CATALOGUE. 133 



glaucous, acute or obtuse, entire or coarsely lobed ; i-U' in length ; flowers 

 distant along the leafy branches, or sometimes in a short rather naked 

 terminal spike ; corolla 2-4" long, light-pink. It is 905 Coulter, 285 Fendler, 

 6339 Bolander, &c., and includes 8. glaucescens, Hook., 8. rotundifolius, Gray, 

 and probably 8. microphyllus, HBK. New Mexico, Colorado and Cahfornia. 

 Abundant on the mountains from the Washoe to the Uintas ; 6-9,000 feet 

 altitude; May-September. (475.) 



LoNiCEEA INVOLUCEATA, Banks. From Lake Superior to the Great Slave 

 Lake and in the Rocky Mountains from latitude 56° southward to Colorado ; 

 and pn the Western Coast from Fraser's River to California. East Humboldt 

 Mountains, Nevada, and in the Wahsatch and Uintas ; 7-9,000 feet altitude ; 

 June-August. (476.) 



LoNlCEEA Utahensis. Stem erect ; leaves oblong, subcordate at base, 

 obtuse, glabrous, on short (1-2" long) petioles ; peduncles axillary ; bracts 

 2, shorter than the ovaries ; teeth of the calyx very obtuse ; corolla obtusely 

 saccate at base, bilabiate, the lobes half shorter than the tube ; style included ; 

 berries red, nearly distinct, diverging. — Shrub 3-5° high, with loose slender 

 spreading branches ; leaves 2' long by 1' in width ; corolla 5" in length, with 

 a broad (Ij" wide) and rather short tube ; berries globular, 2-3" in diameter, 

 2 4-seeded, on short peduncles, (j' long.) Flowers described from a single 

 dried one found among the specimens. Wahsatch Mountains, Utah, in Cot- 

 tonwood Canon; 9,000 feet altitude; in fruit, August. (477.) 



Loniceea conjugialis, Kell. Proc. Cal. Acad. 2. 67. Fig. 15. Stem 

 erect, branching ; branches and buds quadrangular ; leaves oval-oblong, cord- 

 ate or subcordate, short-petioled, obtuse or subacute, softly pubescent, thin 

 and reticulate-veined ; peduncles filiform, exceeding the leaves, divaricate ; 

 bracts minute or none ; calyx-teeth minute, subulate, hirsute ; corolla dark- 

 purple, glabrous, gibbous at base, deeply bilabiate, lower lip linear and twice 

 longer than the very short tube, the upper one shortly 4-toothed ; stamens 

 and the hirsute style equal, included ; filaments hirsute below ; ovaries con- 

 nate. — Leaves J-2' long. Collected by Dr. Veatch on the Washoe Mount- 

 ains, Nevada. 



Sambucus eacemosa, L., Var. pubens. {8. pubens, Mx.) Leaves vari- 

 able, ovate or oblong-lanceolate, 2-6' long and 1-3' wide, sometimes lacini- 

 ately serrate at the apex and with a long acumination, pubescent beneath or 

 glabrous. Northern States, and southward in the mountains to Carolina, 



