AUGUST, ZOE VOL, V. APRIL, 1904. No. 10 A COLLECTION OF MEXICAN PLANTS. T. S. BRANDEGEE. Dr. C. A. Purpus, whois gathering cacti and orchids in Mexico, has made a most interesting collection during the past year, mainly from Ixtaccihuatl, a very high mountain not far distant from the City of Mexico, A comparison, in Biologia Centrali-Americana, of the mountain floras of Mexico makes no mention of that of Ixtaccihuatl, and it seems as if this collection might be the first one from that locality, Most of the plants collected are known from other parts of Mexico, and many of them have been previously ob- tained by Mr. C, G. Pringle on Nevada de Toluca, but a number of undescribed forms were found. ‘The plants from the high alpine region are especially interesting and a great number of them belong to genera growing upon the mountains of the “United States of the North.” MMontia fontana and Sagina Linnei seem to be identical with the northern plants. Ranunculus is repre- . sented by R&R. sibbaldioides and Donnianus—there are several species of Cerastium that seem to have been very abundant. Po- tentilla is represented by species rarely collected: P. ranuncul- oides, candicans, Richardit and comarotdes. Arenaria, Draba, Viola are well represented, and many other common northern genera were collected. Many thanks are due Dr. J. M. Greenmann for determinations of doubtful species. Thelypodium Mexicanum. Perennial, glabrous and glaucous, the leafy stems ascending 4-5 dm. high; larger leaves 10-12 cm. long, 2-3 cm, wide, spatulate, entire, acuminate, thin in texture, APRIL 18, 1904 180 A Collection of Mexican Plants. [ZOE broadly auriculate-clasping, upper leaves similar and smaller; in- florescence in a terminal spike and on short branches from the axils of the upper leaves; flowers light purple, petals linear, nar- rowed at the base, 3 mm. long; immature siliques 1 cm. long ona longer pedicel. ; Collected on Ixtaccihuatl, 1903. Thelypodium australe. An erect perennial, stems hirsute, especially below; leaves glabrous 2-4 cm. long, somewhat spatu- late, obtuse, entire, 5-7 mm. wide, narrowed to near the base then broadly auriculate; petals rose-purple, 3 mm. long: stigma slightly 2-lobed; immature siliques ascending, 2m. long on a shorter pedicel, forming a loose spike more than 2 dm. long. The specimens are young and do not have mature fruit. Col- lected on Ixtaccihuatl, 1903, at 9-10,000 ft. elevation, growing in open woods. No. 304. Dalea Lemmoni Parry, was collected at Ixmiquilpan, Hidalgo, July, 1903, No. 405. The type of the species was found by Lem- mon near Ft. Bowie, South Arizona, and a variety, daxa Wat- son, has been distributed with Pringle’s sets, No. 1758, from Za- catecas, but this variety seems like a distinct species. Dr. Pur- pus’ plant extends the range of D. Lemmonii much southward. Machaonia fasciculata Gray, was collected on the Sierra de la Mesa, near Ixmiquilpan. The specimens agree with Dr. Gray’s short description. The upper leaves are simply, and the lower fasciculately ternate. No. 446. Spermacoce ambigua. Glabrous' or hirtello-puberulent; stems 4-winged; stipular bristles few, longer than the sheath; leaves opposite, the lower ones apparently fascicled on account of the development of young shoots in the axils the larger ones lin- ear-lanceolate, attenuate into a petiole 2-3 cm. long, 5 min. wide; inflorescence axillary or in terminal spikes of small I-5 flowered cymes, the uppermost minutely bracted; internodes 1-2 em. long; peduncles and pedicels 1-2 mm. long; flowers tetra- merous; Corolla 2 mm. long, short funnel-form, lobes short, lin- ear-lanceolate; style -shortly branched; fruit turbinate, 1% mm. long; short calyx lobes persistent. VoL. 5] A Collection of Mexican Plants. 181 This plant is a doubtful Spermacoce. Its general aspect is that of a Linum. Only tops were collected and they seem to have belonged to a fruticulose plant, but it may have been an annual. The fruit is not quite mature, so that the appearance of the perfectly ripe seed is unknown, It separates into two un- equal one-seeded carpels that are entirely covered on the inner faces by the very thin dissepiments. The ovary is affixed at its middle to the septum and the radicle is inferior. No. 417. Cordoba, Vera Cruz. Gentiana perpusilla. Annual, stems several, one-flowered; basal leaves crowded, margins light-colored, 1 cm. long, ovate- spatulate, acuminate, connate-sheathing; stems slightly exceeded by the corolla that is green outside and light blue within; its lobes are short, the plaits broad and acuminate; capsule clavate- obovate at length exserted on a long stipe beyond the corolla. This minute species is very near G. humilis. It was collected in wet meadows above the timber line of Ixtaccihuatl. Gilia Purpusi. Annual, stem simple, erect, 1-2 dm. high, puberulent; leaves 3-4 cm. long, pinnate into 8-12 ovate, acute, sharp-incised leaflets that are cuneate at base into a short petiolule, gradually decreasing in size from the terminal one, upper leaves with few linear-lanceolate leaflets and the uppermost becoming the bracts of the few, loosely flowered panicle; corolla rotate, 15 mim. in diameter, deeply 5-cleft, light blue, lobes ovate; calyx 5- parted into linear, acute, white-margined lobes, longer than the capsule; seeds numerous, mucilaginous when wetted. This species is nearest G. zzcisa, from which it differs mainly in having numerous pinnate leaves instead of a few basal lyrately- pinnatifid ones. Collected at Viesca, Coahuila. No. 132. Castilleia Purpusi. Perennial, frutescent, hirsute; stems 1 dm. high, usually simple from long subterranean root branches; lower leaves linear-lanceolate, obtuse or acute, slightly attenuate at base, 114-2 cm. long, 3-4 mm. wide; upper leaves and bracts trifid, the central lobe much the longest; calyx deeply cleft in front, slightly so behind, the lobes entire or emarginate; corolla 3% cm. long, when fully grown exserted beyond the calyx lobes one-quarter its length: galea tomentose, green upon the 182 A Collection of Mexican Plants. [ZOE back; lip very short, the three teeth acuminate, the central one much shorter than the others. The bracts and calyx are more or less tinged with red. Col- lected on rocky slopes above the timber line of Ixtaccihuatl. No. 320. Krynitzkia Mexicana. Annual, 1 dm. or more high, rough- hispid, stems slender, branched; leaves oblanceolate, 1 cm. long; flowers in the axils of the leaves and bracts: corolla equalling the ovate-lanceolate, yellowish-hispid calyx lobes, 3 mm. long, crests inconspicuous: nutlets 114 mm. long, ovate-triangular, the angles rounded except near the base, strongly muricate-granulose on the rounded back and plane faces, the ventral angle beveled from the apex % the length of the nutlet to the deeply exca- vated deltoid scar; gynobase subulate—pyramidal. This plant is to be compared with K. pusilla Gray, a species with the flowers in small spikes that have a naked appearance as the mature fruit and calyx gradually falls away from the base upward. . Mexicana is upright, more leafy, the flowers not in spikes and bears very different, larger nutlets. Collected at Viesca, Coahuila, 1903, No. 126. Mr. Pringle’s No. 8301, also from Coahuila, is a larger form of the same species with more mature and rounder nutlets. NEW SPECIES OF MEXICAN PLANTS. BY J. M. GREENMAN. Cerastium lithophilum. A low herbaceous perennial: stems branched, the slender branches often becoming somewhat mat- ted: ultimate branches ascending, 0.5 to 1.5 dm. high, gland- ular-pubescent, mostly leafy: leaves crowded at the base of the ascending branches, more remote and about equalling the in- ternodes above, often appressed to the stem, linear-lanceolate, 10 to 22 mm. long, 2 to 3 mm. broad, acute, entire, sessile and sub- connate at the base, glandular-pubescent on both surfaces: inflor- escence a terminal few-flowered cyme: flowers medium-sized for the genus: pedicels 4 mm. or less in length, and as well as the calyx densely glandular-pubescent: sepals oblong-lanceolate, 4.5 to 5 mm. long, 1.5 to 2 mm. broad, obtusish, glandular-pubescent on the outer surface: petals white, oblanceolate-cuneate, 6 to 7 mm. long, 2 mm. broad,deeply notched: stamens 10: ovary glab- rous; styles 5: capsule at maturity barely exceeding the calyx, 1o-toothed at the apex.