SCROPHULARIACE.E. 439 



A. vagans, Gray, p. 253. Add syn. : A. vexiUo-calyculatum, Kellogg, Proc. Calif. Acad. v. 



27, fide Layne-Curran, 

 A. Kingii, Watson, p. 253. Extends from Arizona and the eastern border of California 



to S. E. Oregon. — A. Kelloggii, Greene, in Torr. Bull. x. 126. 



In § Matjrandella, p. 253. 



A. striotum, Gray, p. 253, was badly named. It becomes weak, lax, and climbs by its 

 tortile peduncles, often to a yard in height. — Santa Barbara to San Diego. 



A. filipes, Gray, p. 354. With hardly a doubt this was founded on a depauperate-flowered 

 and very attenuate form of the A. Cooperi, Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. vii. 376, which has the 

 fully developed flowers. The characters should be combined under the former and older 

 name. — In canons, from N. W. Arizona to San Diego, where apparently it also pro- 

 duces small corollas. 



In § Gambelia, p. 354. 



A. speoiosum, Gray, p. 354. Corolla has short or small, but not " narrow " lips, and the 

 palate closes the throat : so that the character of the section needs correction. — Inhabits 

 also San Clemente Island, Nevin & Lyon. 



A. junceum, Gray, p. 354. This is Saccularia Veatchii, Kellogg, Proc. Calif. Acad. ii. 17, 

 & Bull. Calif. Acad. i. 144, with colored plate, reproduced from "The Hesperian," July, 

 1860. The plate shows a plane lip, with no palate at all. The dried flowers show the pal- 

 ate, which, seemingly, cannot close the orifice. It has not been found very near the U. S. 

 boundary. 



6. MOHAVEA, Gray. 



M. viscida, Gray, p. 255. Add syn. ; Antirrhinum confertiflorum, Benth. in DC. Prodr. x. 

 592. 



7. COLLlNSIA, Nutt. 



C. linearis, Gray. (To stand near C. grand/flora, p. 256, but peculiar.) A foot or two 

 high, paniculately branched, glabrous or inflorescence minutely glandular-puberulent : leaves 

 elongated linear (lj to 3 inches long, a line or two wide), entire, or the radical ones lanceo- 

 late-spatulate and obscurely dentate ; uppermost reduced to small bracts : pedicels 3 to 6 

 in the whorls, filiform, about equalling the flowers : calyx-lobes triangular-lanceolate, acute : 

 corolla much declined, gibbose-saccate, half-inch long, light blue, with lips longer than the 

 tube and throat, upper with a slightly prominent and 2-lobed callus : rudiment of sterile 

 stamen filiform-subulate : ovules 3 in each cell : seeds meniscoidal. — Proc. Am. Acad. xx. 

 50. — Northern part of California, Greene, Rattan, and adjacent part of Oregon, Howell. 



C. Rattani, Gray, 1. c. (Between C. parvi flora and C. Parryi.) A foot or less high, 

 barely puberulent, and inflorescence obscurely glandular : stem strict, nearly simple : cau- 

 line leaves narrowly linear and entire (inch or two long), or lowest short and oblong, some- 

 what dentate ; lowest or radical spatulate and very small : pedicels 2 to 4 (3 lines long), 

 about the length of the flower : calyx-lobes broadly lanceolate, rather obtuse : corolla violet 

 or purple, small, little declined, with lips only a line or two long, the upper with a, double 

 callosity : rudiment of sterile stamen subulate : ovules not more than two in each cell : cap- 

 sule equalling the calyx : seeds meniscoidal, margined. — N. California from Mendocino Co. 

 northward (Rattan) to Oregon, Howell, and Washington Terr., Suksdorf. 



11. PENTSTEMON, Mitchell. 



P. Menziesii, Hook., var ScotUeri, Gray, p. 260. Add : Hook. f. Bot. Mag. t. 6834.— 

 The two following must needs be taken as good species of this section. Both have a quite 

 naked sterile filament, and very long-woolly anthers. 



