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— Madrono, Vol. 48, No. 3, pp. 211-214, 2001 NOTEWORTHY COLLECTIONS California Senecio ionophyllus, westflankofSewardMountain,T6N Castilleja tenuis (A. A. Heller) Chuang & Heckard R391497W(SsBecB.G)5,, dalett.. 2D0.7H2.mW.i,lkRe.nB(uSrgBeBsGs).and T. Burgess (SCROPHULARIACEAE).—Ventura Co., headwaters of Previous knowledge. Known from Asia, western North Little Mutau Creek, T6N R20W sec. 1, alt. 2042 m, 18 AmericafromAlaskasouthtoCalifornia,andnortheastern Jun 2000, in moistswalesamongPinusjejfreyi, associated North America. with Deschampsia danthonioides, Lotus purshianus, and Significance. First record for Ventura County and the Scutellaria siphocampyloides. R. Burgess and T. Burgess western Transverse Ranges, representing a disjunction of 3940 (JEPS, SBBG), det. M. Wetherwax (JEPS). ca. 190 km southwest ofnearest known sites in the Sierra Previous knowledge. Known from Alaska south to the Nevada (e.g., Whitney Meadows, Tulare Co., Purpus in Klamath Mountains, Cascade Range, Klamath Range, and 1895, UC) and ca. 180 km west ofnearest known sites in SierraNevadaofCalifornia, anddisjunctly inthe SanBer- the San Bernardino Mountains (e.g., Vivian Creek, Munz nardino and Palomarmountains ofsouthern California(as 7593, RSA). Orthocarpus hispidus Benth. in P. A. Munz 1963, 1974). — Significance. First records for Ventura County and the Rick and Trisha Burgess, Ventura County Flora western Transverse Ranges, representing a disjunction of Project, 221 Juneau Place, Oxnard, CA 93030. ca. 140 km southwest of nearest known records in the Sierra Nevada (e.g., Bartolas Creek, Kern County, Twis- selmann 12452, JEPS) and ca. 180 km west of nearest knownrecords inthe San BernardinoMountains(e.g.,east Mexico of BluffLake, Thorne et al. 47843, RSA, UC). Setaria arizonica Rominger (GRAMINEAE).—Baja Trichostema micranthum a. Gray (LAMIACEAE). California Sur, mpio. de La Paz, area del Borrego Cimar- Ventura Co., near Cuddy Ranch, R. Hoffmann s.n., 21 ron, Sierra "El Mechudo", cercadel RanchoLas Animas, RS1e2mp,1iW1so9su2et7ch.(o1Sf7B,jBuGanh)c.t,io1dn6e4tw6iHt.mh.,LLeow1c4iksJwu(olLyoAd)2;0V0aM0lu,lteiyanuRdoRrayoda,vde,Trn7caaNl. Am25hu.nkdm3o75aDlomNm.mdgVeeugSe.aznMCaJ.tuoa1rn6r6adl5e(XleaHrCCoIfoBisl,toa..AR22I40Z°,4O2cA'tSNC1)19.9160.°4R2e'yW- pool with Epilobium densiflorum, Myosurusminimus, and Previous knowledge. Known only from Pima and Santa Psilocarphus tenellus var. globiferus. R. Burgess and T. Cruz Cos., AZ, and Sonora, Mexico. The species was de- lBiemucarttgeeedlsybsy34.0S5t2e5kvme(LJeAau,sntaSkoBfBatGth)Yi,eslsdlieottew.(JHSa..ckLJeuetnwaiMkse,a(pdLeAor)sw,osnaaallspopcrocoomxl--- is1cc9ar6ni2b)e.SdeTtbahyreiJa.tyR(pIoelmliiisnnogLi.serNB.iionlG.hoiosMdomdnoionngogrg.3r7aN5p4oh fo2fr9o,Nmoprtpthhe6AB6ma-eb6ro8--. munication); dry sandy floodplain, associated with Mim- quivari Mts., Pima Co., AZ (Holotype ARIZ). Four other uluspilosus, Iva axillaris var. robustior, Cardariapubes- specimens are cited, all from Pima and Santa Cruz Cos., cens, and Salix exigua, south side of Lockwood Valley AZ. Road, T8N R21W sec. 25, alt. 1494 m., 22 July 2000, R. The cited collections were named S. liebmannii E. Burgess and T. Burgess 4048 (LA, SBBG), det. Harlan Fourn., a species which is superficially very similiar. Lewis (LA). Rominger considered his new species to be rare. Subse- Previous knowledge. Known from margins of mead- quent to publishing his monograph, Romingermade afew ows, drying lakes, and meadows in the San Bernardino collections, which did not alter the known range. Origi- Mountains, and the mountains ofBaja Californiadel Nor- nally he stated that all collections were within a 100 mile te (Munz 1963, 1974; Lewis, Brittonia 5:276-303. 