GREENMAN, — SPERMATOPHYTES FROM MEXICO, ETC. 241 
equalling the blade, those of the other leaves gradually shorter upwardly 
on the stem: inflorescence terminating the stem and branches in several- 
flowered cymose clusters; pedicels 8 mm. or less in length, erect: 
calyx deeply 4-parted; divisions of the calyx lanceolate, acute, about 
4mm. long: corolla 8 to 10 mm. long, greenish; tube of the corolla 
about equalling the ovate-oblong short-acuminate lobes; spurs subper- 
pendicular, slightly incurved at the base: capsule oblong, 12 mm. long, 
curved above, acuminate, glabrous; seeds subspherical, 1 mm. in diam- 
ter, smooth. — Mexico. State of Hidalgo: wet woods near Trinidad 
Iron Works, altitude 1735 m., 11 July, 1904, O G. Pringle, no. 8939 
(hb. Gr.). 
Phacelia Coulteri, n. sp. An erect rather stout herb: stem 
branched above, reddish brown, pubescent with long spreading villous 
hairs intermixed with stipitate glands: leaves bi-tripinnatisect, oblong to 
oblong-ovate in general outline, 2 to 9 em. long, 1 to 6 em. broad, hir- 
sute on both surfaces with a few glandular hairs intermixed ; segments 
narrow, obtuse to acute: inflorescence consisting of villous-hirsute and 
Somewhat glandular scorpioid cymes subcorymbosely disposed ; pedicels 
1 mm. or less in length: calyx deeply 5-parted ; divisions of the calyx 
unequal, linear to linear-oblong or subspatulate, 2.5 to 3 mm. long, ob- 
tusish, villous-pubescent intermixed with short-stipitate glandular hairs : 
corolla narrowly campanulate, 4 to 5 mm. long, light blue to white, glab- 
Tous ; tube 2.5 to 3 mm. long, bearing within on either side of the fila- 
ments a small thin reflexed valve; lobes of the corolla subrotund, 2 mm. 
broad, subentire or minutely denticulate : stamens exserted : ovary hir- 
sute-pubescent above, 4-ovuled: style short-stipitate, glandular at the 
base: capsule ovoid, 2.5 to 3 mm. long, pubescent above; seeds 4, from 
1.5 to 2 mm. long, somewhat scrobiculate or subfoveolate. P. glandulosa, 
Hemsley, Biol. Cent.-Am. Bot. ii. 359 (1882), not Nutt., as to pl. 
Coulter. — Mexico. State of Hidalgo: fields about Buena Vista Sta- 
tion, altitude 2590 m., 4 August, 1904, C. G. Pringle, no. 8988 (hb. Gr.). 
State of Vera Cruz: Real del Monte, Dr. Thos. Coulter, no. 921 
b. Gr.). 
The = specimen in the Gray Herbarium bears the following note 
in the handwriting of Dr. Gray, “ Between P. glandulosa & P. tanaceti- 
folia = latter = tanacetifolia.” Dr. Gray also placed a question = 
opposite the printed word Mexico on the Coulter label, evidently infer- 
ting that the plant came from California instead of Mexico; mat 96 a 
Pringle’s specimen above cited is identical in every regard with the 
Coulter plant there can be no doubt, as Hemsley indicates, that Calter’ 
VOL. xL1.— 16 | 