—MeExico. State of Mexico: in rocky soil, Mt. Ixtaccihuatl, March to July, 1903, C. 4. Purpus, No. 231 (hb. Gr., hb. Brandg.). : Cerastium micropetalum. A low depressed annual (?), lan- ate-villous throughout: stems prostrate or ascending, 0.5 to 1 dm. in length, leafy: leaves opposite, sessile, linear-lanceolate, 8 to 1 5 mm. long, 2 to°3 mm. broad, acute, entire, subconnate at the base, lanate-villous on both surfaces: inflorescence terminating the as- cending branches in few-flowered leafy cymes: flowers small: pedicels 5 mm. or less long, and as well as the stems above stipi- tate-glandular: sepals lance-oblong, about 3.5mm. long, 1.5 mm. broad, acutish, glandular-pubescent: petals oblong-cuneate, 2 to 2.5 mm. long, notched for about one-third their length: stamens 10: ovary glabrous; styles 5.—MrExico. Stateof Mexico: Mt. Ixtaccihuatl, 1903, C. A. Purpus, No. 473 (hb. Gr., hb. Brandg,). Cerastium Purpusi. A low depressed herbaceous perennial (?), forming rather dense tufts, 0.5 to 1.2 dm. in diameter: stems leafy, villous-pubescent: leaves spatulate to oblong, 8 to 20 mm. long, 3 to 8mm. broad, obtuse, entire, more or less white-villous- 184 New Species of Mexican Plants. [ZOE pubescent on both surfaces, the lowermost narrowed into a sub- petiolate base, the upper sessile: infloresence terminal, cymose, few-flowered; pedicels 4 mm. or less in length: flowers medium- sized for the genus, about 1 cm. in diameter: sepals oblong, ob- tuse, 5 mm. long, 2 to 2.5 mm. broad, villous-pubescent: petals oblong-cuneate, exceeding the calyx, 6 to 7 mm. long, notched at the apex: ovary glabrous; styles 5: capsule at maturity slightly exceeding the calyx, about 6 mm. long: seeds subrotund, about I mm. in diameter, reddish, minutely tuberculate.—MEXxIco. State of Mexico: Mt. Ixtaccihuatl, 1903, C. A. Purpus, No. 472 (hb. Gr., hb. Brandg.). Arenaria oresbia. An herbaceous perennial: stems prostrate or ascending, bifarious-pubescent; internodes 1 to 30 mm. in length: leaves opposite, close and more or less imbricated, or re- mote and much exceeded by the internodes, lanceolate to ovate- lanceolate, 4 to 10 mm. long, t to 4mm. broad, acute, entire, more or less ciliate, subconnate at the base, thickish, glabrous on both surfaces, often pubescent on the prominent or somewhat keeled midrib beneath: flowers terminal or lateral, few: pedicels mostly short (less than 5 mm. long), occasionally 2 cm. in length, pubes- cent: calyx slightly urceolate; sepals lance-ovate and acute to lance-oblong and rather abruptly narrowed at the mucronate- acute apex, 4 to 6 mm. long, rather conspicuously keeled, scarious- margined, glabrous: petals exceeding the calyx, oblong-spatulate to slightly obovoid, 5 to 8 mm. long, sometimes slightly undulate- margined, white: stamens 10: ovary glabrous; styles 3: capsule 4 to 5 mm. long, separating from the top at maturity into 6 valves, —MExIco. State of Mexico: meadows on Mt. Ixtaccihuatl, alti- tude 3350 to 3655 m., March to July, 1903, C. A. Purpus, No. 288 (hb. Gr., hb, Brandg.). State of Jalisco: Nevado de Colima, altitude 3655 m., 16 May, 1903, C. G. Pringle, No, 5514 (hb. Gr.). The leaves in Mr. Pringle’s specimens are less ciliate than those collected by Mr. Purpus, but in other regards the correspondence is so close that the writer has no doubt the sentatives of one and the same species. 4. oresbia suggests in some ways the 4. scopulorum, HBK., but the leaves of the former are of distinctly different outline, the calyx-lobes are two plants are repre- vol. 5] New Species of Mexican Plants. 185 acute, or at least mucronate-acute, and the ovules and seeds are far more numerous than in the latter species. Dalea erythrorhiza. An herbaceous perennial: stems usually several from a suffruticose base, prostrate or ascending, 1 to 3. dm. in length, simple or subdichotomously branched, glabrous, tuber- culate-glandular, reddish: leaves including the petiole 1.5 to 6 cm. long, 1 to 2 cm. broad, pinnately compound; petioles as well as the rhachises sparingly pubescent; leaflets petiolulate, 7 to 15, disposed in 3 to 7 pairs, oblong-obovate, 3 to 10 mm. long, 1.5 to 6 mm. broad, retuse, entire, light green above, paler beneath, glabrous on both surfaces, glandular-punctate: infloresence spi- cate, 1 to 4. cm, in length; peduncles 1 cm. or less long: flowers bracteate; bracts ovate-acuminate, 7 to 8 mm. long, acute, glab- rous, glandular-punctate, often purplish, scarious-margined, at first completely surrounding the flower, early caducous: calyx deeply 5-toothed, long-sericeous-villous along the ten ribs and on the linear-attenuate calyx-teeth, corolla barely exceeding the calyx, dark blue; vexillum with a slender claw and an ovate- oblong 3-mm.-long lamina, bearing as well as the wings and parts of the keel 2 to 6 glands at the junction of lamina and claw: ovary 2-ovuled, and as well as the base of the style long-villous- pubescent.—MeExico. State of Durango: near the City of Du- rango, April to November, 1896, Dr. Edward Palmer, No. 487 (hb. Gr.). State of Zacatecas: in gravelly soil, near the City of Zacatecas, altitude 2135 to 2440 m., August, 1903, C. A. Purpus, No. 452 (hb. Gr., hb., Brandg.). Nama torynophyllum. A low depressed much-branched an- nual, forming rather dense mats 1 to 1.5 dm. in diameter, cinere- ous-pubescent throughout: leaves alternate, spatulate, including the petiole o.5 to 1,5 cm. long, 2 to 5 mm. broad, rounded at the apex, entire, strongly recurved-margined, contracted below to a narrowly winged petiole, presenting an inverted spoon-like ap- pearance, cinereous-hirsute on both surfaces and on the under or concave surface bearing also stipitate-glandular hairs: flowers small, axillary, usually short-pedicellate; pedicels 3 mm. or less in length: calyx deeply 5-parted, persistent; divisions linear, ob- tuse, pubescent: corolla white, about 3 mm. long, slightly exceed- 186 New Species of Mexican Plants. [ZOE ing the calyx, 5-lobed; lobes subrotund: ovary glabrous: styles essentially equal, 0,5 mm. or less in length, glabrous, more or less persistent: capsule oblong, about 2.5 mm. long, glabrous, many- seeded.—MExico. State of Coahuila: in sandy soil, Pefia, 1903, C. A. Purpus, No. 124 (hb. Gr., hb. Brandg. ). Eupatorium rivale. Stem terete, puberulent: leaves opposite, petiolate, ovate, 7 to 11 cm, long, 5 to 8 cm. broad, acuminate, acute, unequally crenate-dentate, cordate, puberulent above, pu- bescent on the nerves and veins beneath and bearing here and there on the under surface patches of tomentum, 3-5-nerved from the base; petioles 3 to 5.5 cm. long: heads 8 to ro mm. high, dis- posed in finely pubescent axillary corymbs together forming an elongated leafy panicle: peduncles slender: involucre narrowly cainpanulate, shorter than the 2 5 to 30 flowers; bracts of the in- volucre 2-3-seriate, subequal or the outermost shorter, striate, slightly pubescent: corollas white: Pappus of uniform sete, white: mature achenes 2 mm. long, pubescent on the angles.