7IO CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES. 



var. FULVOCANESCENS (Wats.), being scarcely at all ful- 

 vous, and the fruit with warty (never acute) corrugations 

 and intermediate papillae, and the short edge of K. glom- 

 erata, the nutlets are not carinate, but are somewhat con- 

 vex on the back a nd abruptly narrowed towards the rounded 

 apex. The nutlets do not fall off in any species of this 

 group and are pediceled below. My No. 5i63ac is almost 

 exactly this variety. 



Krynitzkia leucoph^a var. alata. 



No. 5289t. May 23, 1894, Johnson, Utah, 5000° alt., 

 on sandstone cliffs. 



No. 52613. May 17, 1894, Springdale, Utah, 4000° 

 alt., in red sand, or gravel. 



No. 5455c. June 18, 1894, two miles north of Ferron, 

 Utah, in clay, 5700° alt. 



No. 5144. May 3, 1894, Silver Reef, Utah, 4500° alt., 

 on sandstone cliffs. 



Nutlets bordered by a thick, entire, narrow, raised 

 wing. 



To this I refer No. 632, Fendler and M. M. Palmer's 

 specimen from Fort Defiance, New Mexico. 



E chinos-perniinn jioribundum Lehm. Dr. Gray upholds 

 Greene's E. ursinum from Northern Arizona and adja- 

 cent Utah, but I fail to find any character which is per- 

 manent, even in Greene's duplicate type in the National 

 Herbarium the characters do not hold. 



Polemoniiim c(Brideuni L. 



No. 544iac. June 15, 1894, Ireland's Ranch, Salina 

 Canon, Utah, 8000° alt., in gravel, along shaded streams, 

 in springy places. This is P. filiciniini Greene. I have 

 never been able to see any valid character separating this 

 species from P. foliosissimum Gray. If the flowers are 

 light colored then it is the one species, if not it is the 

 other, the leaf and floral characters vary. 



