88 PLANTAE CHINENSES FORRESTIANAE. 
ac ultra longi, saepe simplices. Folia radicalia caduca, caulin- 
aria alterna, petiolata; petiolis 10-15 mm. longis, alatis, ac 
pilis longis, rufis, dense ciliatis; limbo ovato-obtuso, 15-20 
mm. longo ac lato, pinnato, loborum 4-5 jugis ; lobis inferiori- 
bus deltoideis, superioribus linearibus, obtusis, acutidentatis. 
Bracteae foliis similes. Flores axillares, pedunculis 5-20 mm 
longis, erectis. Calyx campanulatus, anticem usque ad medium 
fissus ac subspathiformis ; tubo membranaceo, perlucido, nervis 
5 eminentibus, plus minusve reticulatis ac pilis albis pluricellul- 
aribus tectis; lobis 5 inaequalibus, pedicellatis, summo foliaceis, 
triangulato-acutis, summo generaliter additis pilis 2, albis, 
brevibus, rigidis, divergentibus. Corolla dilute rosea, tubo 
7-8 mm. longo, calycem aequante vel paulo superante, lato, 
summo dilatato; galea tubum aequans, rectangulata, dorso 
rotundo ac piloso, praesertim anticem, abrupte in rostrum 
rectum vel vix incurvatum, glabrum, 7 mm. longum, summo 
breve bifidum, contracta ; margine inferiori glabra ac fauce dente 
una addita ; labio inferiore alterum superante, margine ciliato ; 
lobo medio lateralibus breviore ac angustiore. Stamina medio tubi 
inserta, filamentis omnibus villosis, duobus anterioribus densius. 
“Plant of 2-8 inches. Flowers pale rose. Grassy openings 
in pine forests on the eastern flank of the Tali Range. Lat. 25° 
40’N. Alt. 8-10,000 ft. July 1906.’ G. Forrest. No. 4488.. 
This is very like P. gruina var. cinerascens, but easily recog- 
nised by the calyx split and the helmet being hairy at the back. 
By this latter character it approaches P. cephalantha, Franch., 
but it differs from that species by the habit and the tube of corolla 
hardly longer than the calyx and widened at the summit. 
30. Pedicularis recurva, Maxim., in Mél. Biol. xii, p. 838, fig. 59, 
var. polyantha, Bonati. 
Caules numerosi. Inflorescentia multiflora. Calycis dentes 
margine ciliat 
“ Plant of “12-18 inches. Flowers deep crimson, apex of 
upper lobe white, spotted crimson.”’ 
“At the base of cliffs on the eastern flank of the Lichiang 
Range. Lat. 27° 25’N. Alt. 11~12,000 ft. August 1906.”’ G. 
Forrest. No. 2667. 
Sect. V. BIDENTATAE VERAE. 
31. Pedicularis hirtella, Franch., in Journ. Linn. Soc. xxvi, 
p. 209. 
“Plant of g-1q4 inches. Flowers deep crimson. Grassy 
situations on the margins of cane brakes on the eastern flank 