1945). radius of Nogales, but he cited no gatherings from Mex- Significance. First record for Ventura County and the ico. Apparently he intended the "radius of 100 miles" to cwae.st1e8r0n kTrmanfsrvoermseneaRraensgtesk,norewpnressietnetsining tahediSsjaunncBteironnaro-f roebfseerrvteodtthheeUsnpeictieedstSotabteescoonmlmy.onIninrtehceenatreyaeaorfsBrIawhlaevye dinoMountains (e.g.. BigBearLake, H—. Lewis 1689, LA). Wash, SWofTucson. It is frequently growing in the shade Senecio ionophyllus E. Greene. Ventura Co., on of mesquites, as mentioned by Rominger in the proto- north-facing, granitic slopes associated with Pinus lam- logue. I have also seen it in some abundance in the Bue- bertiana, Galium jepsonii, Arabis repanda, and Hulsea nos Aires National Wildlife Refuge, near Arivaca, Pima vestita ssp. gabrielensis, west flank of Seward Mountain, Co. Although not rare, as Rominger thought, the species T6NR19Wsec. 5, ah. 2027 m., R. BurgessandT. Burgess is notoftencollected. Aside fromgatheringsbyRominger, 3948 (SBBG), det. D. H. Wilken (SBBG). and several by my wife and me, the ARIZ herbarium has Previous knowledge. Known from dry, rocky conifer- only onerecentcollection from PimaCounty: R. S. Felger ous forests in the southern Sierra Nevada, San Gabriel, 97-16, from just north of Tucson. Two recent collections and San Bernardino mountains ofCalifornia (Munz 1963, from Santa Cruz Co. are L. J. Toolin 2262 and T. R. Van 1974). Devender91-951, both from theTumacacori Mts. As doc- Significance. First record for Ventura County and the umentation of S. arizonica in Mexico, ARIZ has Beetle western Transverse Ranges, a disjunction of ca. 100 km M-6969, T. R. Van Devender90-489, 91-654, 92-1081 and from nearest known sites in the San Gabriel Mountains 94-700, all from Sonora, the lattertwo some 500km south (e.g., Kratka Ridge, R. Bacigalupi 6423, JEPS). ofthe US-Mexico border. Most collectors since Rominger Pyrol—a asarifolia Michaux ssp. asarifolia (ERICA- have commented on the abundance of the species in the CEAE). On vernally moist, n-facing slope, associated areas where they found it. with Pinus lambertiana, Galiumjepsonii, Arabis repanda Significance. First record from the Baja Californiapen- — MADRONO 212 [Vol. 48 insula. The Dominguez collection also extends the known Tridensa—lbescens (Vasey) Wooton & Standley (GRA- range ofthe species some 200 km farther south. MINEAE). Pinal Co., a well-established local popula- tion in a riparian habitat in a tributar—y of the Santa Cruz River in the environs ofCasa Grande near the Mormon Arizona Batallion Monument on Hwy. 387, ca. 2 miles N of its jet. with Hwy. 84. Elev. 1400 ft. [325 m]. 21 Oct 1991. SetariopsisAURicuLATA (E. Foum.) Scribner(GRAMIN- Dan James s.n. (ARIZ, US, CAS). EAE).—Pima Co., Altar Valley, 26 km S ofRobles Junc- Same area. Many clumps in a shallow tributary of the tion. In a broad sandy wash draining into Brawley Wash. Santa Cruz River. 