PLANTE FENDLERIANE. 31 
+120. Ampnicarr#A monoica, Ell. Sk. 2. p. 223. Council Grove; August. 
121. Grycirruiza Lepmota, Nutt. Gen. 2. p. 106. Prairies, in low places, twelve 
miles east of Council Grove, and in waste places around Santa Fe ; July, August. 
122. Psoratea rroripunpa, Nutt. in Torr. §- Gray, Fl. 1. p- 800. Upper Arkan- 
sas to San Miguel, in high prairies; Aug., Sept. 
123. P. arcopuyiia, Pursh, Fi. 2. p. 473; Hook. Fl. Bor.-Am.t. 53. Between 
Willow Bar and the Cimarron River ; August. 
+124. Amoresa canescens, Nutt. Gen. 2. p. 92. Prairies, around Santa Fé. 
125. A. CANESCENS #. LEPTOSTACHYA, Engelm. Mss. Woodlands, seven miles west 
of Las Vegas; August. 
126. A. rruticosa, Linn. var. (A. nana, Bot. Mag. t. 2112. See remarks in 
Torr. § Gray, Fl. 1. p. 690, Suppl., under A. nana). From 120 miles west of Independ- 
ence to Pawnee Fork ; August (in ripe fruit). Shrub three to five feet high. Ovary 
with two collateral ovules in this genus, and in Eysenhardtia. 
127. Davea atorecuroes, Willd.; DC. Prodr. 2. p. 244. Low prairies, &c., 
Santa Fé; also on the Arkansas River; July to September. 
128. D. anata, Spreng. Syst. 3. p. 327. (D. lanuginosa, Nutt. in Torr. §- Gray, 
Fl. 1. p. £07.) Low, sandy places in the prairies, near the Cimarron River ; August. 
, 129. D. aurea, Nutt. Gen. 2. p. 101. Prairies, from Las Vegas to the Upper 
Spring on the Cimarron; August. 
+130. D. nana (Torr. ined.): caulibus e basi ramosis diffusis humilibus foliisque 
sericeo-incanis ; foliolis 5 oblongis vel obovatis ; spicis oblongis laxiusculis sericeo-villosis- 
simis subsessilibus ; bracteis et floribus fere D. auree. — Sandy soil, Willow Bar, on the 
Cimarron; August. Collected in the same region by Fremont in 1845; also by Lind- 
heimer and Mr. Wright in Western Texas in 1847. It appears like a dwarf D. aurea 
(4 to 6 inches high) ; but the diffusely spreading stems are repeatedly branched and leafy 
to the spikes, which are smaller and much less dense. s 
131. D. Laxtrtora, Pursh, Fl. 2. p- 741. Prairies, on the Cimarron, &c.; August. — 
D. penicillata, Moric. Pl. Nouv. Amer. t. 45, from Texas, appears to be the same species. . 
Dr. Torrey has furnished me with specimens of an allied species from Monterey, Mexico.* 
* DaLeA POGONATHERA (sp. nov.) : pusilla, glaberrima, perennis; caulibus depressis; stipulis setaceis ; foli- 
olis 5-7 oblongo-linearibus subtus rachique grosse nigro-glandulosis; spicis oblongis densifloris; bracteis 
ovatis carinato-concavis mucronato-acuminatis glabris parce glanduliferis margine scariosis tubum calycis 
sericeo-villosi laciniis setaceis plumosissimis breviorem sequantibus; petalis purpureis, carina alas et vexil- 
* lum multo superantibus ; staminibus 10.— Around Monterey, Mexico, Dr. Edwards and Major Eaton. — 
The specimens (perhaps depauperate) are only 3 or 4 inches high, and might be taken for a starved state of 
