WOOTON AND STANDLEY FLORA OF NEW MEXICO. 221 



8. Allionia pinetorum Standley, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 12: 344. 1909. 



Type locality: Gilmores Ranch, on Eagle Creek, White Mountains, New Mexico. 

 Type collected by Wooton and Standley (no. 3896). 



Range: Known only fi-om type locality, in the Transition Zone. 



9. Allionia bodini (Holzinger) Morong, Mem. Torrey Club 5: 354, 1894. 

 Oxybaphus bodini Holzinger, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 1: 287. 1893. 

 Type locality: Pueblo, Colorado. 



Range: Wyoming and South Dakota to Arizona and Texas. 



New Mexico: Carrizo Mountains; Sierra Grande; Organ Mountains. Plains and 

 low hills, in the Upper Sonoran Zone. 



10. AUionia subhispida (Heimerl) Standley, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 16: 120. 1913. 

 Mirabilis linearis subhispida Heimerl, Ann. Cons. Jard. Geneve 5: 186. 1901. 

 Allionia linearis subhispida Standley, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 12: 342. 1909. 

 Type locality: Capitan Mountains, New Mexico. Type collected by Earle (no. 



383). 



Range: New Mexico. 



New Mexico: South of San Rafael; Atarque de Garcia; Magdalena; Capitan 

 Mountains; Gray. Low hills, Upper Sonoran Zone. 



11. Allionia linearis Pursh, Fl. Amer. Sept. 728. 1814. 

 Calymenia angustifolia Nutt. Gen. PL 1: 26. 1818. 

 Oxybaphus angusii/olius Sweet, Hort. Brit. 1: 334. 1826. 

 Allionia montanensis Osterhout, Muhlenbergia 1: 39. 1906. 

 Type locality: "In Upper Louisiana." 



Range: Wyoming and Illinois to Texas and Mexico. 



New Mexico: Dulce; Sierra Grande; Raton; Farmington; Pecos; Zuni Reserva- 

 tion; j\Iangas Springs; Rio Frisco; Socorro; Gila Hot Springs; Colfax; Taos; Organ 

 Mountains; Dog Spring; Capitan Mountains; White Mountains. Dry plains and low 

 hills, in the Upper Sonoran Zone. 



12. Anionia diffusa Heller, Minn. Bot. Stud. 2: 33. 1898. 



Type locality: Dry gravelly hills, 10 miles west of Santa Fe, New Mexico. Type 

 collected by Heller (no. 3740). 



Range : Wyoming to Arizona and western Texas. 



New Mexico: Carrizo Mountains; Stinking I^ake; west of Santa Fe; Johnsons Mesa; 

 Albuquerque; Sierra Grande; Roy; Mangas Springs; Kingston; Organ Mountains; 

 Eagle Creek; near Carrizo. Dry plains and low hills, in the Lower and Upper Sonoran 

 zones. 



13. Allionia divaricata Rydb. Bull. Torrey Club 29: 681. 1902. 

 Type locality: Durango, Colorado. 



Range: Utah and Colorado to Mexico. 



New Mexico: Tunitcha Mountains; Cedar Hill; Pecos; Santa Fe Canyon; Chusca 

 Mountains; Sandia Mountains; Chama; West Fork of the Gila. Meadows in the 

 mountains, in the Upper Sonoran and Transition zones. 



3. MIRABILIS L. Four-o'clock. 



Perennial dichotomous-branching herb with opposite, entire, deltoid, sessile or 



petiolat?, thin leaves; flowers solitary in a calyx-like involucre; perianth white, with 



a very long slender tube and broad limb; stamens 5, unequal; fruit leathery, 5-angled. 



1. Mirabilis wrightiana A. Gray; Britt. & Kearn. Trans. N. Y. Acad. 14: 28. 



1894. 



Type locality: Not stated. 



Range: Rocky canyons, western Texas to southern Arizona and southward. 



New Mexico: Mogollon M mntains and Black Range, south to the Mexican border. 

 Upper Sonoran and Transition zones. 