— MExIco. State of Mexico: Mt. Ixtaccihuatl, altitude 21 50 to 2460 m., 1903, C. 4. Purpus, No. 213 (hb. Gr., and hb. Brandg.). In general aspect E. rivale resembles £. petiolare, Mog., but is readily distinguished from it by having the leaves only sparingly pubescent beneath, smaller and fewer-flowered heads, and the corolla-lobes externally pilose-pubescent, Eupatorium vernicosum, Schz. Bip. in herb. Shrub: stem much-branched; ultimate branchlets as well as the foliage and in- florescence glutinous: leaves Opposite, petiolate, ovate, 2 to 5.5 em. long, 2 to 4.5 cm. broad, acute or short-acuminate, dentate, cordate at the base, glabrous on both surfaces; petioles 1 to 2.5 cm. long: inflorescence few-headed cymes, terminating the stem and branches; peduncles 1 to 3 cm, long: heads 1.5 cm, high, 40- 50-flowered: involucre 3-seriate; bracts of the involucre lance- olate, To to 13 mm. long, acute, subequal or the outermost shorter, of unequal sete; corollas white or roseate: mature achene long, pubescent, pentagonal in cross-section.—MExIco, State of Mexico: rocks near timber line, Mt. Ixtaccihuatl, altitude 3350 to 3650 m., 1903, C. A. Purpus, No. 180 (hb. Gr., hb. Brandg.). VOL. 5] Palms of Baja California. 187 Without locality, Avvendberg, No. 376a (hb. Gr.). This species has its affinity with 4. msgind@folium, Gray, E. chapalense, Wat- son, and &. campylocladum, Robinson, but is amply distinct from allof them. ‘The unequal setz of the pappus is rather an excep- tional trait in the genus, nevertheless all the other essential characters are in common with typical Aupatorium. PALMS OF BAJA CALIFORNIA. BY T. S. BRANDEGEE. Washingtonia filifera, W. Sonora, Erythea armata and £.. edulis are grown in the gardens about San Diego, and a few young plants of EArythea Brandegei are established. The seeds of £. Brandegez have been extensively planted in Southern California recently, and it seems as if this palm should grow well in its new habitat, for it will not experience as much frost and ice as it does on its native mountains. Wendland based the genus Washingtonia upon a palm pre- viously known as Brahea filifera. W.vrobusta was later added to the genus, but is by many considered to be doubtfully distinct, and there seems to be a good deal of uncertainty concerning both these species. In Botanische Zeitung, 37, 1878, Wendland describes the genus Washingtonia and writes that credit is due to Herr J. Linden of Ghent for the first importation, perhaps in the year 1869—at the time of this description seed collected a few years after 1870 in Cantillas Cafion had been distributed. One of the earliest notices of the palms now known as Washingtonia is in Botanische Zeitung, 34, where Pritchardia filamentosa is men- tioned as a garden name for plants raised in Europe, said to have been collected about Arizona and the Colorado River. The locality from which the seed came that Wendland examined later is not stated.. Under the rule, “once a synonym always a synonym,’ the name Washingtonia has been changed to Neo- washingtonia, but, in common usage, the new name is disregarded. 188 Palms of Baja Caltfornia. [ZOE In Pflanzenfamilien the genus is considered by Drude a sub- genus of Pritchardia. Much of the W. filifera now cultivated in California probably came from seed collected along the western edge of the Colorado Desert and Cantillas Cafion, a locality in Baja California, just below the boundary line near Campo. This palm is a native of the dry climate of the interior, generally growing on the eastern slope uf the mountains, where in the bottom of the cafions their roots will find plenty of water. I do not know a locality where they are found in a cafion running toward the western slope, but they may grow in such situations in Central Lower California, where so many plants of the Colorado Desert find their way to near the Pacific Coast. Washingtonia Sonore was described from specimens collected about Guaymas by Dr. Palmer, and it is not improbable that the species may extend northward along the Gulf of California to the region about the Rio Colorado, from which the first plants of W. filifera came. This palm grows also at Mazatlan and along the coast of the Cape Region of Lower California. On account of its love for the ocean breezes, it is a more suitable palm for the upper California coast than W. Jilifera from higher altitudes and a desert climate. At San José del Cabo the residents recognize two forms of W. Sonor@, which they name ‘‘Palma blanca” and “Palma rubra.” A way of distinguishing with certainty these two varieties is by cutting into the trunk and the color of the wood, white or reddish, is then evident. There seems tu be no other definite character by which the two varieties can be dis- tinguished. Erytheas are palms of much slower growth than the Washing- tonias. £. armata, or the blue palm, is abundant in Northern Lower California, growing in cafions or along the sandy bottom of dry streams after they leave the mountains, on both eastern and western slopes. £. edulis, the Guadalupe palm, is endemic upon Guadalupe Island. On the eastern slope of the island it is confined to the cations, but on the western slope it often covers large areas. VOL. 5] Notes on Cactee. 189 E. Brandegei,* a description of which recently appeared in Gartenflora and is here reprinted for the benefit of those who may not have access to that publication, grows abundantly in the mountains of the Cape Region of Lower California, in the cafions or often covering mountain slopes on northern exposures. Gen- erally, the dead leaves fall away, leaving a hard, smooth trunk less than two feet in diameter, even though it may reach an altitude of 125 feet. When it reaches a great height, the trunks lose the stiffness of the other species of the genus and wave with the wind. It is known tothe people of the Cape Region as ‘‘I,a Palmia,’’ and a form of it not well distinguished they name “Palma negra.’”’ A few trees in cultivation about San José del Cabo are called Palma de Tlaco. The young buds, two feet long, are cut from the top of the tree and eaten by the people of the vicinity—they are soft and taste very much like a raw turnip. The young shoots of E. edulis also are eaten by the Mexicans. NOTES ON CACTEA. KATHARINE BRANDEGEE. The first ‘‘Nachtrage’’ of Dr. Karl Schumann’s ‘“‘Monographia Cactacearum’’ has appearod. It is a pamphlet of viii-171 pages, and covers the period 1898-1902. Perhaps the most noticeable thing in the work is the absence of the ‘‘Cat.’’ citations so numerous in the previous publication, but the many named ‘‘Reiches,’’ bringing together all sorts of heterogeneous elements, are still in evidence, *Erythea Brandegeei, C. A. Purpus. n. sp. Trunco procero interdum 30 m.alto vel ultra, 3 dm. diametro fere usque ad coronam laeve. Foliis 10-12, flabelliformibus, sub- tomentosis, sparse filiferis, subtus pallide glaucis, atro viridioribus, vix 1 m. longis, ultra medium in segmenta angusta (1-3 cm, lata) divisis, segmentis ad apicem bifidis, laciniis 2- 10 cm. longis; petiolo glabro, 1-1% m. longo, margine dentibus numerosis, ad 5 mm. lon- gis, vestito. Panicula tomentosa, ut videtur paullo ramosa. Floribus sessilibus, subsoli- tariis, 244 mm. longis; calyce 3-partito, . lobis deltoideis, subciliatis, corolla valvata, 3 loba lobis quam lobis calycinis duplo longioribus; filamentis deltoideeis-acuminatis, ovario oblongo, carpellis mox separatis, stylis brevibus, connatis; fructu subsolitario, 10-15 mm. diametro, latere ventrali subapplanato, embryone ad medium versus lateris dorsalis seminis, Valde differte a duabus speciebus adhuc descriptis (E. edulis et E. armata) foliis textura, tenuire, a medio declinatis. Fructus magnitudine E, edulis, sed pedunculo longiore macula embryonale seminis deficiente. 190 Notes on Cactee. [ZOE The sequence of the subfamilies is not changed, but is suggest- edin the preliminary pages. In theearlier workit ran: Subfam. i. Cereoideze; ii. Opuntioidee iii. Peireskioideze. In the later this order is reversed, the seed coats are not mentioned, and the classification rests principally upon the presence or absence of barbed setze (glochidia). It is perilous in the present state of our knowledge to generalize upon the surface structure of seeds as is evidenced by his statement that the seeds of the Cereoidez are “always shining, brittle and black.’’ Certainly they are not always shining, and they are commonly red or yellowish-brown in two sections of Mamillaria (Coryphantha and Lactescentes). ‘“‘Always”’ is a dangerous word in this family of plants. . Some of the new species of mamillaria described by Prof. Coulter,* alternatus, brunneus, capillaris, densispinis, eschauzieri, maculatus, Pringlei, radians-pectenoides, omitted from Monog. Cact., have not been included in the Nachtrage, although the author’s attentiont was called to the matter, Such omissions, which are but examples of many others, it is . needless to say, seriously injure the value of the work. CEREUS GREGGII Engelm, has been found in Sierra de la Trinidad, Baja California, by Mr. Carlos Grabendorfer, who writes that it is locally known as ‘‘Reina de la Noche.”’ CEREUS STELLATUS Pfeiff. Too this species, according to Prof. Schumaun, belongs C. Sonorensis Runge Cat. & C. Simonii Hildm, C. Sonorensis was later described by Schumann, M. f. K. xi, 135, (1901). But C. Sonorensis is certainly a synonym of C. Alamosensis Coult., the type of which was collected at Alamos in Sonora. It has been collected also at Topolobampo, Sinaloa, by Captain Porter, by Dr. Purpus not far from Guaymas, and abundantly in Northern Sonora by Mrs. Main. The following notes were taken from plants flowering in our garden: Flowers 6-8 cm. long, nearly tubular, expansion less than 3 cm., the whole flower with the ovary of the same color, some- what translucent coral-red, but of different shades in different *Cont. U.S. Nat. Museum, iii, No. 2, under “Cactus.” +Zoe, V. 16, * VOL. 5] Notes on Cactee. 1QI plants; becoming recurved; filaments rosy, stout at base anthers violet or purplish, shorter than the style which is white with white acute stigmas which connive, forming a conical body. Scales of the ovary triangular ovate, bearing wool and some- times bristles. Spines variable in number. The flower opens in the morning and remains expanded night and day for about 48 hours. No fruit formed on our plants; the peculiar structure of the stigmas perhaps marks their degenera- tion. Cereus THuRBERI Engelm. var. littoralis. Stems low branching from the base, the branches more slender than in the type and strongly curved. Flowers reddish, much darker than the type. Fruit smaller and said to be better flavored than typical C, Thurbert. On steep seacoast bluffs between San José del Cabo and Cabo San Lucas, Baja California, collected by T. S. Brandegee in 1892* and later by Dr. C. A. Purpus. Cereus vagans. Stems prostrate, branching, light green, but the younger stems and joints often purple, reaching 1 m. in length, 20-25 mm. in diameter at base with roots springing from the whole length, texture rather dry and horny; ribs 8-9 rounded, elevated, well separated, not tuberculate; areolae of the same rib on old shoots 12-15 mm. asunder, woolly, the spines much shorter than the internodes, Spines slender but stiff, white or whitish, 3-6 mm. long, not regularly arranged radials 8-12 with 1-4 slender and longer bristly ones below, centrals 2-6 in two series. Collected by Mr. T. S. Brandegee on El Creston, an island in the harbor at Mazatlan, at various times, and later by Dr. C. A. Purpus, neither of them finding traces of flowers or fruit. It has been in cultivation in our green-house and in the open air for three years, and aJthough it flourishes, some of the stems reach- ing 2 m. in length, it has not so far bloomed. I am sorry to have to describe a plant without flowers or fruit, but it is done in order to obviate a greater evil. It has gone into *Proc. Cal. Acad., ser. 2, iii, 223. 192 Notes on Cactee. [ZOE trade under this name and there is always danger of such plants being loosely described and no type kept. Cereus pensilis. Ribs 8-10 little elevated, often lost in low tubercles; areolze 3-4 mm. in diameter about 2 cm. apart on the same rib; spines rather slender, bulbous at base, at first yellow, becoming reddish gray, on the young growth usually 8 radials, 1 central, all of about the same length—z cm., in age somewhat longer, more numerous and arranged in about 3 series; flowers red, 5-6 cm. in length, with rather long and slender tube, the ex- pansion not equaling the length; areolz of the ovary and tube with yellowish wool and slender chestnut spines I cm. or more in length; fruit globular, spinose, 114-2 cm. in diameter; seeds very numerous, black rugose, nearly 2 mm. long, very oblique at base. Collected by T. S. Brandegee, No. 246 of his ‘‘Flora of the Cape Region” in the Sierra de la Laguna, Baja California, since collected by him in the same place on several occasions, and also by Dr. C. A. Purpus. It is perhaps also the plant mentioned* under C. Phoentccus var. Pacificus as growing on cliffs at Comondu. It is a very conspicuos plant as it hangs six feet in length, with many scarlet red blossoms from the mountain ledges. Wherever it grows on levels, however, the branches are more or less upright and a foot or more long. It probably belongs to the § Echinocereus, Cereus (Echinocereus) sciurus. Densely cespitose forming clumps sometimes 2 feet in diameter, the numerous short, up- right heads covered with slender short spines, gray on the older parts, light yellowish brown with darker tips on the young growth; ribs 12-17, low and much disconnected, on the growth of the year often entirely resolved into tubercles; areolz small soon naked, 5-8 mm. apart on the same rib; radial spines 15-18, centrals 1-6, laterals longest rarely re slender, centrals little stouter; flowers 7c expansion; ovary and tube densely spin aching 15 mm. very m. long, about 9 cm. in ose; petals in 2-4 rows *Proc. Cal. Acad., ser, 2, ii, 162. VOL. §1 Notes on Cactee. 193 bright magenta, paler towards the base the tips erose, acute, the outer surface marked with numerous striz; stamens numerous with greenish filaments and yellow anthers; pistil green with obtuse stigmas; seeds tuberculate about 1 mm. long. Collected by T. S. Brandegee April, 1897, on hills near San José del Cabo, Baja California. Mamillarla Poselgeri Hildm. Prof. Schumann identifies 17. Roseana Brandg. with the above published in ‘“Gartenflora”’ 1885, p 559, abb. 131. The omission from ‘‘Monog, Cact.”’ of this place of publication in a well known German journal was hardly excusable. M. Schumannii Hildm. ‘To this species, very poorly charac- terized, Prof. Schumann refers, probably correctly, MZ. venusta Brandg. Mamillaria Pringlei Coult. In previous notes* by some slip for which I cannot account, this species was compared with J/. Carretiz, with which it is in no way connected. ‘The plant in- tended was M7. Pfeiffer’, with which it appears to be entirely identical. Never having read over the paper until the prepara- tion of this paper, I was unaware of the confusion. M. obscura Hildm. To this 1. Kleinschmidtiana Zeiss. ap- pears to be much more closely related than to 7. angularis Lk. & Otto, where Prof. Schumann refers it. Mamillaria petrophila. Lactescent, attaining a height and diameter of 15 cm. but ordinarily a third less, tubercles short with broad base; areolz soon naked; spines chestnut color, becoming paler in age; radials 10, about 1 cm. long, central 1, sometimes 2, stronger, darker, and nearly twice as long, all porrect spreading; axils densely clothed nearly to the base of the plant with unusually large and long tufts of fulvous wool in which the fruits are nearly hidden; flowers bright greenish-yel- low within and without, abruptly expanded above the ovary, 18-20 mm. long; petals and sepals hardly acute, lightly erose: stamens and 6-parted stigma the same color as the flower: berry small, roundish, color not noted; seeds reddish, smooth, less than I mm. in length. Zoe, V. 7. 