- - FLORA OF LOS ANGELES AND VICINITY LIBRARY NEW YORK BOTANICAL OARDBN BY Le Roy Abrams, A. M. Instructor in Botany in Leland Stanford Junior University STANFORD UNIVERSITY, CAL. STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS APRIL 5, 1904 Copyright, 1!»04, by LeRoy Abhams Si \m ORD UNIVERSITY PfiK89 L 5 F J R A R Y NEW YORK BOTANICAL PREFACE. GARDEN As a student of the flora of southern California, the author has long felt the need of some one book contain- ing descriptions of those plants known to occur in our region. While it is essential that one doing critical work should laboriously search through scattered liter- ature, the average student, and especially the novice, will find such a course impossible. In an endeavor to supply this need, the author has written this book. Not that he feels that the flora is so well known that such a work will prove adequate for years to come, but rather to bring together what knowledge now exists concerning the systematic side of our most interesting plant life. That many mistakes must unavoidably occur, and that many plants are yet to be added, is clearly apprehended. The exact area included in this volume is the coast slope of Los Angeles and Orange Counties. This terri- tory comprises a large portion of the great southern California valley, as well as the following mountain ranges, in each of which we name the culminating point : Sierra Santa Monica (Castro Peak 3946 ft.), Sierra San Fernando (San Fernando Peak 3793 ft.), Sierra San Gabriel (Mt. Gleason 6493 ft.. San Gabriel Peak 6172 ft., Mt. San Antonio 10080 ft.), Sierra Santa Ana (Santiago Peak 5675 ft.). Not a few of the more conspicuous and common plants of southern California not known to occur within our boundaries are included, however, so that the student will rind that a great majority of the iv Preface plants i" be met with on the coast slope south of Point ( Jonception are described. In the preparatioD of the texl the author has made frequent use of published descriptions, especially original ones, only such changes being made as seemed accessary either od account of uniformity or to bring out unob- served characters. Published lists of our local flora have also been constantly consulted, but it is only jus- tice to the author to say that he has personally collected nearlv all the plants included in this work and lias added many species not heretofore reported from our region. Duplicates of these specimens, as well as many others from southern California, are to be found in the Leland Stanford Jr. University Herbarium. The author wishes to express his thanks to the follow- ing persons for assistance in various ways: Mr. S. B. Parish. Dr. A. Davidson and Dr. H. E. Hasse for valuable : Miss Alice Eastwood for the privilege of examin- ing the material in the California Academy of Sciences Herbarium : Dr. N. L. Britton, Dr. B. L. Robinson, Dr. E. L. Greene, \h\ P. A. Rydberg and Dr. J. K. Small for notes on doubtful forms; finally to Prof. William R. Dudley, who has not only given many critical notes and valuable suggestions which have aided greatly toward the completion of the work, but has also shown many personal favors which have rendered the task a pleasant one t<» the author. KEY TO THE FAMILIES Srr.KiNGi.oM SPERM ATOPHYTA. Ovules and seeds borne on the face of a scale. Class 1. Gymnosper.m ak, Ovules and seeds contained in a closed cavity (ovary). Class 2. Angiospermae. Class I. GYMNOSPERMAE. Represented with us by 1 family. Pinaceae, 1. Class II. ANGIOSPERMAE. Cotyledons l; stem endogenous. Subclass 1. Monocotyledons. Cotyledons 2; stem exogenous. Subclass 2. Dicotyledons. Subclass I. MONOCOTYLEDONS. Leaves usually parallel-veined ; flowers mostly 3-merous or 6-merous. Perianth of minute scales or bristles, or wanting. Flowers aggregated on a spadix or scattered, the clusters surrounded at base by a spathe, or foliaceous or membranaceous bract; periantb of minute scales or bristles, or wanting. Reed-like or flag-like marsh plants ; flowers unisexual. Typhaceae, 8. Immersed aquatic plants. Naiadaceae, 9. Marsh or subaquatic plants; flowers perfect. Jdncaginaceae, 14. Minute floating plants. Lemnaceae, 77. Flowers in the axils of scales (glumes); perianth wanting. Glumes 2 to each flower. Gramineae, 18. Glumes 1 to each flower. Cyperaceae, 64. Perianth of 6 distinct chaff-like scales. Juncaceae, 79. Perianth petalold. Carpels distinct, numerous. Alismaceae, 16. Carpels united, usually 3, forming a 3-celled or 3-valved ovary. Ovary superior. Liliaceae, 82. Ovary inferior. Stamens 3; perianth regular. Iridaceae, 92. Stamens 1 or 2; perianth irregular. Orchidaceae, 93. vi Key to the Families Subclass ii. dicotyledons. Leaves mostly netted-veined ; flowers seldom 3-merous or 6-merous, usually 4-nierous or 5-merous. Petals separate and distinct from each other or sometimes wanting, rarely somewhat united. Series 1. Choripetalae. Petals partly or wholly united, rarely separate or wanting. Series 2. Sympktai.ak. Series I. CHOKIPKTALAE. Petals distinct, at least at base, except in some species of Silerie and Crassulaceae. Petals wanting. (A) Flowers unisexual, one or both kinds in amente; trees or shrubs. Staminate flowers in amenta, pistillate becoming a nut. Leaves pinnate. Juglandaceae, 96. Leaves entire or variously lobed or toothed. Fagaceae, 104. Staminate and pistillate flowers both in aments. Leaves opposite; flowers dioecious. Garrya, 293. Leaves alternate. Pistillate flowers becoming wax-coated berries. MTRICACSAB, 97. Pistillate flowers becoming capsules. SAL1CACEAB, 98. Pistillate flowers with their scales becoming a woody cone in fruit. Bbtolaceab, 103. (B) Flowers not in aments. * Ovanj superior. l. Herbs. Calyx and corolla both wanting. Flowers perfect, in spikes, these surrounded at base by a conspicuous white Involucre. anemopsis, 96. I ■ rs monoecious. Aqual ic plants. Leaves disseoted. Cebatopbyllacbab, 160. Lea i lAUiITBJOBACBAS, '..'.'IT. Terrestlal plants: flower-clusters surrounded by a petaloid involucre; ovary .'( oelled, raised above the staminate (lowers ; the whole appeal OWer. E0PBOBB1 \< BAB, 881. Key to the Families vii <'alyr present; corolla wanting. Pistil 1, 1-celled, 1-ovuled. Stipules present. Leaves alternate. Stipules not sheathing. Flowers monoecious: herbage with stinging hairs. Urticackae, 106. Flowers perfect, fascicled; diminutive annual. ALCHEMILTjA, 202. Stipules sheathing; calyx usually 6-parted, often petaloid. POLYGONAC'EAE, 110. Leaves opposite, pungent; petals represented by minute scales. Pentacakna, 150. Stipules none. Calyx petaloid. Calyx 6- (rarely 5-) parted; seed a 3-sided or lenticular achene. POLYGONAC'EAE, 110. Calyx tubular, its base hardening and enclosing the achene. Nt< taginaceae, 136. Calyx not petaloid. Sepals herbaceous; herbage more or less succulent and scurvy. Chenopodiaceae. 123. Sepals membranous or scarious; flowers with bractlets. AMARANTHACEAE, 132. Pistils several, distinct, each 1-celled, 1-ovuled. Thalictrum, 156. Pistil 1, 3-5-celled; sepals sometimes petaloid; flowers perfect. Aizoaceae, 138. Pistil 3-celled; flowers dioecious or monoecious. Euphorbiaceae, 231. Pistil 1, 10-celled; fruit a berry. Phytolaccaceae, 135. 