CATALOGUE OP CANADIAN PLANTS. 509 



143. OXYTROPIS. 



Page 115. 



(525.) O. podocarpa, Gray. On the eastern summit of the 

 North Kootanie Pass, Eocky Mountains. (Dawson.) Abundant on 

 the Eocky Mountains above 7,000 feet, from Silver City to Kicking 

 Horse Lake. (Macoun.) 



(526.) O. arctica, E. Br. 



0. Uralensis, var. pumila, Ledeb. Part I., 115. 



See Dr. Gray's Eevision of the Genus Oxytropis, Proced. Am. Acad. 

 A. & S.,Vol. XX., page 4. Place the Nova Scotia reference to 0. cam- 

 pestris here. The Eocky Mountain one goes under 0. monticola. Digges 

 Island, Hudson Strait. (R. Sell.) West of Cape Bathurst, Arctic 

 Coast. (Capt. Pullen.) 



Page 116. 



(527.) O. campestris, L. Var. ceerulea, Koh. 

 0. campestris, DC. Part L, page 116. 



All western notices must be struck out and divided between 0. Lam- 

 berti and 0. monticola. The northern ones are likely the same, includ- 

 ing 0. leucantha, for the arctic coast specimens. Dr. Gray says this 

 species is only found in northern Maine, Quebec and Labrador. Ford's 

 Harbor and Nachvak, coast of Labrador ; also at Cape Chudleigh, and 

 Cape Prince of Wales, Hudson Strait. (R. Sett.) Hillsides near Forteau 

 lighthouse, Labrador. (Sutler.) Mouth of the Tobique Eiver, and 

 Aroostook Falls, N.B. (Hay.) 



(528.) O. Lambert!, Pursh. All references to this species in 

 Part I. must be considered mixed with O. monticola. Common on the 

 Cypress Hills, N. W.T. (J. M. Macoun.) Western summit of North 

 Kootanie Pass, Eocky Mountains. (Dawson.) At Long Lake north- 

 west of Qu'Appelle, and abundant at Morley and westward up the 

 Bow Eiver valley to Canmore and on the mountain tops to Kicking 

 Horse Lake. Common at Spence's Bridge and along the Fraser, B.C. 

 (Macoun.) Pyramid Lake, Alaska. (Meefian.) 



(530.) O. nigrescens, Fisch. Cape Thompson on the American 

 side of Behrings Straits. (J. Mw'r, vide Gray.) 



Var. arctobia, Gray. 



O. arctica var. minor, Hook. Fl. I. 146. 



Arctic sea-coast, collected by Capt. Parry and most later explorers. 

 (Gray.) 



