CATALOGUE. 215 



Utricularia minor, L. From Rhode Island to Illinois and northward. 

 Flowerless specimens only, probably of this species, were found in Goose 

 Creek Valley, Nevada, and in the Uintas ; 5-8,000 feet altitude. (762.) 



OROBANCHAOE^. 



Phelip^ea erianthera, Eng. Proc. Amer. Acad., 7. 372. {Orohanche 

 multiftora, Nutt.) Glandular-pubescent, simple or branched ; flowers in a 

 close spike, purplish, somewhat curved ; calyx deeply 5-cleft, bibracteate at 

 base, the segments long and linear ; anthers tufted with hairs. — Stems 3-8' 

 high, stout and fleshy ; the calyx-lobes often much elongated, equaling or 

 exceeding the corolla, which also varies in the size and depth of its divisions 

 and in its color. Scarcely differing but in its woolly anthers from P. Ludoni- 

 ciana, with which specimens collected by Dr. Torrey seem to connect both 

 it and P. comosa. New Mexico and Chihuahua, and frequent in the valleys 

 and mountains of Nevada and Utah, more usually in siibalkaline soils; 4^8,000 

 feet altitude ; June-October. " Too-whoo" of the Pah-Utes, by whom it is 

 eaten. (763.) 



Aphyllon uniflorum, T. & G. From Newfoundland and Canada to 

 Florida, Missouri and Texas ; California and "Washington Territory. Wah- 

 satch Mountains ; 7,000 feet altitude ; June. (764.) 



Aphyllon fasciculatum, T. & G. From Northern Illinois and Lake 

 Michigan to the Saskatchewan; and collected also in Colorado, Sonora, Southern 

 California and Washington Territory. East and West Humboldt Mountains, 

 Nevada, in the Wahsatch, and on Antelope Island; 4,300-7,000 feet altitude; 

 May-July. (765.) 



SCROPHULARIACEiE. 



Verbascum Thapsus, L. Introduced about the Mormon settlements of 

 Utah. (766.) 



Antirrhinum Kingii. Annual, 6-18' high, simple or branched, slender, 

 erect, woolly at base, or puberulent, or nearly glabrous throughout, often with 

 fihform prehensile branchlets ; leaves rarely 1' in length, oblong or usually 

 narrowly lanceolate or linear, attenuated to a short petiole, alternate or the 

 lower ones often opposite, mostly longer than the flowers, but the uppermost 

 becoming very small ; pedicels short (1-3" ;) calyx-segments unequal, the 

 posterior one oblong, obtuse, nearly equaling the corolla, the rest oblong. 