2. Trees and Shrubs. Leaves opposite. Flowers dioecious; low maritime shrub; leaves fleshy. Batidaceae, 134. Flowers perfect or dioecious: sepals petaloid; fruit a tailed achene. Clematis, 154. Flowers perfect; fruit a samara. Fraxinus, 302. Xeaves alternate. Flowers perfect; sepals petaloid. Sepals 6; stamens 9. Stamens opening by uplifted valves; aromatic tree. Lauraceae, 157. Stamens splitting longitudinally; shrubs. Eriogonum, 116. Calyx 5-cleft; stamens 5, monadelphous. Frkmontodendron, 250. Flowers monoecious in head-like clusters. Platanaceae, 194. Flowers perfect or unisexual; sepals and stamens 4 or 5; fruit berry-like. RHAMSUS, 241. Ki'Y to the Families ** Ovary inferior. Herbs; leaves alternate, divided. DATISCAOBAE, 857. ly plants, parasitic on trees or shrubs. Loranth.u eae, 109. Petal* present . * Ovary superior. 1. Stamens Hypogynous, more than 10. Pistils several to many. Pistils simple and distinct. Pistils becoming achenes or follicles. Rani'Ni vi. L< ibab, 151. Pistils at first united, becoming distinct and forming tortulose pods. Platystk.mon, 159. Pistils cohering around a central axis. MALVACEAE, 245. Pistil 1. Pistil 1-celled. Sepals persistent. Sepals 2. Calandrinia, 140. Sepals 5, the 2 outer smaller, bract like. CiSTACEAE, 868. Sepals caducous; petals 4 or 6, twice as many as sepals. PAPAVERACEAE, 158. Pistil more than 1 celled. MALVACEAE, 845. 8. Stamens Hypogynous, 10 or fewer. Pistils more than 1, distinct. 1'ist ils exceeding the sepals and petals in number. R anin. n. \< r u:, 151. I' • s, petals and sepals of the same number. Crasstlackak, 183. !' 9 several, more or less united around a central axis, elastically sepai ating as 1-seeded carpels. GbbaniacbaB, 227. Corolla regular. Ovary 1-celled. Anthers opening by longitudinal slits. Fruit a oapsule dehiscent at the apex by valves or teeth. Placenta; central or basal. Calyx tubular or of -1-5 distinct sepals. t' LRTOPHYLLAi BAB, I 18 Calyx (if -.'distinct sepals. Porti'i.acaceae, HO. r toentse parietal; oalyx tubular. Frabkbniaci lb, 851 Km it [ndehisoent; Bepals and petals 4. Cruoibbrab, 1H Antbera opening by uplifted valves; Bhrubby plants. Ill nut urn \. i LB, 156. Key to the Families ix Ovary more than 1-celled. Herbs. Leaves opposite. Calyx of 2 distinct sepals. Elatinaceae, 251. Calyx tubular. Silene, 143. Leaves alternate or basal. Sepals and petals 4 ; stamens 6, sometimes 2 or 4. Ovary 1-celled, stipitate. Capparidaceae, 180. Ovary 2-celled, not stipitate. Crucifekak, 164. Sepals and petals 5; capsule 5-celled. Stamens 10; leaves 3-foliate. Oxalidaceae, 228. Stamens 10; leaves pinnate. Limnanthaceae, 237. Stamens 5; leaves simple. Linaceae, 229. Shrubs or trees. Petals and sepals 4; stamens 6; ovary stipitate. Isomeris, 181. Petals and stamens 2; fruit a simple samara. Fraxincs, 302. Corolla irregular. Stamens 10; diadelphous or monadelphous; corolla papilionaceous. Legdminosae, 204. Stamens 5; petals 5, 1 spurred; sepals auricled. VlOLACEAE, 253. Stamens 6; sepals 2; petals 4, in 2 dissimilar pairs. Bicuculla, 163. Stamens 6-8, monadelphous; petals 3, papilonaceous-like. polygalaceae, 230. 3. Stamens Perigynous. Stamens on an hypogynous disk or on a disk lining the base of the calyx. Herbs; disk 1-sided. Resedaceae, 1S2. Trees or shrubs. Stamens equaling the petals in number and opposite them. Shrubs; petals commonly hooded; ovary usually 3-celled. Rhamnaceae, 240. Woody vines climbing by tendrils; petals early deciduous. Vitaceae, 244. Stamens exceeding the petals in number. Leaves alternate. Fruit drupe-like; styles or stigmas 3. Anacardaceae, 238. Fruit a double samara; leaves simple. ACERACEAE, 240. Stamens on the calyx. Corolla irregular; fruit a legume. Legdminosae, 204. Corolla regular. Stamens more than 10; pistils 1-many. Rosaceae, 195. Stamens 10; fruit a legume. Prosopis, 205. Stamens 5-10. Calyx campanulate. Saxifragaceae, 188. Calyx tubular. Lythraceae, 260. Key t<> the Families ** Ovary inferior. i'i eet Stamens exceeding the petals in number; fruit a pome. ROSACEAE, 195. Stamens as many as the petals and opposite them. Rhamnackak, 240. Stamens as many as the petals and alternate with them. Leaves alternate: fruit a smooth or prickly berry. Ribes, 192. Leaves opposite; fruit drupe-like. Cornaceae, 292. Hi rbs. Petals and stamens many; fleshy maritime herbs. Mesembrianthemcm, 139. Petals 5 or fewer. Style 1. Sepals and petals 4; capsule 4-celled. Onagraceae, 261. 452. Sepals and petals 5; capsule 1-celled. Loasaceae, 255. Sepals 2; petals 5; style 3-8-parted; capsule 1-celled. PORTULAC'A, 142. Style none; stigmas 4; aquatic plants with whorled leaves. Haloragidaceae, 873. Styles 4-5; fruit berry-like. Araliaceae, 274. Styles 2; flowers umbellate or capitate; fruit forming 2 1-celled carpels. Umuei-liferae, 275. I epiny plants, tilth jointed stems. Cactaceae, 257. Series II. SYMPETALAK. Petals united, at least below, except in Pyrolaceae, Plumbagi- naceae and Oleaceae. * Ovary superior. Corolla regular. Stamens free from the corolla; anthers opening by pores. i •• tala distinct ornearlj bo. Pyrolaceae, 294. lis united; shrubs or trees. ERICACEAE, 295. to the corolla, opposite the corolla-lobes. I: fruit capsular, many-seeded. PBIMTTLACBAE, 898, 5; fruit utricular, 1-seeded. PLUMBAOINACBAE, 801. at i: wit li t he corolla-lobes. i tvaries -.', separate, beeoml i FllamenlJ dl n Loot Apo< i n u i le, 804. i monadelptaoua As< i.i.r ldacbai Key to the Families xi Ovary 1, not lobed. Ovary 1-celled. Leaves opposite, entire. Gentianageae, 303. Leaves mostly alternate and seldom entire. II VDKOPHYLLACEAE, 319. Ovary 2-celled; corolla not scarious. Leafy plants. Calyx 5-toothed. Solanaceae, 349. Sepals 5, distinct. Convolvulaceae, 307, 452. Leafless parasitic plants; herbage yellowish. Ccscdtaceae, 310. Ovary 3-celled; styles 3-cleft; capsule 3-valved. Polemoniaceae, 311. Ovary 2-4-celled; corolla scarious. Plantaginaceae, 375. Ovary 1, deeply 4-lobed, forming 4 nutlets. Leaves alternate. Boraginaceae, 328. Leaves opposite. Mentha, 348. ('orolla irregular. Stamens 4 or 2. Ovary 1-celled; parasitic plants. Orobanchaceae, 373. Ovary 2-celled. Scrophulariaceae, 355. Ovary 4-celled, not lobed, splitting into 4 nutlets. Verbenaceae, 338. Ovary 4-lobed, splitting into 4 nutlets. Labiatae, 338. Stamens 5; ovary 2-celled. Verbascu.m, 356. ** Ovary inferior. Stamens distinct. Leaves alternate. Campandlaceae, 385. Leaves opposite or whorled. Ovary 1-celled. Stamens 1-3; slender spring annuals. Valerianaceae, 382. Stamens 2-4; stout late summer herbs. Dipsaceae, 383. Ovary 2-5-celled. Ovary 2-celled ; flowers regular, minute; stems usually 4-angled. Rubiaceae, 377. Ovary 2-5-celled; flowers regular or irregular. Caphifoliaceae, 380. Stamens united into a tube around the ovary. Flowers not in heads. Stamens 3; flowers regular. Cucurbitaceae, 384. Stamens 5; flowers irregular. Campanulaceae, 385. Flowers in heads on a common receptacle, ligulate or tubular. Compositae, 389. FLORA OF LOS ANGELES AND VICINITY. Family 1. PINACEAE. Pine Family. Resinous trees or shrubs, mostly with evergreen nar- row entire or scale-like leaves. The wood uniform in tex- ture, without tracheae, these marked by large depressed disks. The pollen sacs and ovules borne in separate spikes (cones). Perianth none. Stamens several together, subtended by a scale, filaments more or less united ; anthers 2-several-celled, variously dehiscent ; pollen grains often provided with 2 lateral inflated sacs. Ovules with 2 integuments, borne solitary or several to- gether on the surface of a scale, which is often subtended by a bract. Fruit a cone with few-numerous woody, papery or fleshy scales, sometimes berry-like. Seeds wingless or winged. Endosperm copious. Embryo straight slender. Cotyledons 2 or several. Leaves not scale-like. Leaves usually fascicled; cones maturing the second year. 1. Pinds. Leaves scattered, appearing 2-ranked; cones maturing the first year. Cones pendulous; bracts conspicuous. 