26 June 1997. J. R. & C. G. Reeder Rather local on a north-facing shady bank with Setaria 9598 (ARIZ, ASU, NMCR). The James specimen was arizonica and S. grisehachii. Elev. 800 m. 23 Aug 1990. brought to the ARIZ Herbarium by Horace Miller. J. R. REEDER & C. G. REEDER 8553 (ARIZ, US, CAS, Previous knowledge. Hitchcock's Manual (1951) gives TEX). the range as CO, KS, NM, OK, TX. The ARIZherbarium Previousknowledge. There—isnopublshedrecordofthis has specimensgrown inTucson in Experimentalgrassgar- genus occurring in Arizona nor in the US. Mc Vaugh dens in 1936, 1938, and 1939, but no material fromplants (Flora Novo-Galiciana, 1983) gives the range as: "B.C., which were growing spontaneously in Arizona. Son., Chih., Sin., Nay., Gto., Jal., Col., Gro., Mex., Mor., Significance. First record of this species for Arizona. Oax., Pue., S.L.P, Chis., Camp., Yuc; Centr. Amer." At Also, it constitutes a considerable range extension. Prior ARIZ there is a specimen with the following label data: to the Arizona collections the most westerly records for J. J. Thornber s.n. (ARIZ-38003) Nogales, Arizona, Tridens albescens were Sandoval and Dona Ana counties among shrubs. 10-12 Sep 1930. It was originally named in New Mexico. That this species is well established in at Chaetochloa grisehachii van ampki Scribn. & Merr., but least one area in Arizona is attested to by the fact that it in 1958 J. M. Rominger annotated it (correctly) as Setar- was recollected in the same location 6 years later. iopsis auriculata (Fourn.) Scribner. I find no record that Brachiaria PiATYPHYLLA (Muuro cx Wright) Nash (GRA- this was published by Rominger, and the name does not MINEAE).—SantaCruzCo.,SanRafaelValley,pondonKi- appear in Kearney & Peebles' Arizona Flora(Supplement He-Kah Ranch, T23S R17E, Sec. 11 SWy4. Common pros- 1960), nor in Lehr's Catalogue of the Flora of Arizona trate annual in mud. Elev. 4850 ft. [ca. 1500 m]. 24 Aug (1978). Although one finds the name in the key toSetaria \99\. T. R. & R. K. Van Devender et al 91-689 (ARIZ). and allied genera in Rominger's monograph of North Same location: Abundant with other weedy vegetation American Setaria (Illinois Biol. Monogr. No. 29. 1962), along margin ofpond. 22 Sep 1992. J. R. & C. G. Reeder the author makes no further mention ofthe genus. 8930 (ARIZ, ASU, US). San Rafael Valley, ca. 3.5 km Significance. Setariopsis was collected in Arizona in SSW of Canelo Pass in vicinity of Little Outfit Ranch. 1930,butthisfailedtoget intoliteratureonArizonagrass- Charco in grassland with scattered oaks and manzanitas. es. The 1990 collection reported here documents that Se- AbundantMarsilea, Heteranthera, and weedy grasses sur- tariopsis is, indeed, a part ofthe Arizona flora. It is also rounding the pond. Fairly common along thepond margin the first published report ofthe genus from the US. More- with other dense vegetation. Apparently grazed by cattle. over, it occurs about 50 km north ofthe US-Mexico bor- Elev. 1550 m. 22 Sep 1992. J. R. & C. G. Reeder 8929 der. I have visited this site several times during the past (ARIZ, NMCR). The two localities cited above are sepa- decade, andcan reportthatthepopulation, althoughsmall, rated by some 8 km. isthriving. It is interestingthatamongthe several Sonoran Previous knowledge. A native species from Florida to specimens ofthis species at ARIZ, the one nearest to Ar- TX, OK; Mex., Cuba. Easily distinguished from grasses izona is T. R. Van Devender et al. s.n. [ARIZ] collected with asimilarinflorescencebythe spikeletorientation,the in Palm Canyon, SE ofMagdalena some 75 km south of first glume turned toward the rachis. the International