194 Notes on Cactee. [ZOE Collected by Mr. T.S. Brandegeein Sierra de la Laguna, and Sierra San Francisquito in September and October, 1899, and later in the same general region by Dr. C. A. Purpus. Mamillaria lenta. Cespitose by dichotomous branching form- ing nearly flat-topped masses, the body thick and fleshy, the divisions 3-5 cm. in diameter and probabiy 1-2 cm. above ground: tubercles slenderly conical, about 1 cm. long, light green; areole not woolly; spines all spreading and all alike excepting that the later formed are yellow in the center of young tubercles, they are so soft and fragile as to be difficult to count, but appear to be 30-40 in number; axils with short per- sistent wool and an occasional bristle; flowers not seen, fruit clavate, red, 1 cm. long, few-seeded; seeds dull black, more than, 1 mm. long, tuberculate not punctate, strongly constricted above the hilum, the upper part globose. Collected by Dr, C. A. Purpus on rocks near Viesca in Coahuila, January, 1904. OPUNTIA BRADTIANA (Coult.) For this plant Prof. Schumann adopts the name cereiformis. The history given below shows that the oldest descriptions, both under Cereus and Opuntia, belong to Bradtiana. Grusonia cerciformis Hort. Nicolai, nomen nudum 1894 Grusonia cereiformis, M. J. K., iv, 116, no notice or description whatever of the plant—a dissertation by Dr. Schumann on the impropriety of catalogue names. Cereus Bradtianus Coult. Cont. Nat. Mus., ili, 406, (April, 1896) Grusonia cereiformis M. J. K., vi, 127, (August, 1896). Herr Liebner announced that the plant to which this name had been given was growing and was undoubtedly an Opuntia, as it showed the characteristic leaves, Grusonia cereiformis Reichb. Jun. M. J. K. vi, 177, (Decem- ber, 1896) Schumann writes on seeing the plant growing in Rebut’s collection; that there is on account of the leaves a “growing probability” of its belonging to Opuntia. — aan Brandegee, Erythea v, 121 , (Nov. 24, 1897.) Opuntia cereiformis Weber in Bois’ Dict. 897. March, 1808. VOL. 5] A New Calamintha. 195 Opuntia cereiformis Web., Schumann in Monog. Cact, 660, 1898, Synonymy, Grusonia cereiformis, Cereus Bradtianus, O. Bradtiana, Prof. Schuman therefore has deliberately given priority to an undescribed catalogue name. No doubt cevezformis is the prefer- able name and the use of uneuphonious personal names for species is a crying evil, but no such reason could have influenced the author of &. Strausianus, Froelichianus, Soehrensit, O. Schwer- tntana, C. Lauterbachit, C. Damaziot, etc. The real reason, probably, is the one given in Monog. Cact. under JZ. centricirrha, which is adopted in spite of a dozen older names, because the plant is best known under that name in Ger- many. ‘The few people living outside of Germany apparently do not count. A NEW CALAMINTHA. BY T. S. BRANDEGEE, Calamintha Chandleri. Stems frutescent, branching, 1 m. high, forming clumps, upper parts pubescent: leaves orbicular or broadly ovate, with truncate or cuneate base, obtuse, crenate- serrate or entire, 1 cm. long and broad, slightly pubescent on the upper face, more so on the lower: petioles pubescent, 5 mm. long: flowers single or in 2-4-flowered cymes in the axils of the leaves; peduncles and pedicels 1-2 mm. long: bracts linear- lanceolate: calyx tubular-campanulate, slightly bilabiate, 6-7 mm. long; the teeth about 1 mm. long, triangular, acuminate, those of the lower lip slightly longer: corolla 13 mm. long, pubescent outside, cream-white; the tube straight, as long as the calyx; lobes of the lower lip 3 mm. long and broad, the middle one largest, those of the upper lip short: stamens conniving in pairs: style bearing a few scattered hairs nearly its whole length. Collected by H. P. Chandler near San Diego, California, on Mount San Miguel, May 21, 1904. AuGusT 19, 1905 PLANTS FROM SINALOA, MEXICO. BY T. S. BRANDEGEE. The collection upon which this paper is based was made in - Sinaloa. August, 1904, I landed at Altata and from there went to Culiacan. The flora about this city and along the railway to Altata was collected during the months of September and Oc- tober. In November the plants growing about Cofradia and in the Cerro Colorado were collected. Cofradia and Cerro Colo- rado are east from Culiacan thirty or more miles, and near to the boundary line of the State of Durango. Cerro Colorado is a small mountain with peaks of red rock that are perhaps 2000 feet above sea level. Abundant rains fell during August, September and October, bringing forth a luxuriant vegetation and making it possible to find many species, ‘The following pages contain in addition to descriptions of new species, only names of those plants whose distribution seems worthy of note. Sagittaria Greggii J. G. Smith. ? Growing five feet high in ponds about Culiacan. No mature fruit was collected. Andropogon brevifolius Sw. Cerro Colorado. Andropogon fastigiatus Sw. Cofradia and very abundant on Cerro Colorado. Paspalum pyramidale Nees. Growing in ponds about Culiacan. Panicum Oaxacense Fourn. Cerro Colorado. Pennisetum setosum Rich. Cerro Colorado. Campulosus planifolius Pres]. Identified at the Department of Agrostology, Washington, D. C. Erythea aculeata. Trunk 6-7 m. high: blade of the leaf 4-6 dm. long, cleft below the middle; the segments bifid at the apex, about forty in number, slightly filamentose with threads ; 2.5 dm. long: petioles slender, 5 dm, and more long, triangular in cross-section, armed upon the edges with slightly hooked Spines that are 1 mm. long: fruit globular, somewhat flattened on one side, 2.5 cm. in diameter: embryo near the base on the dorsal side: albumen deeply excavated near the base of the ventral side forming a cavity 7 mm, long and half as wide. VOL. 5] Plants from Sinaloa, Mexico. 197 This palm is small and never becomes more than about twenty feet high. The petiole of my specimen is only 1 cm. wide. The dry fruit in appearance is much like that of £. edudis, but the excavation in the albumen is larger. The flowers are unknown. Abundant near Cofradia. Sabal sp. A handsome palm growing near Cofradia. Washing tonia Sonore Watson. A fewslender palms, probably belonging to this species, grow on the Plaza of Culiacan. Tradescantia Palmeri Rose. Culiacan. _ Echeandia nodosa Watson. Culiacan, Cofradia. Pitcairnia monticola. Acaulescent: leaves linear, 4-6 mm. wide below the middle, 3-3.5 dm. long, attenuate to each end, margins entire, more or less flocculent-pubescent: the 2-dm. long peduncle and linear-acuminate bract-leaves white with a de- ciduous tomentum: lower bract-leaves armed with short, recurved spines: flowers 10-14, in a simple raceme 6-8 cm. long; pedicels about 8 mm. long; petals twice the length of the 2-cm. long sepals: bracts nearly as long or exceeding the sepals. Growing on the ground about the summit of Cerro Colorado. The color of the flower-bracts and sepals is light red and probably the petals when fresh are also red. The species is nearest P. Jaliscana, differing in its white tomentose peduncle and raceme, longer flower-bracts and smaller flowers. ‘The specimens must have been more tomentose when young. Thalia geniculata 1, Growing in shallow ponds about Culiacan. Trophis sp. Perhaps a form of 7. Americana. ‘The spikes of pistillate flowers are 1-4-flowered. A small tree growing on Cerro Colorado. Populus dimorpha. A rough-barked tree with a trunk be- coming 2 m. in thickness, spreading branches and 20 m, or more high: leaves of the young trees linear-lanceolate, attenuate into a very short petiole, 1-3 cm. long, 2 mm. wide, serrate: leaves of older trees deltoid-ovate, long-acuminate, 10 cm. long, 7 cm. wide, crenate-serrate, truncate or cuneate at base: petioles flat- tened, 5 cm. long: pistillate aments about 7 cm. long, growing from wood