2. Pseudotsuga. Cones erect. 3. Abies. Leaves scale-like. Monoecious; cones not berry-like. 4. Libocedrus. Dioecious; cones with fleshy scales, berry-like. 5. Juniperus. 2 Pinaceae I. PINTTS L. Pine. Evergreen trees with 2 kinds of leaves, the primary ones linear or scale-like, deciduous ; the secondary ones forming the ordinary foliage, narrowly linear, arising from the axils of the former in fascicles of 2-5, or soli- tary in a single species; subtended by the bud scales, some of which arc united to form a sheath. Staminate cones borne at the bases of the shoots of the season, the clusters of stamens spirally arranged each in the axil of a minute scale; filaments very short ; anthers 2-celled, longitudinally dehiscent. Ovule-bearing cones solitary or clustered, borne on the twigs of the preceding year, composed of numerous imbricated minute bracts, each with an ovule-bearing scale in its axil, ripening into a large cone, which matures the following autumn, its scales elongating and becoming woody. Seeds 2 on the base of each scale, winged above, the testa crusta- c IOUS. * Scales thin, with a terminal unarmed umbo; leaves in 5's. 1. P. Lambertiana Dougl. (Sugar Pine.) Becoming a large tree, with light brown smoothish bark, splitting in small sec- tions; leaves 8-10 cm. long, with 5-6 lines of stomata on each <>f the 3 sides; staminate cones oval, 1 cm. long, with 10-15 involu- cral scales ; anthers denticulate-crested; fruiting cones cylindric, bright brown, 2-4 dm. long, 8-10 cm. broad, on peduncles S cm. long; seeds smooth, black, 12 mm. long; wing scarcely twice as long, widest below the middle, obtuse; cotyledons 13-15. Frequent In the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains, 6mh)-8ikki feet altitude. 2. P. flexilis James. A middle-sized tree with furrowed gray bark; leaves 5, 3-6 cm. long, thick and rigid; staminate* cones oval, 12-14 mm. Long, involucral bracts 8-0; anthers tipped by a spur; fruiting cones oval to Bubcylindric, 8-16 cm. long, light brown, scales rounded or pointed at the apex; seeds oval.com- Pine Family 3 pressed, 8-12 mm. long; wing minute, scarcely exceeding 1 mm. in width, usually remaining attached to the scale. Summits of San Gorgonio, San Jacinto and Sant a Rosa Mountains. ** Scales with a thickened, usually awned umbo. •*- Staminate cones 3-0 mm. I"iig; leaves 1-5 in a cluster, 5 cm. long or less. 3. P. monophylla Torr. & Frem. (Nit Pink.) A small tree, 5-8 m. high, with irregularly spreading branches and pale flaky hark; leaves short, spiny-tipped, solitary, terete, 3-5 cm. long; staminate cones oval with ti involucral bracts; fruiting cones 3-6 cm. long and nearly as broad, bright green, apex of scale thickened, 4-angled, narrowed into a prominent knob with a usu- ally truncate umbo ending in a minute incurved tip; seeds oblong, 12-20 mm. long; wing light brown, 8-12 mm. wide, remaining attached to the scale. Frequent on the desert slopes of the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains. 4. P. quadrifolia Pari. (Parry's Pine.) A small tree, 6-10 m. high, with around top; bark dark brown tinged with red, divi- ded by shallow fissures; leaves 3-5 (mostly 4) in a sheath, stout, glaucous, 30-45 mm. long ; staminate cones oval, about 5 nun. long, surrounded by 4 conspicuous bracts; fruiting cones sub- globose, 3-5 cm. broad; scales thickened at apex, rounded, conspicuously keeled, narrowed with a central knob terminating in a truncate or concave umbo, armed with a minute recurved mucro, bright chestnut brown, the rest of the scale dull red; seeds oval, 10-10 mm. long; wings brown, about 2 mm. wide, remaining attached to the scale. (P. Parryana Engelm.) Santa Rosa Mountains, Hall. First collected at Larkin's Station near the Mexican boundary by Parry. *■ ■*- Staminate cones 10-50 mm. long; leaves 2-5 in a cluster, usually over 10 cm. long. 5. P. Torreyana Parry. (Del Mar or Torrey Pine.) A small tree, 6-10 m. high, with spreading branches and dark brownish bark; leaves 5 in a cluster, crowded at the ends of the thick branchlets, stout, 20-28 cm. long; staminate cones cyclindric, about 5 cm. long and 8 mm. thick, involucral bracts 14; fruiting cones broadly ovate, 10-15 cm. long, chocolate brown; scales 4 Pinaceae much thickened at apex into broad straight or reflexed umbos terminating in minute spines; seeds oval, l(>-20 mm. long, nearly enclosed by the thickened rim of the dark brown wings, these 8-10 mm. wide. Delmar, San Diego County ; Santa Rosa Island. 6. P. ponderosa Dougl. (Yellow Pine.) A large tree with very thick red-brown bark; deeply furrowed and split in large plates; leaves 3 in each cluster on stout branchlets, dark green, 15-25 cm. long; staminate cones cylindric, 35-50 mm. long, involucral bracts 10-12; fruiting cones oval, 7-12 cm. long, rich brown; scales thickened into a central knob terminating in compressed straight or recurved umbos, awned with slender spines; seeds ovate, acute, about 8 mm. long, coat nearly black, rugose; wing thin, pale brown, 25-30 mm. long and about 20 mm. wide below the middle. Common on all our mountains, making up a greater part of the coniferous forests. The cones usually fall during the autumn and winter after maturity. 7. P. Jeffreyi Oreg. Com. (Jeffrky Pine.) Closely resembling the preceding in foliage and habit; bark deeply furrowed, not split in large plates, dark; staminate cones 3 cm. long; fruiting cones oval, rather rich browm, 15-30 cm. long; seeds 8-10 mm. long; wings about 25 mm. long. With the last, but much less common. Rather frequent in the San Ber- nardino Mountains, especially about Bear Valley. 8. P. Murrayana Oreg. Com. (Murray PrNE or Tamarack Pine.) Becoming a rather large tree, 15-40 m. high ; bark rather finely furrowed, grayish-brown ; leaves 2, 25-75 mm. long, very stout and rigid; sheaths 8-12 mm. long when young; staminate cones with (1-8 involucral bracts, cylindric, 10-15 mm. long; fruiting cones clustered or in pairs, oval or subcylindric, oblique^ 2-") cm. long; scales armed with slender recurved prickles; seeds scarcely 2 nun. long, dark brown mottled with black; wings lighl brown, widest above the base^tapering to apex, 12-15 mm. lone. lent in tin- upper portions of the coniferous forests. Mt. San An- tonio; Hear Valley; Mt. San Gorgonio; Mt. San Jacinto. . !». P. Sabiniana Dougl. (Digqbb I'isk or Silveb Pine.) A rather small open-topped irregularly branched tree; leaves ,'i iii a cluster, drooping, lighl green or glaucous, 2-3 cm. long; stami- nate cones oblong, about 2 cm. long, with 10-15 involucral bracts : Pine Family 5 fruiting cones lateral, short oval, acutish, 15-25 cm. long, 10-15 cm. in diameter, deep chestnut-brown; scales produced into prominent knobs awned with stout straight or slightly incurved spines; seeds subcylindric, dark, 18-24 mm. long; wing about half as long. Antelope Valley, ranging northward to the upper Sacramento. Confined to the foothills. 