~2 Muhlenbergia, Vohunc o 



annual, collected by himself, as a perennial, and then a little 

 later re-described it under another name. 



Dr. Greene may be excused for re-publishing this species 

 under the name L. capitatus, for there is nothing in either of 

 Watson's prior descriptions to lead one to suspect that this Ari- 

 zonan plant may be the same. The peculiar glaucescent ap- 

 pearance and the very characteristic broad-sinused upper calyx 

 lobe with the tips of the teeth slightly incurved, are not men- 

 tioned, and by inference, at least, it is compared with L. pusil- 

 /us, which it resembles not at all. The species has a wide range 

 in Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, and Arizona. 



Lupinus waskoensis n. n. 



Lupinus pinetorum Heller, Muhlenbergia 6: 25. pi. 1. and 



f. j. 1910. Not L. pinetorum Jones, Cont. West. Bot. 8: 



25. 1898. 



A little more care in looking up names, especially in my 



own Catalog, which was apparently not consulted, would have 



prevented the making of this unnecessary homonym. 



Lupinus Greenei n. n. 



Lupinus albicaulis var. Bridgesii Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 



8: 527. 1873. 

 Lupinus formosus var. Bridgesii Greene, Fl. Fran. 42. 1891. 

 Lupi7ius Bridgesii Heller, Muhlenbergia 1: 112. 1905. 



Not L. Bridgesii Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. 8: 538. 1873. 

 Although the name Bridgesii used in the varietal sense has 

 priority of place over the specific name used in the same paper, 

 present usage demands that a new name be given to this plant, 

 already burdened with synonymy. 