of the preceding year, much exceeded by the young 198 Plants from Sinaloa, Mexico. [ZoR growth of the present year: capsule ovate-acuminate, 2-valved, 7 mm. long, opening in September. Common along the Culiacan, Humaya and Tamazula Rivers. The young trees bearing only linear leaves resemble willows, and until I saw older trees bearing also deltoid leaves was it cer- tain that they belonged to Populus. ‘Trees that bear both sorts of foliage have numerous intermediate leaf forms. ‘The aments growing from the almost leafless part of the branches gives the fruiting tree an appearance different from a typical cottonwood. All other species of the genus bloom in the early part of the year and soon mature their fruit. The wood is very soft and is brought into Culiacan to be made into boards. Staminate aments and pistillate flowers were not seen. Okenia hypogea C. & S. Leaves with sinuate margins, sta- mens, 7, peduncles elongated to 15 cm. and more. Collected on sand dunes near Altata. Philoxerus vermicularis Moq. Growing on saline flats about Altata. Cleome Sinaloensis. Annual, 3-4 dm. high, much branched, viscid-pubescent, somewhat rough to the touch: petioles 1.5-2 em. long; leaflets 3, broadly ovate-acuminate, 2.5 cm. long, 1.4 cm. wide; bracts nearly sessile, glandular-pubescent: calyx lobes linear, 4 mm. long; petals a half longer, yellowish-white, spatu- late; stamens 6; pedicel of mature pod 2cm. long; stipe 3 mm. long; capsule torulose, pointed at both ends, glabrous, 4-—4.5 cm. long, 3 mm. wide; seeds muricate and finely striate, 2.5 mm. in diameter. Collected in the vicinity of Culiacan. Drymaria effusa Gray. Cofradia. Compared with the type by Dr. J. M. Greenman. Acacia crinita. A bush 4-5 m. high, the unarmed young branches and petioles villous-hirsute with white or yellowish hairs that are 4-5 mm. long; petiole with rachis of the leaf 5-6 em. long; pinnz 2-3 pairs 4-10 cm, long: leaflets 4-8 pairs, ovate- oblong, the longer 23 mm. long, 14 mm. wide, obtuse or retuse, glabrous on both surfaces; stipules linear-lanceolate, 8 mm. long, ciliate; the oblong or globular heads on axillary peduncles 3-4 cm. long; flowers white: stamens very numerous; fruit unknown. VOL. 5] Plants from Sinaloa, Mexzco. 199 This slender bush grows on the slopes of the Cerro Colorado. It had not come into bloom, and diligent search was required to find a few flowering heads. Dr. Robinson obligingly compared specimens with A. vi//osa, to which it seems to be allied. Mimosa Palmeri Rose. Collected only in fruit. The pointed pubescent pod 3-4 cm. long, 3 mm. wide, 6-8 seeded and short- stipulate, is curved into a semi-circle. Common about Cofradia. Dr. Palmer collected it near Alamos in flower. Mimosa spirocarpa Rose. Spikes 12-14 cm. long. It formed no fruit. Common about Culiacan. Mimosa polyantha Benth., and its var., /evior Rob., are abund- ant about Culiacan. Mimosa distachya Cav. Near Altata. Mimosa asperata \,. var. Berlandieri Rob. Much less pubescent and strigilose than Pringle’s 3798. Pithecolobium. Several species were collected and have not been determined. Calliandra rupestris. A small tree 4 m. high, the branches unarmed, brown, glabrous: internodes 3-6 cm. long; petioles 14 mm. long; pinnz + pair, 7 mm. long, slightly pubescent: leaflets 2 pairs, the veins conspicuous, the inner one of the lower pair small; terminal leaflets oblique-ovate, obtuse or somewhat pointed, apiculate, 3 cm. long, 15 mm. wide, glabrous excepting a few marginal hairs; larger leaflet of lower pair similar to those of the upper pair, the inner one rarely absent, 2-7 mm. long; stipules broadly lanceolate, 4 mm. long; flowers sessile in heads on peduncles 12 mm. long, one or two from the axils: calyx 2 nim. long, the short teeth rufous-pubescent; corolla 5 mm. long; stamens 10, 3-5 cm. long, dark purple below shading into a lighter color above; legume unknown. Growing among large rocks in a cafion near Cofradia. From their described characters this species seems to be near C. tergemina and C. Seemannt. Calliandra Coulteri Watson. A form with 14-15 pairs of nar- row leaflets and often 4 pairs of pinnae. Growing in shade of bushes and trees near Culiacan. Calliandra grandiflora Benth. Cofradia. 200 Plants from Sinaloa, Mexico. [ZOE Lysiloma Watsont Rose. Cofradia. Lystloma sp. Nearly glabrous, with large semicordate stipules that persist. Collected only in flower. Near the plant collected by Pringle in Rincon Mts., Arizona, 1884. Bauhinia (Paz/etia) chlorantha. A bush 2-3 m. high, the sulcate stems finely pubescent; leaves orbicular in circumscrip- tion, cordate, bilobed one-quarter of their length, the lobes rounded, pubescent on the 7-9 nerves beneath, 4-5 cm. long and wide; petioles 15 mm. long, pubescent; the stipules are slightly re- curved prickles 5 mm. long and 4 mm. broad or less at the base; flowers in pairs in a terminal raceme or from the upper axils; peduncles 2 cm. long; calyx 10-12 cm. long, finely pubescent; Stamens united near the base, 5 fertile, with narrow, pointed anthers 18 mm. long, the others with as long filaments and shorter, linear-lanceolate, rudimentary anthers; petals narrowly linear, not half as long as the stamens: pistil of the open flower 14-15 cm. long, exceeding the filaments; stipe of the pubescent Ovary 7-8 cm. long: legume pubescent, 20-22 cm. long, 15 mm. wide, acuminate, plane. This species is near &. leptopetala DC., but differs from it as figured in Calques des Dess. FI, Mex., in having rounded lobes to the 9-nerved leaf, larger flowers and longer petals. The flowers of B. chlorantha have nearly the color of the surrounding vege- tation. Collected in the vicinity of Culiacan. Krameria prostrata. The hirsute stems prostrate, sparingly branched, 3-4 dm. long; larger leaves linear-lanceolate, nearly sessile, 2 cm. long, 2-3 mm. wide, hirsute beneath; flowers on 2-bracted peduncles 1 cm. long; sepals 1 cm. long; the three upper petals united three-fourths their length; stamens united near their bases; capsule globose, white silky-pubescent, 8 mm. in diameter; the spines subulate, 1 mm. long. Collected at Cofradia. The slender stems of this species are not woody and the plant spreads flat upon the ground amongst other vegetation and but for the purple sepals would not be con- spicuous. VOL. 5] Plants from Stnaloa, Mexico. 201 Parkinsonia aculeata 1, ‘This small tree grows abundantly about Culiacan in depressions that after heavy rains are filled with water. 5 Hematoxylon boreale Watson. Very common about Culiacan. Crotalaria eriocarpa Benth. Abundant about Cofradia. Crotalaria Maypurensis HBK.2 A single specimen in fruit was collected at Cofradia. It is nearly the same as Pringle’s 4818, but has even more foliaceous stipules. Dalea revoluta Watson. A perennial growing in dense clumps. The specimens are the same as those collected by the Lumholtz _ Expedition in Sonora. : Dalea diffusa Moric. Cofradia. Dalia minor (Rose). Prostrate, spreading. Cofradia. Tephrosia Toxicaria Pers. Cofradia and Cerro Colorado. Tephrosia multifolia Rose. Not typical. Leaves more acumi- nate and cuneate at base. Flowers white, tinged with purple, vexillary stamen free only at base. A bush six feet high. Cerro Colorado. ; Tephrosia rhodantha. Several stems 4-5 dm. high from a perennial root, hirsute with short spreading hairs and fewer much longer ones intermixed; leaves 10 cm. long and less witha short petiole 1 cm. long; leaflets 2.5 cm. long, 6 mm. wide, ob- long, rounded at each end, nerves prominent beneath, acuminate with the excurrent midnerve, appressed white-hirsute upon both sides, whiter beneath, nearly sessile, about 8 pairs and a terminal one; stipules linear-lanceolate, 7 mm. long; flowers in terminal and axillary spikes 2 dm. long or less; bracts linear-lanceolate, 5 mm. long; calyx 2 mm. broad and long, the linear-lanceolate teeth longer than the purple-tinged tube, appressed white- hirsute; flowers brick-red: banner 1 cm. long, slightly exceeding the keel: vexillary stamen free; mature legume sessile in the calyx, 6.5 cm. long, 4 mm. wide, slightly curved toward the tip, spar- ingly hirsute, acuminate. Collected at Cofradia. Aischynomene Acapulcensis Rose. The specimens are much younger than Dr. Palmer’s and consequently more viscid. The plants are villous-pubescent. Cerro Colorado. 