10. P. Coulteri Lamb. (Coulter's Pine.) A middle-sized tree, with thick rough bark; leaves crowded at the ends of the thick branches in clusters of 3, stiff and erect, 15-25 cm. long, dark blue-green; staminate cones cylindric, 35-40 mm. long, with 8-10 involucral bracts; fruiting cones long-oval, pointed, 25-35 cm. long, 10-12 cm. thick, yellowish-brown, persistent; scales with a stout elongated umbo armed with thick incurved spines; seeds oval, black, 12-16 mm. long; wing 20-30 mm. long. Rather frequent in the coniferous forests of the San Bernardino, San Jacinto and Cuyamaca Mountains, 4500-7000 feet altitude. Not yet reported from the San Gabriel Mountains. 11. P. attenuata Lemmon. (Knob-cone Pine.) A small tree usually less than 10 m. high, somewhat irregularly branched; bark light brown, roughish ; leaves in clusters of 3, 10-15 cm. long, dark green; staminate cones, cylindric, 14-15 cm. long, with 6 involucral bracts; fruiting cones clustered in verticils, persistent for many years, light chestnut-brown becoming grayish, elon- gated-conic, oblique at the base, 8-14 cm. long; scales armed with stout prickles; seeds black, grooved, 6 mm. long; wing 14-16 mm. long, widest near the middle. (P. tuberculata Gordon.) Extending in a narrow belt along the southern slope of the San Bernar- dino Mountains, 2500-4000 feet altitude. 2. PSEUDOTSUGA Carr. False Spruce. Evergreen trees with flat petioled leaves, appearing 2-ranked by a twist of the petiole, leaving an oval scar on the smooth branches. Staminate cones oblong or cylin- dric, partly enclosed by conspicuous orbicular bud-scales, scales ending in a short spur ; anthers 2, obliquely split- ting. Pistillate cones with the scales much shorter than the broadly linear acutely 2-lobed and long-pointed. (•> Pinaceae aristulate bracts, maturing the firsl year. Seeds without resinous-resides, the wing at last breaking off ; coty- ledons 6-12. I. P. macrocarpa (Torr.) Mayr. (Big-cone Spbucb.) Tree L2-18 in. high, rarely 1 in. in diameter, branches spreading; Leaves rather narrow, acutish; Btaminate cones about 2 cm. long; fruiting cones 12-18 cm. long, 5-6 cm. thick; scales large, rather thick; bracts somewhat exceeding the scales; seeds in- cluding wing about 10 mm. long; cotyledons 9-12. R;uher common in all our mountains except the Santa Monica. Ranging mostly from 2000-5000 feet altitude, being confined for the most part to canyons and north slopes in the upper portions of the chaparral belt and extending into the pine belt. 3. ABIES Link. Kir. Evergreen trees with sessile loaves appearing 2-ranked by a twist of the petiole leaving a circular scar on the smooth branches, more or less flattened and emarginate, bearing stomata only or mainly ^)n the lower surface, with 2 longitudinal resin-ducts mostly close to the epi- dermis on the lower side. Staminate cones oval or cylin- dric, scales terminating in a knob, hearing 2 anthers. these transversely dehiscent. Pistillate cones erect, the brad much larger than the scale. Fruiting cones erect, maturing the first year, scales and enclosed or exserted membranous bracts falling at maturity from the persist- ent axis. Seeds partly and permanently enclosed by the base of the wing. Cotyledons 4 10. 1. A. concolor (Gord.) Parry. (Whitk Fir.) Often becoming B large tree with rough grayish bark; leaves obtuse, pale green, with stomata on both sides, 2-3 cm. long or on yoniuj trees often 6 cm. long, convex above, somewhat falcate; mature cones oblong- cylindric, 8-12 cm. long, M-l cm. thick, pale green; scales 2 l-HO mm. broad, but little over half as long; bracts short enclosed, truncate or emarginate, with or without, a short mucro; wing of the seeds oblique, as broad as long; cotyledons 5-7. Frequent in the coniferous for. sis of the San Qabrieli San Bernardino, San Jaotnto and Cuyamaea Mountains. Pino Family 7 4. LIBOCEDRUS Endl. Incense Cedar. Evergreen aromatic trees with thin fibrous bark and scattered flattened 1 tranches. Leaves scale-like adnate and imbricate in 4 rows, oblong, with free acute tips, somewhat dimorphous. Staminate cones of 12-16 sub- peltate broadly ovate pointed scales, hearing usually 1 pollen-sacs. Pistillate cones composed of 4-6 small coriaceous valvate scales, only the middle pair fertile ; ovules 2. Mature cones oblong, scales oblong; seeds unequally 2-winged, maturing the first year. 1. L. decurrens Torr. Mostly a rather small tree with bright cinnamon-red bark and spreading branches; leaves pale green, 4-8 mm. long, the lateral ones without glands, nearly covering the flattened, obscurely pitted inner ones; staminate cones oblong- ovate, 5-6 mm. long; fruiting cones 2 cm. long and about 8 mm. thick; scales with short somewhat recurved mucro; seeds ob- long-lanceolate, 8-12 mm. long, the narrow outer wing scarcely longer, the inner broader and nearly equaling the scale. Frequent in the coniferous forests of the San Gabriel, San Bernardino, San Jacinto and Cuyamaca Mountains. 5. JUNIPERUS L. Juniper. Low dioecious or monoecious shrubs or trees, with mostly thin shredded bark and evergreen binate or ter- nate, free and subulate or adnate and scale-like leaves, not 2-ranked. Cones small solitary axillary or terminal upon short lateral branchlets ; scales few, decussately binate or ternate. Staminate cones oblong-ovate ; an- ther-cells 4-8 under each shield-shaped scale. Pistillate cone of 2 or 3 series of fleshy scales, with 2 erect ovules to each scale, becoming united into a blue-black or reddish drupe in fruit and ripening the second year. Seeds 1—12, bony ; cotyledons usually 2, rarely 4-6. 1. J. Californica Carr. Shrub usually much branched, with stout, spreading branches and branchlets; leaves ternate, s Typhaceae short and thick, mostly acute, grayish green ; fruit ohlong-ovate, reddish, dry and sweetish, 10-14 mm. long, of 6 or rarely 4 scales, usually 1-seeded; seed 8-12 mm. long, smooth, often angled or grooved, brown with a whitish 2-3-lobed hilum ; cotyledons 4-6. San Fernando Valley and San Gabriel Wash near the mouth of the can- yon. Common on the desert slope. 2. J. occidentalis Hook. Usually a small tree, 6-12 m. high : fruit blue-black, resinous-fleshy ; seeds deeply pitted ; cotyledons 2. Summit of Mt. San Antonio and in Bear Valley, San Bernardino Mountains. Family 2. TYPHACEAE. Cat-tail Family. Marsh or aquatic herbs with creeping rootstocks and solid cylindric stems, bearing long linear alternate leaves. Flowers monoecious, in dense spikes or heads. Perianth composed of bristles or irregular scales. Sta- mens - 7. filaments distind or connate. Ovary stipitate or sessile, 1 2-ovuled. Fruit nut-like; endosperm copious. Flowers in spikes. 1. TTPHA. Flowers in heads. 