FLOWERIXG PLANTS AND FERNS OF ARIZONA 721 



February to May, type of .1/. macdougalii from Flagstaff (MacDougal 



42 . Nebraska to British Columbia, south to Arizona and California. 

 The Arizona form appears to be var. micrantha 'Kellogg; Brand. 



6. Gilia gilioides (Benth.) Greene, Erythea 1: 93. 1893. 



Cullomia gilioides Benth., Edward's Bot. Ree. 19: pi. 1622. 

 1833. 

 Gila and Yavapai Counties to Pima County. 3.000 to 5.000 feet, 

 moist soil along streams, March to May. Nevada and Oregon to 

 Arizona and California. 



7. Gilia dactylophyllum Ton*, hi Ives, Colo. River Rpt. 22. 1860. 



Gilia demissa A. Grav, Amer. Acad. Arts and Sci. Proc. 8: 263. 



1870. 

 Linarith.us demissus Greene. Pittonia 2: 257. 1892. 

 Linanihus dactylophyUus Rvdb., Fl. Rocky Mount. 698, 1065. 



1917. 



Mohave, Pinal. Maricopa, and Yuma Counties, 2.000 feet or lower, 

 desert sands, locally abundant. March to April, type from mouth of 

 Diamond Creek, Mohave County I Ne wherry in 1858; . Utah, Arizona, 

 and southeastern California. 



8. Gilia filiformis Parrvex A. Grav, Amer. Acad. Arts and Sci. Proc. 



10: 75. 1874. 

 Mohave County, at Fort Mohave (Lemmon in 1884). and Yucca 

 (Jones 3909), 500to 1.800 feet, April and May. Utah, western 

 Arizona, and southeastern California. 



9. Gilia minima (Xutt.) A. Grav, Amer. Acad. Arts and Sci. Proc. 8: 



269. 1870. 



Navarretia minima Xutt.. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. Jour. ser. 2. 1: 

 160. 1848. 



Coconino County, 7.000 to 8.000 feet, openings in pine forests, June 

 to August. Washington to Arizona and California. 



10. Gilia breweri A. Grav, Amer. Acad. Arts and Sci. Proc. 8: 269. 



1870. 



Navarretia breweri Greene, Pittonia 1: 137. 1887. 



Navajo Mountain, Coconino County (Peebles and Smith 1395 7 . 

 about 8,000 feet, June. Wyoming to California and northern Arizona. 



11. Gilia filifolia Xutt., Acad. Xat. Sci. Phila. Jour. ser. 2. 1: 156. 



1848. 



Mohave County to Cochise. Santa Cruz, and Pima Counties. 1.200 

 to 4.000 feet, plains and mesas. April and May. Idaho and Washing- 

 ton to western Texas, Arizona, and Baja California. 



The Arizona form is var. diffusa Gray, with floccose pubescence. 

 The typical form of the species varies from pilose to nearly glabrous. 



12. Gilia eremica (Jepson) Craig, Torrev Bot. Club Bui. 61: 417. 



1934. 



Hugelia eremica Jepson, Man. Fl. PL Calif. 793. 1925. 



Coconino and Mohave Counties to Graham. Santa Cruz. Pima, and 

 Yuma Counties, up to 5,000 feet, common on dry plains and mesas. 



