396 SGROPHULAKIACEiE. 



herbage green and glabrous, or the inflorescence glandular-pubescent; 

 leaves not decurrent, 4 in. long or less; upper leaves ovate or ovate- 

 lanceolate, dentate, cordate-clasping; lower leaves oblong, more 

 coarsely toothed or pinnatifld, the basal ones narrowed to a short 

 winged petiole; flowers yellow or white, 1 in. broad, in a long loose 

 simple raceme; pedicels longer than the calyx; filaments all bearded 

 with violet woolly hairs. 



Introduced from the Old World: St. Helena, Mrs. 0. D. Hunt- 

 Redwood Peak; Lower San Joaquin; Lake Co.; and Sierra Foothills 

 opposite Sacramento, ace. to Brandegee. V. virgatum With, may 

 be found; its pedicels are in 2's and 3's and not longer than the calyx- 

 lobes. 



2. ANTIRRHINUM L. Snapdragon. 



Annual or perennial herbs with the lower leaves opposite and the 

 upper leaves alternate. Corolla gibbous or saccate at base on lower 

 side; palate closing the throat. Capsule dehiscing by pores at the 

 base of the style; style (in our species) persistent and often de- 

 flexed. (Greek anti, like, and rhinon, nose, because of the snout- 

 like flowers.) 



Perennials; no tendril-like branches. 

 Leaves linear; sepals 54 the length of the corolla . . . .1. A.virga. 



Leaves lanceolate; sepals equaling or shorter than the corolla 



2. A. glandulosum. 

 Annuals ; branches or peduncles disposed to he prehensile. 

 Peduncles about 1 line long; branchlets slender or filiform, at length 



twisting .2. A. vagans. 



Peduncles 2 to 3 in. long, filiform, prehensile i. A. sirictum. 



1. A. virga Gray. Glabrous, erect, with many virgate stems from 

 a perennial base, 2J to 5 ft. high; leaves linear, 2 to 3J in. long, 

 sessile; flowers red-purple in a mostly seound raceme, with subulate 

 bracts; sepals ovate, acute, moderately unequal, scarcely half the 

 length of the corolla; corolla 6 to 7 lines long, the sac at base mam- 

 mseform; lower pair of filaments dilated at apex, all geniculate at the 

 very base and all hairy, especially at the geniculation or knee; cap- 

 sule dehiscing by pores at the base of the style; seeds with the longi- 

 tudinal wing-like ridges fimbrillate. 



But few stations known: Howell Mountain; Mt. St. Helena and 

 northward to Lake and Mendocino Cos. June. 



2. A. glandulosum Lindl. Stem stout, branching, 3 to 5 ft. 

 high, very leafy; herbage glandular-pubescent; leaves lanceolate, 

 sessile, gradually diminishing into the bracts of the inflorescence; 

 bracts equaling or shorter than the oblong tube of the corolla; sep- 

 als oblong-lanceolate, unequal; "fllaments all moderately dilated 

 upwards." 



Mt. Hamilton (ace. to Greene); Santa Cruz, and southward. 



3. A. vagans Gray. At first simple and erect, at length branch- 

 ing and very diflTuse, the branches 6 to 18 in. long; slender or flliform 

 branchlets more or less twisting and disposed to be prehensile; leaves 

 ovate, mostly 3 to 6 lines long, or oblong to lanceolate and mostly \ 



