822 MISC. PUBLICATION 42 3, IT. S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE 



mentary; capsule 4-valved; seeds many, striate and transversely 

 reticulate. 



1. Gratiola neglecta Torr., Cat. PL N. Y. 89. 1819. 



Coconino County, near Flagstaff {Lemmon in 1884), and near 

 Williams {Kearney and Peebles 14005), about 7,000 feet, mud flats, 

 July and August. Almost throughout the United States. 



12. CONOBEA 



Plant small, annual, glandular-pubescent; leaves opposite, petioled, 

 pinnatifid, the divisions wedge-shaped, usually toothed; flowers axil- 

 lary, short-peduncled, small; calyx 5-paited, the divisions narrow; 

 corolla obscurely bilabiate, the tube yellowish, the limb violet; stigma 

 2-lobed; capsule longitudinally dehiscent, appearing 4-valved; seeds 

 numerous. 



1. Conobea intermedia A. Gray in Torr., U. S. and Alex. Bound. Bot. 



117. 1859. 



Schistophragma intermedia Pennell, Notul. Nat. Acad. Nat. 

 Sci. Phila. 43: 2. 1940. 



Mountains of Cochise, Santa Cruz, and Pima Counties, 4,000 to 

 6,000 feet, grassy or wooded slopes, mostly in loose soil, July to 

 September. Southern New Mexico and Arizona , and northern Mexico. 



13. PAGESIA 



Small, glabrous, perennial herb; leaves opposite, short-petioled or 

 nearly sessile, the blades lanceolate, ovate, or obovate, crenate or 

 dentate; flowers axillary, solitary, on long slender peduncles; corolla 

 funnelform, slightly bilabiate, yellow with dark veins. 



1. Pagesia vandellioides (H. B. K.) Pennell, Notul. Nat. Acad. Nat. 

 Sci. Phila. 43: 2. 1940. 



Herpestis vandellioides H. B. K., Nov. Gen. et Sp. 2: 367. 1818. 



Cochise, Santa Cruz, and Pima Counties, 2,800 to 4,500 feet, wet 

 sandy soil along streams, March and April (sometimes flowering also 

 in autumn). Southeastern Arizona and Mexico. 



14. MIMETANTHE 



Plant small, annual, viscid- villous with long, slender, white hairs; 

 stems erect, much-branched, leafy; leaves opposite, sessile or nearly 

 so, the blades lanceolate or oblong, entire; flowers axillary, solitary, 

 slender-peduncled; calyx campanulate; corolla tubular-funnelform, 

 obscurely bilabiate, the lower lip usually with 2 red-brown or purple 

 spots; stigma dilated at apex. 



1. Mimetanthe pilosa (Benth.) Greene, Calif. Acad. Sci. Bui. 1: 181. 



1885. 



Herpestis pilosa Benth., Compend. Bot. Mag. 2: 57. 1836. 

 Mimulus pilosus S. Wats, in King, Geol. Expl. 40th Par. 5: 

 225. 1871. 



Graham, Gila, Pinal, Maricopa, and Pima Counties, 1,000 to 4,500 

 feet, moist sandy soil along streams, April to July. Nevada and 

 Oregon to Arizona and southern California. 



