SUPPLEMENT TO THE FLORA OF MONTANA. 53 



*Stellaria media, Cyrill. Not infrequent as a weed in door- 

 yards and lawns in the larger towns. Plains, Aug. 7, 1901 ; Helena, 

 Aug. 12, 1898, E. N. Brandegee; Bozeman, Aug. 18, i< 



RANUNCULACE^:. 



Anemone Canadensis, L. In low woodlands along: the Missouri 

 River. Culbertson, July n, 1904, and region adjacent. 



Anemone Drummondii, Wats.? "Rocky Mts. Summits at 8000 

 ft. Lat. 49 degrees N." Dr. Lyall, 1861 in Gray Herb. I am inclined 

 to refer this specimen to A. Tctonensis, Porter, as in my opinion this 

 and all other specimens of Drummondii from the Rocky Mountains 

 are the former species. The two appear to intergrade westward, but 

 Drummondii is properly a species of the Coast Range and southward. 



Anemone lithophylla, Rydberg, Bull. Torr. Bot. Club, 29: 152. 

 "Little Belt Mountains 9 miles from Barker, 1896, J. H. Flodman, 

 459-" 



Anemone globosa, Nutt. is A. multifida, Poir. I am unable to 

 see that the Montana form of this species differs essentially in pube- 

 scence or other character from the South American forms of the 

 type, so that Nuttall's globosa seems quite untenable, even as a 

 variety. 



Aquilegia formosa, Rydberg, Flora, 155. ^All the specimens 

 from Montana referred to this are probably the red-sepaled form of 

 A. flavescens, Wats., which is common in the mountains along with 

 the form with yellow sepals ; its long curved spurs and yellow or 

 pinkish sepals separate it from formosa with straight spurs and deep 

 carmine red or scarlet sepals. The latter species appears not to be 

 within our limits. 



Clematis Scottii, Porter (Rydberg, Flora, 160) is C. Wycthii,, Nutt. 

 below. 



Clematis Wyethii, Nutt., Jour. Acad. Phila. 7: 6. Rydberg 

 says it is "common .in Montana." (Bull. Torr. Bot. Club, 29:155), 

 but it is not commonly separated from Douglasii and is doubtfully 

 distinct. 



Delphinium bicolor Montanense, Rydberg, Flora, 157. Is not 

 "glandular pilose," but viscid pubescent and is in part at least the 

 early spring form of D. Menziesii, DC., and in part apparently an in- 

 tergrade between D. bicolor, Nutt. and Mcnsiesii, both of which are 



