306 SCEOPHULARIACE^. Pedicularis. 



P. Chamissonis, Stev. Commonly a foot high, robust, glabrous : leaves deeply pinna- 

 tifid ; divisions lanceolate, serrate or incised : lower whorls of the spike remote : calyx- 

 teeth entire: corolla yellow (over half inch long); galea with incurved acuminate beak, 

 becoming straitish. — Monogr. in Mem. Soc. Nat. Mosc. vi. 20, t. 4, fig. 1; Hook. Fl. ii. 

 107. P. Romanzovii, Cham, in Spreng. Syst. ii. 778. — Aleutian Islands, Chamisso, Dull, &c. 

 (Adjacent W. Asia.) 



* # Leaves alternate, or some occasionally opposite. 



-K- Galea produced into a filiform porrect or soon upturned beak ; throat with a tooth on each side ; 

 tube of corolla nearly included in the 5-toothed calyx : leaves lanceolate in outline, pinnately 

 parted; the linear or lanceolate divisions acutely or laciniately serrate, or the larger again 

 pinnatifid : stems simple, strict, from a span to a foot and a half high : spike dense and many- 

 flowered, naked: corolla dull rose-red or crimson-purple. 



»"'"■ P. Grcenlandica, Retz. Glabrous ; spike 1 to 6 inches long : caly.x-teeth short : beak 

 of the galea half inch or more long, twice the length of the rest of the corolla, decurved 

 on the accumbent lower lip, thence porrect and soon upwardly recurved. — Fl. Scand. ed. 

 2, 45; Fl. Dan. t. 1166 (with flowers not well developed); Torr. Ann. Lye. N. Y. ii. 223; 

 Hook. I. c. P. Grcmtandica & swrecta, Benth. 1. c. 566. P. incarnata, Retz, Fl. Scand. ed. 

 1, 117, & Obs. iv. 27, t. 1 (representing well developed ascending beak), not Jacq. &c. — 

 Wet ground, Labrador and Hudson's Bay to Alpine and subalpine Rocky Mountains, 

 extending south to borders of New Mexico, west to Brit. Columbia, and south in the 

 Sierra Nevada to King's River, California, Dr. Matthews. (Greenland.) 



^^ P. attollens, Gray. More slender : spike loosely lanate-pubescent when young : flowers 

 smaller : calyx-teeth nearly as long as the tube : corolla dull violet purple : galea much 

 shorter than the broad lower lip, about half the length of the obtuse and abruptly 

 upturned or retrocurved filiform beak, which is only 2 or 3 lines long. — Proc. Am. Acad, 

 vii. 384, & Bot. Calif, i. 582. — Wet ground. Sierra Nevada, California, from the Yosemite 

 district to Placer Co., at 6-10,000 feet. Bridges, Brewer, &c. 



-i— +- Galea of the' (short, half inch long) white corolla produced into a slender elongated-subu- 

 late circinate-incurved beak, nearly reaching the apex of the broad lower lip : calyx cleft in 

 front : whole plant glabrous. 



P. aentorta, Bentll. A foot or less high, simple : leaves pinnately parted into linear 



incisely serrate lobes ; the upper reduced to simpler small bracts : spike naked, cylindrical, 

 rather loosely many-flowered : galea with the slender beak almost circinate. — Hook. Fl. 

 . ii. 108, & DC. 1. c. 575. — Mountains of Oregon and Idaho, Tolmie, Hayden, &c. 

 "^^P. raoemosa Dougl. A foot or so high, simple or sometimes branching, leafy to the 

 top : leaves lanceolate, undivided, minutely and doubly crenulate (2 to 4 inches long) : 

 flowers short-pedicelled, in a short leafy raceme or spike, or the lower in remote axils and 

 uppermost with bracts hardly surpassing the 2-toothed calyx : slender beak of galea 

 hamate-rtcfle.xed. — Hook. 1. c, & DC. 1. c. — Subalpine regions, British Columbia to N. 

 California, Utah, and Colorado. 



^— H— H_ Galea falcate and with a conical or thick-subulate beak, edentulate : leaves at least pin- 

 natifid : flower about half inch long. 



++ Stems more or less leafy, low: leaves simply pinnatifid: corolla ochroleucous. 



P. Lapponica, L. Merely puberulent : stems clustered, a span or more high, leafy up 



to the short close spike : leaves lanceolate, pinnatifid half way down in many and close 

 small oblong and incisely toothed lobes: calyx cleft in front, minutely 2-toothed behind: 

 galea erect, with abruptly incurved conical short beak. — Fl. Lapp. t. 4, fig. 1; Fl. Dan. 

 t. 2; Pursh, Fl. ii. 309. — Labrador and Arctic America: apparently uncommon. (Green- 

 land, Lapland to Kamtschatka.) 

 *"" P. Parryi, Gray. Glabrous, or the inflorescence slightly pubescent : stem a span or two 

 high, very leafy at base, slightly so above ; leaves linear-lanceolate in outline, deeply pin- 

 nately parted; the divisions linear-lanceolate, acute (2 or 3 lines long), closely callous- 

 serrate ; uppermost leaves reduced to narrow linear bracts : spike dense, 1| to 4 inches 

 long : calyx 5-toothed ; the teeth entire : corolla ochroleucous or more yellow ; galea 

 strongly falcate, with decurved subulate-conical beak, of about the length of the width of 

 the galea. — Am, Jour. Sci. ser. 2, xxxiii. 250; Porter & Coulter, Syn. Fl. Colorad. 97. — 

 Rocky Mountains, from Wyoming or Montana through Colorado to Utah, within and on 

 the border of the alpine region. 



