46 Muhlenbergia, Volume 7 



the scarlet, conspicuously forked where the bract is toothed: 

 calyx about 15 mm. long, tubular, finely glandular pubescent, 

 ciliate along the veins, green, tinged with yellow, tipped with 

 scarlet, about equally cleft before and behind for 5 mm. or less, 

 the lateral divisions again cleft into shorter, linear-lanceolate to 

 ovate-lanceolate, acute segments: corolla 20 to 25 mm. long or 

 more, hence much exceeding the calyx, yellowish-green, puber- 

 ulent, galea almost as long as the tube, slender, almost straight, 

 faced with scarlet, lip green, i mm. long or less: capsules lan- 

 ceolate in outline, acuminate, glabrous except along the veins 

 which are sometimes ciliate even at maturity, 12 mm. long or 

 less, straw-colored to dark brown under the sheath: seeds gray- 

 ish-brown, triangular in side view, about 160 in each capsule. 



Type sheet no 5^^577 in the National Herbarium, collected 

 by J. C. Blumer in pine woods at Manning's Camp in the Rin- 

 con mountains of Arizona, September 24, 1909, no. j///, alti- 

 tude about 2400 meters. Other collections made by Mr, Blumer 

 in Arizona are as follows: 



Pine woods near Webber Camp in the Santa Catalina moun- 

 tains, July 7, 1909, altitude 2400 meters, no. 3195; in the same 

 mountains, October 5-7, 1910, near Soldier Camp, no. 3898^ 

 Oracle Ridge, no. 3899, Bear Wallow, no. 396^^ Upper Sabino 

 creek, no. 3900; in the pine zone in the Rincon mountains, alti- 

 rude 2400 meters, July 23, 1909, no. 3280; Spud Ranch, Rincon 

 mountains, altitude 2220 meters, October 19, 1910, no./jpc?// 

 on the summit of Mount Lemmon, altitude 2840 meters, in an 

 open spot near aspens and snowberries, July 7, 1909, no. 3194; 

 on the east side of the crest of the Huachuca mountains, altitude 

 2550 meters, August 31, 1910, no. 3834. 



No. 3193, collected in the Santa Catalina mountains on a 

 ridge near Mount Lemmon under white firs, July 7, 1909, is, 

 with but little doubt, the same; this plant is larger, about 60 

 cm. high, and has a few branches above. A few of its lower 

 leaves have two linear lobes. 



The herbarium of the University of Arizona contains the 

 following specimens under the name C. gloriosa Britton, which 

 is a doubtful segregate of C. integra Gray: One sheet from the 



