484 RyDBERG: STUDIES ON THE RocKy MOUNTAIN FLORA 
long; flowers mostly solitary; pedicels 1-4 cm. long; calyx nar- 
rowly funnelform, strongly 5-angled; lobes nearly equal, lanceo- 
late, about half as long as the tube; corolla crimson, 3-4 cm. long, 
scarcely ventricose; anthers sparingly bearded. 
This is related to Mimulus cardinalis, to which Miss Eastwood 
referred it with some hesitation. She also pointed out the low 
habit and more sharply toothed leaves, but did not notice the 
most striking feature of the plant, viz., its stolons, which are sent 
out after blooming. By means of these the plant, growing as it 
does in crevices of perpendicular or overhanging cliffs, can propa- 
gate itself in every direction. Wherever a stolon touches the rock 
and the root can get a foothold, a new plant is formed, even under 
the overhanging rocks. In the latter case the plantlet formed will 
be growing, the following year, with the roots up and the flowers 
down. 
Uran: In cervices of perpendicular or overhanging rocks, 
along San Juan River, near Bluffs, August 25-29, 1911, Rydberg 
9883 (type); also the same locality, Miss Eastwood. 
Veronica Buxbaumii Tenore has been collected in Utah and V. 
arvensis L. in Idaho. Veronica peregrina L. is not found in the 
Rocky Mountain region. All specimens so named from there 
belong to V. xalapensis H. B. K. Antirrhinum Cooperi A. Gray 
and A. Kingit S. Wats. have both been collected in Utah; Mon- 
niera rotundifolia Michx. in Montana; 5 Nelicesians ebracteata Benth. 
in Montana and Idaho. 
Triphysaria hispida (Benth.) Rydb. © 
Orthocarpus hispidus Benth. Scroph. Ind. 13. 1835. 
In the genus Cordylanthus [Adenostegia] Coulter & Nelson* 
have transposed the color characters of the corolla of C. Wrightti 
and C. ramosa. Adenostegia capitata (Nutt.) Greene has been 
collected in Idaho and A. canescens is common around Great Salt 
Lake. Cordylanthus bicolor A. Nels. is evidently the same as 
Adenostegia ciliosa Rydb. 
Castilleja subcinerea Rydb. sp. nov. 
Perennial with a branched short caudex; stems 3-5 dm. high, 
canescent-strigose, stout; leaves more or less canescent, strongly 
¥* See Manual 462. 1909. 
