147 
Plain. Ranges from Maine and Quebec to British Columbia, 
southward to Georgia, Texas and California. 
5. GRATIOLA VIRGINIANA L. Sp. Pl. 17. 1753. ‘Habitat in 
Virginia.” Although Linné had specimens of the plants 
here called G. neglecta in his herbarium in 1753, his de- 
scription is taken solely from Gron. Fl. Virg. 6, 1743, and 
so is based upon Clayton 379. This, as shown by Dr. S. 
F. Blake in Rhodora 20:65, 1918, is the plant which has 
been known as G. sphaerocarpa Ell. 
Flowering from mid-May to September, and soon spenind 
fruit. 
Wet loam, in shade, occasional in the Middle and Cape May 
Districts of the Coastal Plain of New Jersey, and below the Fall- 
ine in Delaware. From Burlington, N. J. southward to Florida 
and Texas, extending inland to the southern Appalachians. 
7. Mimu.us L. Sp. Pl. 634. 1753 
Type species, M. engent L: 
Corolla yellow. Capsule dehi t laterally 
¥ 1 4 
T 11 sak: Seeds ellip- 
soid-orbicular. Steins pubescent. Species introduced. 
(Simiolus Greene. 
Corolla 12-20 mm. long. Leaves 3-4 cm. long. Stems 
loosely lanose, co lax. 1. M. moschatus. 
Corolla 30-35 mm. Leaves 4-5 cm. long. Stems 
glabrous to finely Se Pe se cent, stout, erect. 2. M. guttatus.- 
Corolla lavender-violet. Capsule dehiscent laterally from very 
apex, and its valves splitting from the persistent axial cell- 
wall. Seeds oblong. Stems glabrous. Species native. 
(Eumimulus.) 
Teaves ovate, petioled. Angles of stem slightly winged. 
Pedicels stout, in fruit 5-10 mm. long. Calyx-lobes seta- 
ceous-tipped, 1-2 mm. long. Corolla 35 mm. long. 
Seeds pale-yellow. 3. M. alatus. 
Leaves lanceolate, clasping. Angles of stem not winged. 
Pedicels slender, in fruit 30-60 mm. long. Calyx-lobes lan- 
ceolate, 3-5 mm. long. Corolla 30 mm. long. Seeds 
brownish. 4. M. ringens- 
1. MIMULUS MoscHATUS Dougl. 
Aquatic in running streamlets or in bogs; rare; seen only from 
Queens and Sullivan counties, New York and Lehigh County, 