Border. — SignifWicance. First record from Arizona. Previously not AlopecurusARUNDiNACEUS. Poir. (GRAMINEAE). Co- known ofTexas. NOTE: R. D. Webster [TheAustralian conino Co. N end of Mormon Lake in a marshy area. A Paniceae (Poaceae). Stuttgart: J. Cramer 1987] arguedthat common species here, with other grasses; strongly rhizo- the traditional characterofspikeletorientation (withlower matous. Elev. 2200 m. 21 June 1995. J. R. Reeder & C. glume turned toward, or away from the rachis) used to G. Reeder9309 (ARIZ, US, CAS). Same area, one ofthe separate Brachiaria from Urochloa is unreliable and, dominant grasses in marshy ground; plants strongly rhi- moreover, of minor significance. He proposed restricting zomatous; associated here with Phalarisarimdinacea and the genus Brachiaria to a single species, B. erucaeformis Poapratensis. 24June 1998. J. R. Reeder& C. G. Reeder (Sm.) Griseb., and relegating othertraditional membersof 9675 (ARIZ, RSA). the genus to Urochloa. This suggestion has some merit Previous knowledge. This grass is a native of Eurasia. and has been adopted by some agrostologists. Following In Hitchcock's Manual (1951) it is not included inthe key Webster, the name ofthe plant underdiscussion would be to Alopecurus, but at the end of the treatment for that Urochloa platyphylla (Munro ex Wright) R. D. Webster. genus one finds the name Alopecurus arundinaceus Poir., (For an explanation of the author citations for these bi- along with a short description. As reason for its inclusion nomials, see Kartesz & Ghandi in Phytologia 69(4):303. in the Manual, there is the statement: "Adventive in hay 1990). meadows, Labrador; North Dakota; Eurasia." According Urochloa panicoides P Beauv. (GRAMINEAE). to a map kindly providedby Mary Barkworth,thisspecies Maricopa County, Phoenix, in horse pastureland west of is now established in all northern states west of, and in- lumberyard at Precision Components, Inc., 1820 S 35th cluding, the Dakotas. The most southern records, accord- Ave. (at Durango). Grass lies flat to ground, radiating ing to Barkworth, are Cache Co., Utah and Garfield Co., from center, flowering stalks rising upward. Formerly (at Colorado. least 5 yrs. ago) grazed by Chaolais cattle, originallyfrom Significance. First record of the species from Arizona; France via Mexico. Grass made sudden appearance after also apparently the most southerly locality in which it is first discing of pasture. 24 June 1988. D. J. PINKAVA recorded as growing spontaneously in the U.S.A. 14365 (ARIZ, ASU, CAS, TEX, US) — 2001] NOTEWORTHY COLLECTIONS 213 Previous knowledge. A native ofe and s Africa, India, ington, T26N R5E S30, elev. 4 m, 5 Sep 1998, Weinmann and Pakistan, and now adventive in many localities in 42 (WTU); S shore of Lake Sammamish, mouth of Issa- warmerparts ofthe world. It was not mentioned in Hitch- quah Cr., sand and gravel shore of small island and ad- cock's Manual (1951), and McVaugh (Flora Novo-Gali- jacent park beach, T24N R6E SI7, elev. 8 m, 25 Aug ciana, 1983) commented that the two collections he cited 1999, Zika 14131 (WTU); S shore of Lake Sammamish, wereapparently thefirstrecordsofthespeciesinAmerica. mouth ofLaughing Jacobs Cr., gravelly shore, with Lyth- In the United States it has now been reported from several rum salicaria, Cyperus hipartitus, T24N R6E SI6, elev. localities in Texas and also from New Mexico. It is an 8 m, 7 Oct 1999, Zika 14560, Jacohson & Weinmann