202 Plants from Sinaloa, Mexico. [ZOE LE schynomene amorphoides Rose. A bush or small tree 15 feet high in the Cerro Colorado, Zornia diphylla Pers. The western Mexican and Lower Cali- fornia specimens differ from those of Central Mexico somewhat. The more acute leaves are larger and the bracts are not so’ evidently punctate. There are also other minor differences. Desmodium gramineum Gray. Cerro Colorado. Desmodium orbiculare Schl. Cerro Colorado. Desmodium (Chalarium) chartaceum. Frutescent, 2 m. high, the weak stems drooping at the ends, the younger growth, pedicels and branches of the panicle furnished with few, short, weak, uncinate hairs, otherwise glabrous; leaflets chartaceous, three or sometimes one: the terminal one, 6 cm. or less long, 20-22 mm. wide near the rounded base and then tapering to an obtuse or retuse apex that is rarely minutely mucronate: the lateral leaflets 15 mm. below the terminal, half its length, the same width and more oval in outline; petiole I-3.5 cm. long; stipules 7 mm. long, linear-lanceolate, striate, soon deciduous; the leafless branching panicle 2 dm. long, pedicels 1-1.5 cm. long; calyx lobes 2 mm. long exceeding the tube; corolla purple, 8 mm. long; legume flat, stipitate, 23 mm. long, 3 mm. wide; joints 5, elliptical. Near D. Ghiesbreghtii Hemsley, judging from its description. Cerro Colorado. Centrosema sagittata H. & B. Cofradia. Canavalia acuminata Rose. Culiacan and Cofradia. Rhynchosia rupicola. Stems twining, 1 m. long, whole plant glandular-pubescent: petiole 1-2 cm. long: terminal leaflet ovate-acuminate, 3-3.5 cm. long, 2 cm. wide; lateral leaflets oblique-ovate, all resinous-dotted on under side: stipules triangu- lar-lanceolate: facemes with 2-3 branches, axillary, 9-12 cm. long, 3-4 times exceeding the leaves; calyx 5-toothed, the two _ Superior teeth slightly united at base, the lower tooth 6 mm. long, twice as long as the others and three times the length of the tube, all linear-lanceolate: banner 12 mm. long, striped with brown; wings yellow; keel violet and yellow: legume 2 cm. long, 8 mm. wide; seeds 2, black; hilum linear with funicle at- tached to the end: vexillary stamen free. VOL. 5] Plants from Sinaloa, Mexico. 203 This plant is so glutinous that the stems stick together when collected. It differs from most species of the genus in having branched racemes and the attachment of the seed. Growing among rocks of the highest elevations of the Cerro Colorado. Phaseolus rubescens Brandegee. This species was described from specimens collected in the Cape Region of Baja California. It is common on the low lands west of Culiacan. Dr. Palmer’s 104 from Acapulco is the same species. Erythroxylon sp. Probably the same species that Dr. Rose found at Tepic. Altata. Guadichaudia fiilipendula Juss. Culiacan and Cofradia. Heteropteris arborescens. A large bush or small tree q—5 m. high with a spreading top; branches light brown thickly covered with small lenticles; leaves ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, 7 cm. long, 3-5 cm. wide, glabrous, biglandular on the nerves near the base or on the 6-10 mm. long, pubescent petiole; fruiting calyx 8-glandular; fruit in terminal or axillary panicles with brown- pubescent peduncles and pedicels, without crests; samarz usually two, 3 cm, long: the wing 1.5 cm. broad above, straw-colored shading into bright red toward the margin; flowers not seen. This small tree grows on the steep slopes of the Cerro Colo- rado, where its crowded brilliant fruit makes it very conspicuous. Heteropteris Palmeri Rose? Seen only in fruit. Common about Cofradia. Janusia Mexicana. Stems suffruticose, twining, 1 m. long and less, the new growth pubescent; larger leaves ovate acumi- nate, mucronate, pubescent, lighter colored beneath, 5 cm. long, 2-3 cm. wide; petioles 5 mm. long; infloresence axillary in 3-4 flowered corymbs; peduncle 4 mm. long; pedicels 3-5 mm. long, - with two leafy bracts at their bases, white-hirsute; bractlets minute; petals 5, clawed, 8 mm. long, the orbicular dentate- lacerate limb 5 mm. in diameter, orange-yellow; fertile stamens two, their filaments 4 mm. long, united near the base; the anthers orbicular, glabrous; style basilar, exceeding the stamens; stigma capitate; calyx lobes oblong-lanceolate, two biglandular, two uniglandular, one usually glandless, glands deciduous with age; mature fruit one carpel, dorsal wing 1 cm. long, 5 mm. 204 Plants from Sinaloa, Mexico. [ZOE broad, the lateral wings short, with a short crest. No cleisto- gamous flowers were found with the specimens. Cerro Colo- rado and Culiacan. Galphimia vestita Watson. It differs from the description in having bracts shorter than the pedicel and rarely glands on the leaves. Cofradia. Malpighia umbellata Rose. A bush bearing an abundance of light pink handsome flowers. Culiacan. Brysonima crassifolia HBK. Cerro Colorado. Zanthoxylum arborescens Rose. Culiacan and Cofradia. Zanthoxylum Pterota HBK. Culiacan. Bursera collina. Brapches glabrous; leaves except the ter- minal 2-3 pairs of pinne bipinnate, 7-15 cm. long, rachis pubes- cent and narrowly winged; pinnze 3 cm. long; leaflets 2-3 pairs, ovate-acuminate, cuneate at base, 1-2.5 cm. long, 4-7 mm. wide, deeply crenate-serrate, sparingly pubescent, darker green above; fruit 1 cm. long, glabrous; peduncles 2-6 cm. long. This species is near 2. diverstfolia. Cofradia. Bursera tenuiflora Rose. Culiacan, Bursera Palmeri Watson. Culiacan. Bursera laxiflora Watson. Culiacan. Bursera bipinnata Engler. Cerro Colorado. Trichilia Colimana ©. DC.? The leaves are pubescent, the panicles vary from one-quarter to one-half the length of the leaf and sometimes bear small leaflets. Culiacan. Polygala glochidiata HBK. Cerro Colorado. Polygala Albowiana Chodat. Nearly the same as Pringle’s 3876. Cerro Colorado, Cofradia. Polygala collina. Perennial, stems 3 dm. high, pubescent, sparingly branched; leaves alternate, puberulent, ovate-lanceolate, . attenuate at base into a short petiole, 3-4 cm. long, 7 mm. wide, the lower much smaller; infloresence on axillary or supra-axillary flowered racemes that are shorter or longer than the leaves; few lower pair of sepals connate, upper sepal glandular on the margin, entire calyx persisting in fruit; wings obovate, inequilateral, shorter than the capsule, 4 mm, long; keel without crest, yellow- ish white; petals purple; capsule elliptic-oblong, glabrous; seeds | WOEr 5} Plants from Sinaloa, Mexico. 