449 MINNESOTA BOTANICAL STUDIES. 
and linear: sepals oval, over ¥% inch long, much surpassing 
the petals, fully as long as the spur: follicles as in the last; 
seeds with loose coats, folded at the angles forming wing-like 
processes. Southern California (tf). 
19. D. Menziesii DC. Syst. 1: 355. 1818. 
D. pauperculum GREENE, Pitt. 1: 284. 1889. 
Plant sparingly pubescent: stem simple, slender, % to1™% 
feet high, few-leaved: leaves small, 3-5-parted, the divisions 
mainly cleft into linear or lanceolate lobes; petioles hardly di- 
lating at the base: flowers in simple conical racemes; sepals 
blue, somewhat pubescent outside, nearly equalling the spurs 
in length; upper petals yellowish: follicles 3, pubescent or 
sometimes glabrous; seeds black-winged on the outer angles. 
April to June. On hills, California and northward to Alaska. 
Bote neo. 14; 1192. 
20. D. pauciforum Nurr..ex Torr. & Gray, Fl. eaggee 
1838. 
D. Nuttallianum Pritz.in Walpers Rep. 2: 744. 1843. 
D. Menziesit var. pauciforum Wutu, Bot. Jahrb. 20: 
445- 1895. 
Stem slender, nearly glabrous, % to 1 foot high; oblong or 
fusiform fasciculate-tuberous roots: leaves small, parted into 
narrow linear lobes; petioles not dilating at base: flowers and 
fruit similar to those of D. Menziesz7, but on shorter pedicels. 
May to June. Colorado to Washington and California. 
Var. Nevadense Gray, Syn. Fl. 1: 50. 1895. 
D. decorum var. Nevadense Wats. Bot. Calif. 1: 11. 
1376.) in ‘part. 
Leaves much dissected: racemes with spreading pedicels: 
flowers often pinkish purple; sepals longer than in the type 
but shorter than the spur: follicles much like the type. Sierra 
Nevadas, above Cisco, and in Plumas Co., Calif., into Ne- 
vada (f). 
Var. depauperatum Gray, Bot. Gaz. 12: 54. 1887. 
D. tricorne var. depauperatum Hutu, Delph. N. Am. 73. 
1892. 
Stem leaves few, lobes ovate to lanceolate: racemes fewer 
flowered than in the type and in the preceding variety. North- 
western Nevada into Oregon (f). 
