surface of the seeds, from which the name was 
- * The plant named Draba lutea A. longipes by Hooker in Geyer’s collection, having minutely hispid sili- 
« cles, would appear to be a form of D. nemoralis. 