205 cylindrical, appressed-hairy; caruncle large, white, curved, 2-horned, Growing in the Cerro Colorado. The flowers and fruit of this species are the same as those of P. grandiflora Walt., but the axillary infloresence gives it a very different appearance. Polygala setifera. Annual, branching from above the base, glabrous, 15 cm. high and less; leaves 8-12 mm. long, 2-5 mm. wide, alternate, obovate, apiculate or setiferous at the tip, attenu- ate to a short petiole or sessile base and decurrent on the stem as a wing I cm. or more; spikes terminating the branches, 1-2.5 em. long, densely flowered, the conspicuous, setiferous bracts ex- ceeding the yellowish white flowers: wings broadly obovate, 2.5 mm. long; sepals long-setiform, broadened at the base; keel crested with 5-6 processes; cells of the capsule unequal; seeds dark brown, short pilose, nearly cylindrical, rounded at ends, caruncle half their length; stigma penicillate. Collected on grassy slopes of Cerro Colorado. Sebastiana Mexicana. Herbaceous: stems slightly pubescent, angled: leaves alternate, ovate-acuminate, often cordate at base, entire or serrulate, with few short hairs upon both surfaces and margins, 2-4 cm. long, 1-1.5 cm. wide; petioles pubescent, 5 mm. long: racemes axillary and terminal, much shorter than the leaves, the solitary pistillate flower at the base: staminate flowers minute, 1-2 with each bract, sessile: sepals 3, rose-colored; stamens 3, not exceeding the sepals: pistillate flower on a pedicel 1mm. long; sepals 3; styles not united: capsule smooth, 4 mm. long, short-cylindrical, furnished with 6 subulate horns near the top and 6 similar ones near the base: seed nearly cylindrical; caruncle large, stipitate, disk-shaped and umbonate. This species belongs to § Microstachys as defined by Miiller in DC. Prodromus. Unfortunately only a few herbaceous branches were collected. Many of the leaves are purple-tinged. Culiacan. Croton jucundus. Several herbaceous, sparingly stellate- pubescent, branching stems from a perennial root, 1 m. high: leaves ovate-lanceolate, obtuse, mucronate, 6-10 cm. long, 2-3 cm. wide, nearly glabrous above, sparingly stellate-pubescent below, more pubescent when young, 3-nerved at base and pin- 206 Plants from Sinaloa, Mexico. [ZOE nately 8-10 nerved; margins entire and bearing few or many short-stipitate glands; base of the blade furnished with 4-8 long- stipitate glands; petiole % as long as the blade, sparingly stellate pubescent; stipules linear-lanceolate, 2-3 mm. long bearing longer stipitate glands: racemes moncecious, 3-6 cm. long with 2-7 pistillate flowers below: bracts Jinear, bearing long stipitate glands: pistillate flowers on pedicels 2-3 mm. long, apetalous; sepals 5, linear-lanceolate, 8 mm. long, stellate-pubescent, stipi- tate-glandular onthe margins; styles 3 mm. long, 4-cleft to below the middle; ovary densely stellate-pubescent: staminate flowers on pedicels 1 mm. long; stamens about 12; sepals ovate-acumi- nate, stellate-pubescent, 1.5 mm. long; petals twice as long, spatulate; receptacle pilose; capsule shorter than the calyx lobes, stellate-pubescent. This plant grows on the low, level lands about Yerba Buena near Altata. It is very fragrant when living and the same odor is noticed when boiling the dried plant. The stipitate glands are much like those of C. ciliato-glandulosus. Jatropha canescens Muell Yerba Buena, Altata. Jatropha purpurea Rose. Culiacan. Jatropha vernicosa. A bush 2-4 meters high, glabrous throughout; dicecious: leaves ovate-acuminate, cordate, 5-7 cm. long, 3-5 cm. wide, dark green and shining, pinnately veined, the margin bearing numer- ous sessile glands; petioles 3-7 cm. long; stipules represented by sessile glands; pistillate flowers usually solitary, terminating the branches; pedicels 2-3 cm. long; calyx lobes 5, distinct to the base, foliaceous, ovate, 5mm. long, margined with sessile glands, glutinous and shining; petals ligulate, equalling the calyx, white or sometimes with a tinge of purple, distinct; disk entire; styles the same number as cells of the ovary (two with my specimens), distinct to the base and divided to the middle: capsule subglobose, 2 cm. in diameter: stami- nate flowers cymose-cory mbose, the peduncles shorter than the leaves; calyx lobes elliptical, slightly united at base; stamens 10; glands of the disk five. Common at middle elevations of the Cape Region mountains of Baja California. In general habit much resembling /. canescens of the same region, a species there also dicecious. I have plants of both species in cultivation and they thrive well in their new habitat. The - construction of the flower of /. vernicosa shows that it belongs to § Adenoropium of Benth. & Hook. My specimens of the Cape Region incorrectly named /. cordaita belong to this new species. Specimens of /. canescens from Altata are moncecious. VOL. 5] Plants from Sinaloa, Mexico. 207 Croton Californicus Muell. Arg. Altata. Croton elegnoides Watson. Culiacan. Croton glandulosus 1, Culiacan. Croton lobatus1,. Culiacan. Phyllanthus evanescens. Annual, stem simple, slightly winged below each leaf, erect, 2-2.5 dm. high, slightly puberu- lent; leaves glabrous, alternate, oblong-lanceolate, obtuse at base, 2.5 cm. long, 18 mm. wide; petioles 1 mm. long; one pistillate with 2-3 staminate flowers in the axils of the leaves: styles of pistillate flower, short, divided; calyx lobes, six, ovate, hyaline- margined, finally recurved; fruit 2.5 mm. in diameter, on re- curved pedicels 1.5 mm. long; seeds sharply angled, minutely roughened, not striate; staminate flowers with shorter pedicels, anthers three, globose, sessile. Growing during the early part of the rainy season under bushes and trees about Culiacan. Sapium biglandulosum Mull. Culiacan. Acalypha alopecurotdes Jacq. Culiacan. Acalypha subviscida Watson. Cerro Colorado. Acalypha polystachya Jacq. Culiacan. Dalechampia scandens I,. Culiacan and Cofradia. Euphorbia (Cytfarospermum) Cofradiana. Annual, erect, branching, 2-3 dm. high, slightly pubescent; upper leaves oppo- site, broadly ovate, rounded at the tip, cuneate at base, setulose on both surfaces, paler beneath, the larger 3 cm. long, nearly as wide, on petioles twice as long, those from the short axillary branches much smaller; flowers axillary, solitary, on pedicels 5 mm. long; involucres turbinate, less than 1 mm. high, setulose, the short lobes linear-lanceolate, lacerate; glands 5, each with 4 finger-like appendages; styles divided and distinct to the base; capsule setulose, 1.5 mm, in width: seed orbicular, pitted with numerous crater-like depressions. Collected at Cofradia. This species isnear £. calicola Fernald, but is not ‘‘viscid-setulose with long pale hairs,’’ the involucre is turbinate instead of campanulate, the flowers are on much shorter pedicels and there are other minute differences. From £. astrottes it seems also to be distinct. 208 Plants from Sinaloa, Mexico. [ZOE Euphorbia (Cyt/arospermum) Humayensis. Annual, freely branching, 3-4 dm. high, slightly pubescent, glandular about the ends of the branches; leaves nearly as broad as long, rounded at the tip, cuneate at base, slightly setulose on both surfaces, paler beneath, the larger 3 cm. long on much longer petioles; flowers solitary in the axils on pedicels 4 mm. long and less; involucres small, turbinate, setulose, lobes linear, lacerate; glands 5; appendages 0.25 mm. long, light green, entire; styles distinct and divided to the base; capsule glabrous, its stipe 2 mm. long: seeds orbicular, with numerous, acute-margined, crater-like pits. This species was collected at Culiacan, on Cerro Colorado and in the foot-hills near Todos Santos of the Cape Region of Baja California. In general appearance it resembles Z. delicatula Boiss., which is not glandular, has subpeltate leaves and is . different in other respects. The Baja California specimens have larger leaves. Euphorbia (Zygophyllidium) Sinaloensis. Annual, 1 m. high and less, much branched, glabrous throughout; leaves thin in texture, paler beneath, broadly ovate, obtusely pointed, cuneate at base, the largest 2 cm. wide, 3-5 cm. long; petioles 4 cm. long; flowers solitary or rarely two from the axils on pedicels 4 mm. long and less; lobes of the involucre quadrate, slightly fimbriate, white; glands 5, orbicular; appendages clear white, 2 mm. long, oblong, entire or slightly undulate; styles united near the base and divided half their length; capsule on a stipe 5 mm. long; seeds obtusely 6-angled, pointed at the top, granular- roughened, crenate on the angles. A handsome delicate species from Cerro Colorado. The clear white appendages to the glands render it very conspicuous. Euphorbia dioscorioides Boiss. Culiacan. Euphorbia Francoana Boiss. Cofradia. Euphorbia Colime Rose.