2. Spakgami m. 1. TYPHA L. Cat-tail. Stems tall simple terminating in a long spike, the staminate portion above contiguous with the pistillate below or separate. Perianth of numerous fine bristles. Filaments connate. Nuts small, enveloped in a copious do\\ n. 1. T. latifolia L. Stems stout, 1.5-3 m. high; leaves long, 6-20 mm. wide, sheathing at base; spike L5-25 cm. long, 20 mm. <>r ne ire in diameter, the staminate and pistillate portions usually contiguous; stigmas rhomboid or spatulate; pollen grains in l's; fruit furrowed, bursting in water; seeds with separate outer Coat. Frequeni throughout our range along the margins of marshes or slow- running Btreazns. May July. 2. T. angustifolia L. Stems slender, L. 5-3.5 m. high; leaves 1-9 mm. wide; spikes L5-30cm. long, 4-16 mm. in diameter, the Naiadaceae 9 Btaminate and pistillate portions usually distant; stigmas linear or linear-oblong; pollen grains simple; fruit not furrowed, not bursting in water, outer coat not separable. In similar places, but not common. Near Los Angeles, Davidson; San Bernardino, Parish. 2. SPARGANIUM L. Bur-beed. Marsh or aquatic plants with simple or somewhat branched stems. Flowers in globose heads along the upper portions of the stem and branches, the upper 1 leads stamina te ; the lower pistillate, in the axils of leaf- like bracts. Perianth of minute irregular scales. Sta- mens with long slender distinct filaments. Ovaries ses- sile, mostly 1-celled. Fruit nut-like. 1. S. eurycarpum Engelm. Stems ratherstout, 1-2.5 m. high, branching; leaves, linear flat, slightly keeled beneath, the lowest 1-1. 5 m. long, the upper shorter; staminate heads numerous; pistillate heads 2—4, sessile or more commonly peduncled, com- pact, 20-40 mm. in diameter when mature; style 1; stigmas 1-2; nutlets sessile, 6-10 mm. long; perianth segments as many as the angles of the fruit or with 2-3 outer ones, spatulate or eroded, equaling the fruit. Occasional along streams, usually growing with Typha. Ballona Creek; New River near Alamitos. May-June. Family 3. NAIADACEAE. Pondweed Family. Aquatic plants entirely submerged or with floating haves. Stems jointed, usually branched. Leaves linear or lanceolate or with broad floating blades, sheathing at the base. Flowers small, naked or with herbaceous or hyaline perianth, commonly borne on a spike or spa- dix. Stamens 1-6, with extrorse anthers. Ovaries mostly distinct, 1-celled, 1-ovuled. Carpels rarely dehi's^- cent ; endosperm none ; embryo often curved. in Naiadaceae Flowers perfect. Perianth of 4 distinct segments. 1. Potamogkton. Perianth none. 2. BUPPIA. I i .'. its monoecious or dioecious. Fresh-water plants; liowers monoecious. Leaves entire. 3. Zannichkllia. Leaves spiny-toothed on the margins. 4. Naias. Marine plants. Flowers monoecious; carpels ovoid. ft. Zostera. Flowers dioecious; carpels heart-shaped. 6. Phyllospadix. 1. POTAMOGETON L. Pondweed. Perennial herbs. Leaves alternate or the uppermost often opposite, often of 2 kinds, submerged and float- ing, the floating elliptic or ovate, the submerged linear. Spikes sheathed by the stipules in the bud. Peduncles axillary, bearing small perfect flowers. Perianth segments 4, herbaceous concave, valvate in the bud, short-clawed. Stamens 4, inserted on the claws of the perianth segments ; anthers sessile. Ovaries 4, sessile distinct 1-celled, L-ovuled, attenuate into a short erect or recurved style. * With floating and submerged leaves. 1. P. natans L. Stems 1-1.5 m. long, simple or sparingly branched; floating leaves thick ovate-elliptic to lanceolate, rounded or subcordate at base, 4-8 cm. long, mostly shorter than the petiole; submerged leaves reduced to phyllodcs or bladeless petioles; peduncle as thick as the stem, 4-8 cm. long; spike dense, 4 cm. long; fruit turgid, 4 mm. long, narrowly obovoid; nutlet pitted on the sides, 2-grooved on the back. Bear Valley, San Bernardino Mountains. Not known within our limits. 2. P. lonchites Tuckerm. Stems 1-2 m. long, much branched ; floating leaves rather thin, elliptic, pointed at both ends, 5-10 cm. long; submerged leaves linear-lanceolate, 10-16 cm. long, 4-1') nun. wide, rounded at base or tapering into a petiole; stip- ules 2-8 cm. long, free from the leaves; peduncles thickening upward, 1-6 cm. l'>ng; spikes dense, 2-4 cm. long; fruit I mm. long, obliquely obovoid, Bides smooth, 3-keeled on the back. (/'. fluitam Roth.? Occasional m ponds in the valley region. Pondweed Family 11 ** With submerged leaves only. 3. P. foliosus Californicus Morong. Stems 0.3-1 m. long, mucli branched, flattened or winged; leaves 3-5 cm. long, 2 mm. wide, 3-nerved or sometimes 5-nerved toward the base ; stipules free from the leaves, small, white, becoming setose; peduncles 8-12 mm. long, erect, clavate, flattened; spikes subeapitate, 6-12-flow- ered; fruit lenticular or nearly orbicular, about 2 mm. long, 3- keeled on the back, middle keel winged, sinuate-dentate, face strongly angled or arched; style apical. (P. paucijiorus Cali- fornicus Morong.) Occasional in streams and irrigating ditches in our interior valleys. June-September. 4. P. pectinatus L. Stems 0.3-1 m. long, slender, mucb branched, branches repeatedly forking; leaves setaceous, attenu- ate to the apex, 1-nerved, often capillary and nerveless, 2-10 cm. long; stipules half free, 1-2 cm. long, their sheaths scarious on the margins; peduncles filiform, 4-10 cm. long; spike 1-4 cm. long; flowers in whorls; fruit obliquely obovoid, about 4 mm. long, with two ohscure lateral ridges on the back ; style straight, or curved, facial. Common in streams and ponds. May-August. 2. RUPPIA L. Ditch-grass. Stems capillary, widely branched. Leaves all sub- merged very slender attenuate 1-nerved, with mem- branous sheaths at the base. Flowers on a capillary spadix-like peduncle naked perfect, consisting of 2 ses- sile anthers, 2-celled. attached by the back to the peduncle, having between them several pistillate flowers with sessile peltate stigmas in 2 sets on opposite sides of the rachis, the whole at first enclosed in the sheathing base of the leaf ; in developmenl the peduncle elongates, bearing the pistillate flowers at the end ; fertilization takes place at the surface, after which the peduncle coils up. Fruit a small obliquely pointed drupe, pedicelled. 1. R. maritima L. Stems 0.5-1 m. long; leaves 4-6 cm. lonj: ; sheaths membranous, G-8 mm. long; peduncles 4-20 cm. long or 12 Naiadaceae more in fruit; pedicels 1-3 cm. long at maturity; drupes with a hard shell, 2 mm. long, ovoid oblique or gibbous at base, pointed with the long style. Brackish streams along the coast. June-August. 3. ZANNICHELLIA L. Horned Pondweed. Stems capillary, Bparsely branch'ed from a creeping rhi- zome. Leaves all submerged, filiform but flat, 1-nerved. Staminate and pistillate flowers in the same axil, en- closed in the bud by a hyaline spathe-like envelope; staminate solitary, with 2-celled anther on a short pedi- cel-like lilanient : pistillate '!-"). Ovary flask-shaped, stipulate at base, tapering into a short style with a broad cup-shaped stigma, its margins angled or dentate. Fruit a flattish falcate nutlet, ribbed or sometimes toothed on the back. 1. Z. palustris L. Stems 3-6 dm. high; leaves 2-6 cm. long; spathe separating from the leaves and fruit at maturity ; fruits 2-6 in a cluster, 2-4 mm. long, sessile or short pedicelled, some- times the whole cluster peduncled ; style persistent, straight or curved, 1-2 mm. long. Occasional in marshes and ponds. 