440 SUPPLEMENT. 



^P. Barr&ttfB. A foot or two high, and glabrous throughout, very glaucous, rigid : flower- 

 ing stems leafy up to the thyreoid inflorescence : leaves ovate and oval, entire or serrulate, 

 an inch or two long ; cauline closely sessile by a broad base : sepals short, scarious-cOria- 

 ceous, oblong-lanceolate, acute or short-acuminate : corolla an inch and a half long, rose- 

 purple. — Mountains of Hood Eiver, Oregon, near its confluence with the Columbia, Mrs. 

 Barrett. Here may belong an insufficient specimen from the northern side of the Columbia, 

 .collected by Suksdorf. 



P. Lyalli. Puberulent or nearly glabrous up to the racemiform inflorescence : flowering 

 stems 2 feet high and herbaceous (the base unknown): leaves elongated linear or linear- 

 lanceolate, 3 to 5 inches long, 2 to 4 lines wide, sparsely serrulate : sepals Jinear-lanceolate 

 and attenuate-acuminate : corolla inch and a half long. — P. Menziesii, var; ? Lyalli t Gray, 

 Proc. Am. Acad. vi. 26, referred to on p. 260, under var. Scouleri. — N. W. Montana, on the 

 borders of Brit. Columbia, Lijall iu 1861, and Missoula Canon, Watson, 1880 ; also Wigwam 

 River, British Columbia, Macoun, 1884. 



P. ternatus, Tore., p. 260. Corolla equally 4-cleft at summit, and the lobes equally as- 

 cending, upper lobe or lip sometimes a little shorter and 2-lobed at summit. 



P. Rothrockii, Gray, p. 260. San Jacinto Mountains, S. E. California, at 8,000 feet, . 

 Parish. A foot or two high, woody below : corolla reddish, half-inch long. 



P. baccharif olius, Gkat. Not Mexican : for P. coriaceus, Schaffner in herb, (referred 

 in Hemsl. Biol. Centr.-Am. Bot. ii. 443, to this species as var. Schaffneri), differs not only in 

 the smoothness and entire leaves, but in the shape of corolla and dehiscence of the anthers. 



P. labrosus, Hook. f. Next P. barbatus, p. 261, and much like it, narrower leaved : inflo- 

 rescence almost simply racemose : corolla more slender, light scarlet, destitute of beard ; 

 limb longer ; lobes of the 3-parted lower lip linear, equalling the upper, spread ing, Jiully half 

 the length of the tube. — Bot. Mag. t. 6738, & Gard. Chron. 1883, ii. 536, fig. 91. P. bar- 

 batus, var. labrosus, Gray, Bot. Calif, i. 622. — S. E. California, on Mount Pinos, Kern Co., 

 Rothroch, and Grayback, San Bernandino Co., Parry & Lemmon, H. G. Wright. Also Can- 

 tillas Mountains over the Mexican boundary, Orcutt. 



P- nudiflorus, Gray. Ambiguous between the Speciosi and the Genuini : anther-cells 

 strictly divaricate, elongated oblong, dehiscent through the whole length, but not explanate : 

 glabrous and glaucescent : stems simple, strict, 2 feet or more high, bearing below 2 or 3 

 pairs of ovate-lanceolate partly clasping leaves, above bearing a long and loose naked thyr- 

 sus : peduncles subtended by minute subulate bracts, elongated, about 2-flowered : sepals 

 short, broadly ovate : corolla inch long (purple ?), with much ampliate throat from a nar- 

 row tube of double the length of the calyx ; lips short and spreading : stamens slightly 

 exserted from the throat : sterile filament pilose-bearded for nearly its whole length. — 

 Proc. Am. Acad. xx. 206. — Northern Arizona, near Flagstaff, Lemmon. 



P. Havardi, Gray. After P. WrigJit.ii, p. 264, which it resembles in herbage, but long- 

 flowered, wholly smooth and glabrous, glaucescent, 2 feet high : leaves coriaceous, entire, 

 oval or oblong ; lower long-petioled ; upper smaller and half -clasping ; those of the elon- 

 gated and virgate racemiform thyrsus reduced to small or minute bracts : peduncles very 

 short, 3-5-flowered, but pedicels slender : sepals short, oval, obtuse : corolla (apparently 

 violet or blue) tubular, inch long (throat not over 3 lines wide), and lips only 2 lines long; 

 upper erect, 2-lobed ; lower spreading and 3-lobed ; lobes roundish : sterile filament filiform, 

 naked. — Proc. Am. Acad. xx. 306. — Guadalupe Mountains on southwest frontier of 

 Texas, Havard. (Mex. ?) 



P. centranthifolius, Benth., p. 264. Flowers occasionally yellow, near San Bernardino, 

 S. California, Parish. 



P. Cleveland]., Gray, p. 265, where it is partly mixed with the next. Leaves rigid, ob- 

 long or ovate, acutely and rigidly dentate, uppermost usually connate into a disk : thyrsus 

 narrow : corolla crimson, three-fourths inch long, with narrow throat : sterile filament 

 bearded above : stem lignescent at base. — Proc. Am. Acad. xvii. 229. — Exclude the 

 Cucamonga habitat. 



P. Parishii, Gray. Wholly herbaceous : leaves less coriaceous, lanceolate or ovate-lanceo- 

 late, entire or minutely denticulate ; upper half-clasping by subcordate base, but not con- 

 nate : thyrsus more paniculate, sometimes effuse : corolla red, an inch long, with throat 



