SYNOPSIS OF THE FLORA OF COLORADO. 105 
roou ves Sangre de Cristo Range, Brandegee Gray’s Peak, 
mith. see Creek Cation, Coulter ; Redfield 
s CHOTOMA, Ruiz & Pav. () ray in oes Am, Acad., 8, p. 283. 
4 More or i. viscously pubescent; corolla not, or but little, surpassing 
leav tes ; sans ov a or short- oblong ; seeds strongly rugose-pitted, 
Me -4// long, oval-oblon 
Var. NETETEROLPA <t e l.¢., p. 284. Leaves linear-lanceolate.—_S. 
Oérado, Hayden ; Hoopes. 
POLEMONIACE EZ. 
Aaa CANESCENS, T. & G. Gr. Rev. Polemon. Proc. Amer. Acad., Dee., 
wart and matted- -crespitose, with a woody, perennial, 
3 mltiek. Gane ned hase which is usually covered with the dead leaves of 
__-previous seasons; the branchlets densely wierd up a ine solitary, sessile 
flowers, woolly-canescent; leave Ae de 0 long, evergr »Tigid, s ubulate, 
more or less acerose, scaridts-co nate at base, ustally olute 
1 
5 e€ 
appressed base; tube of the white corolla: exc duit the calyx, the ob- 
ovate lobes entire or emarginate, 3-4” long; ovules solitary. —Caiion 
mee cpap tee 
% C2 vnelenet octeoeg Gr. bie bs Cay Do Di rarf, densely oF rather 
long, piinisent, “Hipia on ‘the thick ened, owt revolute margins, 
otherwise smooth or sparingly planidtully’ “corolla. tube more or less ex- 
ceeding the calyx, lobes obovate, entire ae long 
Var. CONDENSAT ay Den AE: cresp e, 14/2 pie leaves short, 
2-3" long, ver Dunenes crowded, erect, brieated, —Gray’s Peak, at 
13,000 feet altitude, Coulter. Hall & Harbour 3 Parry. 
PHLox DovGuasi, Hook. Gr. Rev. Ke c., 254, Crespitose, very much 
branched, pubescent or ile eha ; leaves rather rigid, acerose, e, usually 
peeading, less crowded; margins ‘naked or somewhat hirsute-ciliate at 
ase; flowers Scale) corolla purple or white Phish pxonadinrs the 
calyx, lobes obovate, entire, 3’ long.—Hall & Harbour, 
PHLOX LONGIFOLIA, Nutt: Gr. Rev. 1. ¢., 255. Peren ome woody only 
at the base, glabrous or pubescent; stems erect or ascending: leaves 
Slightly rigid, not fascicled, linear or very narrowly linear, sometimes 
lanceolate, 1-3! lo ong ; flowers solitary or subcymose, long-peduncled; 
corolla white or pink, tube longer than the narrow, subulate calyx-teeth; 
Style elongated and often equaling the tube.—Near Long’s Peak, 
Coulter, San ngre de Cristo Range, Brandegee. 
_ COoLLomts? LINEARIS, Nutt. Gr. Rev. 1. ¢., 259. Annual, more or less 
‘Nama, | by aye S sepaled, persistent. Corolla tubular- funnelfo mm. Stan sub- 
included. Styles 2, with rather obtuse stigmas. Capsuls iy aha loe ulicidal, the 
Septum bearing two laminar placente projecting into each cell from the axis, which 
are at first united, at length free—Low, aunual branching herbs, perennial or som 
What woody at the base, variously pubéscent, with alternate or rarely opposite entire 
leaves, and axillary and terminal flowers.—Choi isy, DC. Prod,, 10, p. 18: 
*COLLOMIA, Nutt. Corolla ic glia or salv stmt with a more or ie 
lated throat. Filaments slender unequally inserted, usually protruded. Ovules 
itary, few ormany in each cell. Seed. 
threads a, when wetted, Nee ie in C. gracilis.)—2 Patio $ or semi- i 
With alternate le which are usually pinnately incised or divided, and with clus- 
tered or ~ytnonerintes beaitened flowers. a 
ee & 