4. NAIAS L. Naiad. Stems slender, branching, from fibrous roots. Leaves all submerged, opposite or whorled, spiny-toothed, sheathing at the base. Flowers i oecious or dioecious, axillary, solitary, sessile or pedicelled. Staminate with a double perianth ; the outer entire or I -toot bed at the apex. the inner one hyaline, adhering to the anthers. Stamens sessile or stalked ; anthers L-4-celled, apiculate or 2-lobed at the summit. Pistillate flowers of a single ovary, which tapers into a short style; stigmas 2-1, subulate. Fruit a solitary carpel, sessile, ellipsoidal, with a crusta- ceouE pericarp. Pondweed Family 13 1. N. flexilis (Willd.) R. & S. Stem slender, forking; leaves linear pellucid, acuminate or acute, 1-2 cm. long, 1-2 mm. wide, numerous and crowded on the upper branches with 25-30 minute teeth on each margin ; fruit 2-4 mm. long, 0.5-1 mm. in diameter ; style long, persistent; stigmas short. Near Soldiers' Home, Basse, /'aridson. 4. ZOSTERA L. Eel-grass. Marine plants, wholly submerged, with slender root- stork- and branching compressed stems. Leaves 2-ranked, sheathing at the base, the sheaths with in- flexed margins. Spadix linear, contained in a spathe. Flowers monoecious, arranged alternately in 2 rows on the spadix. Staminate flower merely an anther attached to the spadix near its apex, 1-celled ; pollen thread-like. Pistillate flower fixed on its back near the middle. Ovary 1 ; style elongated ; stigmas capillary. Mature carpels flask-shaped, beaked by the persistent style. Seeds ribbed ; embryo ellipsoidal. 1. Z. marina L. Leaves ribbon-like, obtuse at the apex, 0.5-2 m. long, 5-10 mm. wide; spadix 2-5 cm. long; flowers about 6 mm. long, crowded. Shoal waters in bays on muddy bottoms. San Pedro. 5. PHYLLOSPADIX Hook. Submerged marine plants with thickened rootstocks and slender stems, which bear the inflorescence at the summit or in clusters along the upper part. Leaves linear, sheathing. Flowers dioecious in spathes like those of Zostera. Spathes with membranous edges, the back thickened and terminating in long leaf-like ap- pendages. Spadix with a series of short dilated foli- aceous flaps, which close over the flower, spreading open at maturity. Staminate flowers of numerous sessile stamens in 2 rows ; anthers 1-celled. Pistillate of sim- ple sessile ovaries, attenuate into a short style ; stigmas 14 Juncaginaceae •J. capillary. Fruit beaked by the short persistent style, cordate-sagittate. 1. P. Torreyi Wats. Stems slender, flat, 0.5 m. long or more, bearing the Bpathes in clusters along the upper part; leaves 4-8 cm. Long, 1-2 mm, wide, thick and smooth ; sheaths long, their margins membranous; spathes 3-5 in a cluster, 2-4 cm. long, Blightly curved; appendages of the pistillate spadix elliptic, of the ataminate oblong-ovate; fruit heart-shaped, 5 mm. long. Growing on rocks which are uncovered at low tide. San Pedro; La Jolla. Family 1. JUNCAGINACEAE. Arrow-grass Family. Marsh plants with rush-like or cylindric leaves. Flowers spicate, racemose or solitary, perfecl or monoe- cious. Perianth none, 1-bracted or 4— 6-parted. Stamens 1 or 3-6. Ovaries 1 or 3—6, when more than 1 they are more or less united while immature. Seeds anatropous ; embryo straight. Flowers perfect ; perianth segments 3-6. 1. Triglochin. Flowers polygamous; perianth wanting. 2. Lilaka. 1. TRIGLOCHIN L. Arrow-grass. Marsh plants with radical semiterete fleshy leaves, which have membranous sheaths at the base. Flowers small perfecl in spikes or racemes, on long smooth naked Bcapes. Perianth segments 3—6, concave, the •"> inner in- serted higher up than the others when present. Sta- mens 3-6; anthers 2-celled extrorse sessile or nearly bo, inserted at the base of the segments and deciduous with them. Ovaries 6, united or rarely free, L -celled ; Btyle short; stigmas as many as ovaries, plumose. Fruit of 3-6 oblong or ovoid carpels, when ripe separat- ing from the base upward from a persistent central axis. dehiscing by a vent ra I Buture. Arrow-grass Family 15 1. T. maritima L. Perennial plants with a long rootstock and a thick caudex, which is nsnally covered with the sheaths of old leaves; spathes stout, 2-4 din. high, commonly solitary; leaves much shorter than the scapes, tapering to a long acute or obtuse point, 4-6 mm. wide; racemes 4-10 cm. long; pedicels decurrent, 2-5 mm. long; perianth segments 6, the 3 inner smaller, ovate, greenish-white; stamens 6; ovaries 6, united, each 1-celled, 1-ovuled ; carpels 3-angled, with the dorsal angles making a broad groove on the back, 5-6 mm. long; stigmas persistent and recurved. Salt marshes along the coast. 2. LILAEA H. B. K. Subaquatic stemless annuals, with simple slender scapes and radical leaves, which are slightly dilated at base. Flowers polygamous, the one sort solitary, pistil- late and disposed among the leaves at the base, with long thread-like styles ; the other monoecious, in dense spikes at the apex of slender scapes. Staminate flowers imbricated in narrow oblong spikes ; anthers nearly ses- sile in the axis of a white linear petaloid bract. Pistil- late flowers imbricated in conical crowded spikes, bract- less, consisting of a 1-celled, 1-ovuled ovary ; stigma capitate. Fruit ovoid, costate, indehiscent. 1. li. subulata H. B. K. Leaves cylindric, numerous, 12-20 cm. long, 3-5 mm. in diameter, tapering to a point at the apex; scapes 8-16 cm. high, shorter than the leaves, terete; styles of the solitary flowers often 12 cm. long and tipped with a capi- tate stigma; fruit 6 mm. long. Occasional about San Bernardino, Parish. Frequent about San Diego and in the Cuyamaca Mountains. 16 Alismaceae Family 5. ALISMACEAE. Water-Plantain Family. A.quatic or marsh plants, with Bcapose stems and radi- cal long petioled sheathing leaves. Inflorescence race- mose or paniculate. Flowers regular perfect, monoecious or dioecious, pedicelled ; the pedicels in whorls and sub- tended by bracts. Perianth segments 6, the outer 3 small berbaceous persistent ; the inner 3 larger and peta- loid, deciduous. Stamens 6 or more; anthers 2-celled, extrorse or dehiscing by Lateral slits. Ovaries numerous distincl on a Hat or convex receptacle, t-celled, L-ovuled. Carpels becoming achenes in fruit. Flowers perfect. 1. ECHINODOBUS. Flowers polygamous. 2. Lophotocakpus. Flowers monoecious or dioecious. 3. Sagittauia. 1. ECHINODORUS Rich. I'.ir-head. Perennial or annual herbs with lon^-petioled, flliptic ovate or Lanceolate, often cordate or sagittate Leaves, 3-9-ribbed and mostly punctate with dots or lines. Scapes often longer than the leaves. Inflorescence race- mose or paniculate. Flowers perfect, in whorls, each whorl with •'! outer bracts and numerous inner bracteoles. Petals white. Receptacle large convex or globose. Sta- mens 12-30. Ovaries numerous ; style obliquely apical, persistent; stigmas simple. Achenes more or Less com- pressed, ribbed and beaked, forming Bpinose heads. 1. E. cordifolius (L.) ( Jriseb. Leaves variable, usually broadly ovate, obtuse, cordate at the base, 12-16 cm. Long and wide, so times lanceolate and smaller; petioles angular, striate, 6-15 cm. Long; scapes 1 or more, erect 10-80 cm. high; (lowers :{-»> in each whorl, on pedicels 8-12 mm. long; bracts lineardanceolate, acu- minate dilated at the base; inner perianth segments shorter t lian the outer, 4-6 mm. long; stamens usually L2; styles exceeding the ovaries in Length; fruiting heads bur-like, 4-6 mm. in diam- Water-Plantain Family 17 eter; achenes obovate or falcate, 6-8-ribbed; beak apical oblique, 1.5 mm. long. I /.'