238 BOTANY. 



too young, and in doubt placed here (126, 112), were much frequented by 

 a large black insect an inch or more long. Attached to these were some 

 flies engaged in sucking the juices of the larger insect* We found many 

 of the flies still active and adhering to their defunct victims. — Southern 

 Arizona (555, 556) ; Nevada. 



Etjeotia lanata, Moq. — Common throughout the West, where it goes 

 among the herdsmen under the name cf White Sage and Winter-fat, — a 

 really valuable forage eagerly eaten by stock. 



Cokispermum hyssopifolium, L. — Colorado (37, 866, 872). 



Spieostachys occidentals, Watson (Halostachys occidentalis, Watson 

 in King's Report, v, 293). — Nevada, Arizona, and Utah. 



PARONYCHIE.E. 



Paronychia pulvinata, Gray. — South Park, Colorado, at 12-13,000 



feet elevation (46). 



ELiEAGNE^. 



Shepherdia Canadensis, Nutt. — Colorado (58, 59). 

 Eljeagnus aegentea, Pursh. — Colorado (60). 



URTICE^. 



Celtis eeticulata, Torr. (Ann. N. Y. Lye. 2, 247, and Nutt. Sylva, 

 1, 133, t. 39). — Leaves somewhat acute, obliquely cordate-ovate, and the 

 nearly entire margins somewhat revolute ; veins strongly reticulated on the 

 lower surface and deeply impressed on the upper, papillose-scabrous above, 

 less rough below ; fruiting pedicels longer than the petioles ; the pisiform 

 berry glaucous, with a somewhat reticulate-rugose nucleus. — Nevada. Not 

 having seen a specimen, I have drawn this description largely from 

 Planchon, in DC. Prod. 17, p. 178. 



Number 367, from Camp Grant, Arizona, Mr. Watson regard's as a new 

 species, for which he has indicated the name of G. curtipes. I do not feel 

 like attempting a description from the material at hand. It is a tree 20 

 feet high, with a diameter of 18 inches, and has a smoothish, white bark. 



Urtica gracilis, Ait., San Luis Valley, Colorado (71), and U. geacilis, 



* Since this observation was made in 1874 the relations existing between insects and flowering 

 plants have come to be more generally acknowledged, because more fully understood. I now suspect 

 that the case given above has a deeper history than appears on the surface. 