aggresive annual which is listed in the Federal Noxious (WTU); Bellevue, N shore ofPhantom Lake, dampgravel Weed Act. near lawn, with Hypericum mutilum, Portulaca oleracea, Significance. FirstrecordofUrochloapanicoidesin Ar- T24N R5E S2, elev. 75 m, 15 Oct 1999, Zika 14604, & izona; also first report of the species in the U.S.A. west Weinmann (WTU). of Dona Ana Co., NM. Previous knowledge. Guernsey pigweed is introduced ScLEROCHLOA DURA (L.) P. Beauv. (GRAMINEAE). from the Mediterranean, and found as a weed in eastern Maricopa Co., Phoenix, Encanto Golf Course. Thriving North America, west to Utah. on the fairway, where it has persisted for two or three Significance. First report for Washington. This and the years. 1 May 1988. Robert Lytic s.n. (ARIZ, ASU, US). following taxa are all from the Seattle metropolitan area. Previous knowledge. A rather inconspicuous annual, Ballota—nigra L. subsp.foETiDA (Vis.) Hayek (LAMI- native to southern Europe and the Middle East. Adventive ACEAE). King Co., Seattle, weed in shade, Univ. of in the U.S. in several scattered locations in western states, Washington campus, T25N R4E SI6, elev. 25 m, 26 Oct usually as a weed in lawns, golf courses, and roadsides. 1999, Zika 14655 & Jacobson (WTU). Reported from WA, OR, ID, CO, UT, NM, TX. Also Previous knowledge. Black horehound is native to Eu- known from CA see Hickman 1993, Jepson Manuel. rope, and adventive in eastern North America, west to Significance. First record for Arizona. Nebraska. Enneapo—gonCENCHROiDES(Licht.)C. E. Hubbard(GRA- Significance. First report for W—ashington. MINEAE). Pima County, Santa Catalina Mountains, Briza minor L. (POACEAE). Kitsap Co., Restoration Molino Basin, south side ofroad, elevation 4500 ft [1370 Point, SE end of Bainbridge Is., Puget Sound, weed in m]. September 1976. E. Schmutz s.n. (ARIZ); along Mt. meadow neargolfcourse, with Perideridia gairdneri, Hy- Lemmon Hwy. in the Molino Basin area, common along pochaeris radicata, Agrostis capillaris, T24N R2E S12, the highway, elevation 1280 m, 22 September 1980. J. R. elev. 4 m, 20 Aug 1999, Zika 14085 & Jacobson (WTU). Reeder & C. G. Reeder 7329 (ARIZ). Tucson Mountains, Previous knowledge. Little quaking grass is a common in sandy soil ofOesteWash, Tucson Mountain Park;T14S weed in the Willamette River valley of northern Oregon, R12E S13 NEy4, elevation 2650 ft. [800 m] 29 October 200 km to the south. 1989 P. D. Jenkins 89-70 (ARIZ). Significance. First report for Washington. Previous Knowledge. This species is anativeoftheOld Carex pendula Huds. (CYPERACEAE).—King Co., World. Renvoize (Kew Bull. 22:393-402. 1968), in his Washington Park arboretum, naturalized along small study of the genus, gives the range of Enneapogon cen- creek, with Ranunculus repens, Equisetum telmateia, chroides as: "From Sudan southwards to the Cape Prov- T25N R4E S21, elev. 15 m, 11 Oct 1999, Zika 14576 ince of South Africa; through Arabia to India; also on (MICH, WTU). Ascension Island." I have been unable to find that it is Previous knowledge. Pendulous sedge is native to Eu- anywhere recorded as growing spontaneously in the rope and occasionally plantedas an ornamental in western U.S.A. Moreover, I have no information regarding when, Washington. Known as an adventive in the arboretum for nor why, it became established in the Santa Catalina and the last decade. Tucson Mountains of Arizona. The ARIZ Herbarium has Significance. First report as an escape from cultivation several othercollections from the southern SantaCatalina in Washington. Mountains between 600 and 1400 m, the latest with the Carex projecta Mack. (CYPERACEAE).