. rostratus Engelm.') Occasional along streams and banks of ponds. May-July. 2. LOPHOTOCARPUS Durand. Annual aquatic or bog plants with basal long petioled sagittate or cordate Leaves, simple erect scapes bearing flowers in several verticils of 2-3 at the summit, the lower perfect, the upper staminate. Petals white. Sepals distinct, enclosing or enveloping the fruit. Re- ceptacle strongly convex. Stamens 9-15, hypogynous inserted at the base of the receptacle. Pistillate numer- ous with solitary ovules and an elongated persistent style. Achenes winged or crested ; embryo horseshoe- shaped. 1. L. calycinus (Engelm.) J. G. Smith. Scapes weak, at length decumbent; leaves floating or ascending, entire, hastate or sagit- tate, the basal lobes spreading ovate, acute or acuminate, 2-16 cm. long; verticils of flowers 1-5; bracts membranous, orbicular or ovate, or those of the staminate flowers lanceolate ; pedicels recurved in fruit ; petals 6-8 mm. long ; filaments flattened, papil- lose; achenes obovate, 2 mm. long, narrowly winged on the mar- gins, tipped with a short horizontal triangular beak. (Sagittaria calycina Engelm.) Ballona Creek. 3. SAGITTARIA L. Arrow-head. Perennial aquatic or marsh herbs with tuber-bearing or nodose rootstocks. Leaves with nerves connected by numerous veinlets. Scapes erect decumbent or floating. Flowers monoecious or dioecious, borne near the summit of the scapes in whorls of 3's, pedicelled, the staminate usually uppermost, whorls 3-hracted. Perianth seg- ments 6, the outer 3 herbaceous persistent and reflexed or spreading in the pistillate flowers. Stamens numer- ous inserted on the convex receptacle ; anthers 2-celled, 18 Gramineae dehiscent by Lateral slits. Pistillate flowers with num- erous distinct 1-ovuled ovaries and small persistent stigmas. A.chenes densely aggregated in globose heads, compressed ; seeds curved ; embryo horseshoe-shaped. 1. S. latifolia Willi 1. Rootstock slender ; scapes 0.2-1 m. high, angled; leaves very variable, ovate-sagittate to linear, acute, lobes more or less divergent, acuminate; flowers monoecious with the lower verticils pistillate or dioecious, 2-4 mm. wide; petals white; stamens numerous 25-35; filaments glabrous; pistillate pedicels shorter than the staminate; achenes broadly winged on hotb margins, 8 mm. long, with a lateral horizontal or curving beak, )4r)'i lis length. (S. variabilis Engelm.) Occasional on margins of ponds about Los Angeles. Family 6. GRAMINEAE. Grass Family. Annual or perennial herbs of various habit, rarely shrubs or trees. Stems (culms) generally hollow or sometimes solid, the nodes closed. Leaves sheathing. the -heaths usually split to the base on the side opposite the blade, a scarious or cartilaginous ring (ligule) borne at the base of the leaf-blade. Inflorescence Bpicate, racemose or paniculate, consisting of spikelets composed of 2-many 2-ranked imbricated bracts (glumes), the 2 lowest in the complete spikelet always empty, 1 or both sometimes wanting. One or more of the upper glumes usually contains in the axil a Bower, which is u-ually inclosed by a bract-like awnless organ called the palea. placed opposite the glume with its back to the axis (rachilla) of the spikelet, generally 2-keeled. Flowers perfect or staminate. g 'times monoecious or dioecious, subtended by L-3, usually 2 minute hyaline scales (lodicules) placed at the base of the ovary oppo- site the palea. Stamens l-(>, usually .'5 ; anthers 2-celled versatile Longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary 1-celled, 1- OVUled ; styles L— 3, usually 2 and lateral; stigmas Grass Family 1«> hairy or plumose. Fruit a seed-like grain (caryopsis). Endosperm starchy. KEY TO THE TRIBES. I. Panicaceae. Spikelets 1-flowered or with a rudimentary or staminate flower below, rarely above, the perfect one; rachilla articulated below the empty glumes. Axis of inflorescence articulated; empty glumes firmer in texture than the flowering ones. Tribe 1. Andropogyneae. Axis of inflorescence not articulated; flowering glumes firmer in texture than the empty ones. Tribe 2. Panhkak. II. Poaceae. Spikelets 1-many-flowered; rachilla usually articulated above the empty glumes. Spikelets 1-flowered. Spikelets arranged on one side of a continuous rachis forming a unilat- eral spike. Tribe 6. Chlorideae. Spikelets not arranged in unilateral spikes. Inflorescence spicate: spikelets sessile on alternate notches of the rachis. Tribe 8. Hordeae. Inflorescence racemose or paniculate, rarely spicate or apparently capitate ; spikelets pedicellate. Glumes 5, the first 4 usually empty, the fifth with a hermaphrodite flower; palea 1-nerved. Tribe 3. Phalarideae. Glumes 3 or sometimes 4, the first two empty : palea 2-nerved. Tribe 4. Agrostideae. Spikelets 2-many-flowered. Spikelets pedicellate in panicles or racemes, never unilateral. Empty glumes usually longer than the flowering glumes, 1 or more of the latter usually awned on the back or from beneath the teeth of the bifid apex; awn twisted. Tribe 5. Aveneae. Empty glumes generally shorter than the flowering glumes, these awnless or with 1-many terminal, rarely dorsal straight or simply divergent awns. Tribe 7. Festdceae. Spikelets sessile in true spikes or on very short pedicels in unilateral racemes. Spikelets in unilateral spikes or racemes. Tribe 6. Chlorideae. Spikelets inserted on the alternate notches of the rachis forming equilateral, flattened or cylindric spikes. Tribe 8. Hordeae. 2d Andropogoneae Tribel. A.NDROPOGONEAE. Sorghum Tribe. Spikelets in spike-like racemes, 2 a1 each joint of the rachis, 1 pedicellate and hermaphrodite, staminate or rudimentary. Glumes usually 4, the first and second empty. Large and mtich firmer in texture than the others, the third usually empty or with a staminate flower in its axil, rarely awned, the fourth or flowering glume hyaline, usually awned, the awn generally twisted or geniculate. Inflorescence composed of spike-like silky racemes. 1. Andropogon. Inflorescence paniculate ; spikelets somewhat silky-pubescent. 2. Sorghum. 1. ANDROPOGON L. Slender or rather coarse perennials with solid culms. Spikelets heterogamous, in pairs at each joint of the articulate and usually hairy rachis. one of each pair ses- sile, hermaphrodite and 1-flowered, the other pedicellate and staminate or rudimentary. Glumes of the fertile spikelel 4, the first coriaceous, flattened on the hack with a strong nerve near each margin and usually with fainter ones between, second glume hyaline awned. Stamens .".. Styles distinct ; stigmas plumose. Grain imfurrowed, free within the hardened outer glumes. 1 . A. glomeratua (Walt.) B. S. P. Culms erect, 4-6 dm. high, Braootb, simple below, much branched above, upper nodes of branches barbed; Bheaths compressed, glabrous or pubescent; 2-4 Him. wide, scabrous, long acuminate, nearly equaling the ■■ulms, tlmse of the culms 15-4.") mm. long; branches elon- gated, forming a compact terminal inflorescence; spikes in pairs. aboul L'"> mm. long, loose, protruding from the sides of the scabrous sheaths; rachis ilexuuus, the joints and pedicels pubes- cent with long spreading silky hairs; outer glume ahout .'