280 SCROPHUlrARIACE^E. (FIG WORT FAMILY.) 



-i- -t- Leaves petloled, denticulate or serrate : corolla narrow, light yellow. 



3. M. floribundus, Dougl. About a span high, flowering from almost 

 tlie lowest axils, the lateral branches diffusely spreading : leaves ovate and the 

 lower subcordate, an inch long or less ; the upper shorter than the somewhat 

 racemose pedicels : calyx short-campanulate, becoming ovate or oblong and 

 truncate in fruit ; the teeth short and triangular : corolla 3 to 6 lines long : cap- 

 sule globose-ovate, obtuse. From the mountains of Colorado and Wyoming to 

 California and Oregon. 



4 M. moschatUS, Dougl. More villous and viscid, musk-scented: stems 

 spreading and creeping, a foot or so long : leaves oblong-ovate, an inch or two 

 long, mostly exceeding the pedicels : calyx short-prismatic, becoming obloug- 

 campanulate in fruit; the teeth broadly lanceolate and acuminate: corolla usually 

 | inch lon<: : capsule ovate, acute. From W. Wyoming to California and Brit- 

 ish Columbia. Known as the " Musk Plant." 



* # Neither viscid nor glandular. 

 +- Corolla rose-red : calyx oblong-prismatic ; the short teeth nearly equal. 



5. M. Lewisii, Pursh. Slender, 2 to 4 feet high, with minute or fine 

 pubescence : leaves from oblong-ovate to lanceolate, denticulate : corolla 1| to 

 2 inches long ; the roundish lobes all spreading : stamens included. Through- 

 out the Sierra Nevada and extending eastward into Montana and Utah. 



i- -t- Corolla yellow : calyx campanulate, oblique at the orifice ; the posterior tooth 



largest. 



6. M. Jamesii, Torr. & Gray. Diffuse and creeping, glabrate : leaves 

 roundish and often reniform, from denticulate to nearly entire, 4 to 12 lines 

 long, all but the uppermost with margined petioles : flowers all axillary and slender- 

 pedicelled : corolla light yellow, 4 to 6 lines long : fructiferous calyx campanu- 

 late, 3 lines long : seeds shining, almost smooth. In water or wet places, 

 in the mountains from Arizona to Montana and eastward to Illinois and 

 Michigan. 



7. M. luteilS, L. Glabrous or puberulent : stems erect ; the larger forms 

 2 to 4 feet high : leaves ovate, oval-oblong, roundish, or subcordate ; the upper 

 cauline and floral smaller, closely sessile, not rarely connate-clasping ; all usually 

 acutely dentate or denticulate; lower sometimes lyrately laciniate: inflores- 

 cence chiefly racemose or terminal: corolla deep yellow, commonly dark-dotted 

 within, and the protuberant base of lower lip blotched with brown-purple or 

 copper-color, sometimes 1 to 2 inches long : calyx ventricose-campanulate, 

 a half-inch or less long : seeds rather dull, longitudinally striate-reticulate. 

 Throughout the Rocky Mountains and westward. Immensely variable. 



Var. alpinus, Gray. A span or so high : stem 1 to 4-flowered : some 

 leaves rather distinctly pinnate-veined above the middle. Proc. Acad. Philad. 

 1863, 71. From the Colorado mountains and California Sierras to Alaska. 



Var. depauperatllS, Gray. Includes reduced or depauperate forms, 2 to 

 10 inches high, with leaves 3 to 6 lines long, fruiting calyx 2 or 3 lines long, 

 and corolla 3 to 7 lines long. Bot. Calif, i. 567. Rocky Mountains and 

 westward. 