—King Co., date 1999. near NE shore ofRattlesnake Lake,just above high water Enneapogoncenchroides is a robust annual, whichcan line, inpartial shade, withMalusfusca, Alnus rubra, Salix attain a height ofa meter. Although the spikelets are sim- sitchensis, Phalaris, T23N R8E S34, elev. 275 m, 26 Jul ilar to those of our native E. desvauxii P. Beauv., it is 1996, Weinmann 30, 31 (WTU); same site, 29 Sep 1999, readily distinguished by its much coarser stems, and the Zika 14428 & Weinmann (WTU). larger, somewhat open inflorescence which is often as Previous knowledge. Necklace sedge is native to east- much as 20 cm or more in length. The plant is quite at- ern North America, west to Saskatchewan. tractive and conspicuous when in flower. Significance. First record as an adventive in Washing- Significance. Although ithasbeen documentedby spec- ton. imens at ARIZ since 1976, curiously there seems tobe no Carex sylvatica Huds. (CYPERACEAE).—King Co., record in the literature that it is established anywhere in SE end of Mercer Is., Lake Washington, Clarke Beach the United States. Park, weed along shaded, paved trail, with Lapsana, Hed- — era, Carex deweyana, Acer macrophyllum, T24N R5E John R. Reeder, Herbarium, University of Arizona, S30, elev. 10 m, 13 June 1998, Weinmann 35 (WTU); 113 Shantz Building, Tucson, AZ 85721. same site, 6 Oct 1999, Zika 14523 & Weinmann (WTU). Previous knowledge. Wood sedge is native to Europe, and has been reported as an adventive in southern British Columbia and eastern North America. Washington Significance. First report for Washington. — Crassula tillaea Lest.-Garl. (CRASSULACEAE).— Amaranthusblitum L. (AMARANTHACEAE). King King Co., Shilshole Bay, Seattle waterfront, 0.7 km S of Co., Juanita Beach Park, wet sandy shore ofLake Wash- Meadow Point, common weed in gravel and bare ground. — MADRONO 214 [Vol. 48 with Poa annua, P. pratensis, Aira carvophyllea, T25N Previous knowledge. Pellitory-of-the-wall is native to R3E S3, elev. 2 m, 8 May 1999, Jacobson s.n. (WTU); Africaand Eurasia. Itis weedy incoastal California, 1000 same site, 25 May 1999, Zika 13758 & Jacobson (WTU). km to the south. Previous knowledge. Mossy stonecrop is native to Eu- Significance. First report for Washington. — rope and adventive on the west coast, N to Lane Co., OR, ParietariaofficinalisL. (URTICACEAE). KingCo., 370 km to the S. Seattle, Univ. of Washington campus, T25N R4E SI6, Significance. First report for Washington. elev. 25 m, 26 Oct 1999, Zika 14657 & Jacobson (V, Cyperus odoratus L. (CYPERACEAE).—King Co., WTU). West Point, Seattle waterfront, weed in wetland, with Previousknowledge. Easternpellitory-of-the-wallisna- Mentha pulegium, Cyperus eragrostis, T25N R3E S9, tive to central and southern Europe. Cultivated at the me- elev. 2 m, 20 Oct 1999, Jacobson s.n. (EIU, WTU). dicinal herb garden of the University, it is now an occa- Previous knowledge. Rusty flat sedge is a pantropical sional weed in the area. weed, and has been collected in Multnomah Co., OR, 200 Significance. First report for Washington as an escape km to the S. from cultivation. Significance. First report for Washington. — POTENTILLA INCLINATA Vill. (ROSACEAE).—King Co., QuDeaetnurAannewr,igShetaittileR,egQeulee(nSOALnnAeNAAvCeE.AEn)ea.r BoKsitnognCSot..,, eSleeavt.tle2,5 mUn,iv2.6 OocftW1a9s9h9i,nZgitkoan1c4a6m5p1us&,JTa2co5bNsoRn4(EWTSUI)6., weed in gravel parking lot, T25N R3E S24, elev. 120 m, Previous knowledge. Cultivated in the medicinal herb 20 Oct 1999, Zika 14632 & Jacobson (WTU). garden at the University for a decade, and readily reseed- Significance. First report for Washington. ing inadjacentareas. Removedfromthegardensca. 1990, Eragrostis curvula (Schrad.) Nees (POACEAE). but persisting as a rare weed in the area. King Co., S side of West Point, Seattle waterfront, dis- Significance. First report for Washington as an escape turbed ground near path, T25N R3E SI6, elev. 3 m, 4 from cultivation. August 1999, Jacobson s.n. (WTU). SCROPHULARIA NODOSA L. (SCROPHULARIACEAE).— Previousknowledge. Weeping lovegrass isnativetoAf- King Co., Seattle, Univ. of Washington campus, T25N rCioc.a,, aOnRd,h2a0s0bekemntcooltlheectSe.d as an adventive inMultnomah Rso4nE(SWIT6U,)e;levS.ea2tt5lem,,G2o6odOctShe19p9e9r,dZCieknate1r4,6N66E&50JtahcoStb.-, Significance. First report for Washington. Known from waste ground, T25N R4E S8, elev. 90 m, 16 May 2000, theGseiutemsiunrcbean19u9m8,L.and(RiOncSrAeCasEiAngE.).—King Co., Island ZikPare1v4i9o8us3 k(nWoTwUl)ed.ge. Common figwort is native to Eu- CarnedstinParwke,tlMaenrdcebrelIso.w, LsauksepeWnassihoinngbtroind,ges,hawdietdhtHreaidlesridae,, rUnoipveerasnidty.cuNltoiwvataend oicncatshieonmaeldiwceienadlinhetrhbegaarerad.en at the PWaG111ala999ero999sukn999h,gm,,,insZZpZmghiiaiataktkkcodhaaarsneo,d11p1c44hTr4a65oym5253alp5592dlu4sNusi&&m,d(,ReWJ,WT4aTTe2ETcUi25o2)n4bNSn5;Ns2iNo1RaSn,Rn4eRn5aE(4etEltWE(elSTWveIS.,USTI62)U,902a;),,0re;bleSeoelemlvSrea,e.evteva.tt.t2l4ute594ml,0,Se0m,Iem,npmcUt,t,noe2irm6671vlm9.aOOO9koccc8eonttt,nf Crtt11eiaE99nvr99SsAVee99iiEes,,gbwr,)nyebZiZ.fieiTa—sikkasdtcaarcaoKanuar1i1cxlmm4ne4ao.3g7cngp3rg3uuFCa8m9itlop,re.v&as&,,tteThrTJS,rJ2uea2eaa5lpcw5ctoeoNitoNrntblbtehtsRs,Ruofo4D4onmWnaErEac(t(sVWWSiyShaWll2T2siTli11.UhnsU,,ig),)nt(;e.egLollSteanaeCovvpr..nsRPb.aoaO22rnr5P0eaktH,mmuaU,mr,PL,booA11aar75RdevpItNSeruAoenam-vp--, ZRiikdage,13b5ar4e4gr(oWuTnUd),;parSteiaatltlseh,adLea,kTev2i5eNwRP4aErk,27.Harrison andPrheavsionuostkbneoewnlerdegpeo.rtHeodaarsyamuwlilledinpliasntnaitnivoeutroaEruerao.pe, Previous knowledge. Wood avens is native to Europe, Significance. First report for Washington. and was first observed in the arboretum in 1978. It has Verbena officinalis L. (VERBENACEAE).—Seattle, been known as a weed in Portland, OR, since 1993, 230 Univ. of Washington campus, weed on waste ground, km to the south. T25N R4E S16, elev. 25 m, 26 Oct 1999, Zika 14649 & Significance. First report for Washington. — Jacobson (WTU). Parietaria judiaca L. (URTICACEAE). King Co., Previous knowledge. Vervain is native to Europe, and Capitol Hill, Seattle, near Aloha St., weed in cracks in has been reported as a weed on ballast in MultnomahCo., concrete, T25N R4E S28, elev. 110 m, 20 Oct 1999, Zika Oregon, 200 km to the south. 14629 & Jacobson (WTU); Pigeon Point, Seattle, near Significance. First report for Washington. 19th St., weedon shadedgroundnearconcrete steps,from — top of bluff to base of West Seattle Bridge, T24N R3E Arthur L. Jacobson, Frederick C. Weinmann, and (SIWT3,Ue)l.ev. 15-45 m, 20Oct 1999,Zika 14633 &Jacobson PUneitve.roFf. ZWiaksah,inHgetrobna,riSuemat,tlDee,pWt.Aof98Bo1t9a5n-y5,32B5o.x 355325,

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