! mm. nwn I'J-ls mm. long, scabrous; pedicelled spikelet reduced to a single scale or wanting. I. macrourus Michx.J Bui i is. San Gabriel Mountains, KcClatchU. Sorghum Tribe 21 2. A. saccharoides Swartz. Culms erect, 4-10 dm. high, simple or branched, glabrous, the nodes pubescent with silky hairs ; sheaths smooth ; leaves 8-16 cm. long, 4-6 mm. broad, long-acuminate, scabrous, glaucous ; ligule hairy ; spikes 25-35 mm. long, in an exserted panicle, 5-10 cm. long ; first glume of sessile spikelet ovate-lanceolate, 4 mm. long, about equaling the terminal hairs of the rachis joints, pubescent at base with long silky hairs, scabrous above ; awn 10-15 mm. long, spiral, bent, scabrous ; pedicelled spikelet reduced to a single narrow scale. Occasional on stony south slopes in the chaparral belt. Sepulveda Can- yon and Cahuenga Pass, Santa Monica Mountains; Tia Juana, San Diego County; Gaviota, Santa Barbara County. 2. SORGHUM Pers. Annual or perennial grasses with long broad flat leaves and terminal ample panicles. Spikelets in pairs at the nodes, or in 3's at the ends of the branches, 1 sessile and perfect, the lateral pedicelled, staminate or empty. Sessile spikelet consisting of 4 glumes, the outer indurated and shining, obscurely nerved, the inner hyaline, the fourth awned and subtending a small palea and perfect flower, or palea wanting. Stamens 3. Styles distinct. Grain free. 1. S. Halepense (L.) Pers. (Johnson-grass.) Culms erect, 9-15 dm. high, simple or sometimes much branched, smooth; sheaths smooth; leaves 2 dm. long or more, 7-25 mm. wide, long-acuminate ; panicle open, 15-45 cm. long ; branches gener- ally whorled, spreading, naked towards the base; outer glumes of sessile spikelet 4-6 mm. long, ovatedanceolate, usually purplish, pubescent with long, appressed hairs ; awn 8-16 mm. long, moreor less bent, sometimes wanting; pedicelled spikelets of 4 glumes, the outer 2 about 6 mm. long, membranous, the inner 2 shorter and narrower, sometimes with staminate flowers. Becoming a troublesome grass in moist places along roadsides and in fields. Especially common about Santa Ana. 22 Paniceae Tribe 2. PA NIC EA E. Millet Tribe. Spikelets hermaphrodite, terete or flattened on the hark. Glumes 3- 1. rarely '2, when 4 the third usually includes a Btaminate flower in its axil ; flowering glume firmer in texture than the outer ones. Axis of the in- florescence noi articulated, the rachilla being articulated below the empty glumes and the spikelets falling off singly from the pedicels. Spikelets not surrounded by a bristly or spiny involucre. Glumes 3; spikelets sessile or on short pedicels in unilateral spikes or racemes. 3. Paspalom. Glumes 4, the first usually short, rarely wanting. Spikes digitate. 4. Synthkiusma. Spikes not digitate. 5. Panicom. Spikelets surrounded by a bristly or spiny involucre. Bristles slender, not falling with the spikelets. 6. Chaetochloa. Bristles thickened below, spine-like, falling with the spikelets. 7. Cenchrus. 3. PASPAL.TJM L. Ditch-grass. Perennial grasses of various habit, with generally flat have- and 1-llowered spikelets borne in 2—4 rows on 1- sided spikes, which are single, in pairs or panicled. Spikelets oblong to orbicular, flat on the inner surface, convex on the outer. Glumes •">. rarely 2 by the absence of the outermost, the outer ones membranous, the Inner one indurated and subtending a palea and perfect flower. Stamens 3. Styles distinct; Minimis plumose. Ovary oblong or ovoid, -month. 1. P. distichum L. Culms erect, L5-85 cm. high, creeping at the base; sheaths smooth, sometimes filiate on the margins or sparsely pubescent; leaves Bat, 4-10 cm. long, 2-4 mm. wide, smooth; Bpikee 25-60 nun. long, in pairs, or occasionally with a third, exserted; rachis Bat, L-2 nun. wide, sn th; spikelets mm. long, elliptic, Bomewhal pubescenl or glabrous, acute, Millet Tribe 23 nearly sessile in 2 rows ; outer glumes 3-5-nerved, slightly ex- ceeding the acute third one, which is sparingly hearded at the apex. Frequent along streams and irrigating ditches. Los Angeles; Santa Ana. 4. SYNTHERISMA Walt. Crab-grass. Annual grasses with flat Leaves. Spikelets borne in pairs or in 3's in secund spikes which are digitate or approximate at the summit of the culm. (Humes 4 or 3, the innermost one chartaceous, subtending a palea of similar texture and a perfect flower. Stamens 3. Stig- mas plumose. 1. S. sang-uinalis (L.) Pulac. Culms erect or decumbent, often rooting at the lower nodes, 3-9 dm. long, smooth; sheaths glabrous or pubescent; leaves 5-15 cm. long, 4-8 mm. wide, acuminate, glabrous or pubescent; spikes 3-10, narrowly linear, 4-15 cm. long, digitate at the summit of the culms; rachis flat, winged; spikelets 2.5-3 mm. long, in pairs, 1 sessile or nearly so, lanceolate; first glume minute, second a half to a third as long as the spikelet. (Panicum sanguinale L.) Common along irrigating ditches and in neglected orchards and gardens. 5. PANICUM L. Panic-grass. Annual or perennial grasses, varying greatly in habit and inflorescence. Spikelets 1-2-flowered, when 2-flow- ered the lower one staminate only. Glumes 4, the 3 lower membranous, empty or the third with a staminate flower ; the fourth chartaceous shining, enclosing a palea of similar texture and a perfect flower. Awns commonly wanting. Stamens 3. Styles distinct ; stig- mas plumose. Grain free, enclosed in the hardened fruiting glume and palea. * Anns present. 1. P. Crus-galli L. Culms 3-8 dm. high, usually branching at base; sheaths smooth; leaves 1-5 dm. long, 3-12 mm. wide, smooth or scabrous; panicle composed of 5-15 sessile mostly 24 Paniceae erect or ascending branches ; spikelets ovate, green or purple, densely crowded in 2-4 rows on one side of the rachis; second and third glumes about .'5 mm. long, scabrous or hispid, t lie third glume more or less awned, empty, the fourth ovate abruptly pointed. frequent in neglected orchards and gardens and in waste places. ** .1 uma none. 2. P. colonum L. Culms tufted, smooth. 2 •> dm. high, often decumbent and rooting at the lower nodes ; sheaths compressed, usually crowded: ligule wanting; leaves flat. 3-15 cm. long, 2-8 mm. wide; panicles composed of 3-18, 1-sided more or less spreading dense branches, these 1-3 cm. long, spikelets single, or in 2's or 3's in 2 rows on one side of the hispidulous triangular rachis, obovate, pointed; first glume about half as long as the spikelet, 3-nerved, the second and third glumes a little more than 2 mm. long, awnless, 5-nerved, hispid on the nerves, the fourth cuspidate. i kscasional along irrigating ditches and in waste places about Los Angeles and Santa Ana. 3. P. capillare L. Culms erect or decumbent, 3-6 dm. high, simple or sparingly branched; sheaths papillose-hirsute ; leaves 15-30 cm. long, 6-15 mm. wide, more or less pubescent; terminal panicle usually 2-4 dm. long, lower branches exserted and widely spreading, 1-2 dm. long; spikelets 2-2.5 mm. long, acuminate; first glume \fc-% as long as the spikelet; second and third glumes nearly equal, acute, the fourth 1.5 mm. long. Occasional along irrigating ditches and in neglected orchards and gardens. \. P. scoparium Lam. Culms simple and erect, becoming profuse with age; sheaths hirsute to villous, often papillose; Leaves usually rounded or truncate at the base, pubescent or glabrate, those of the culms 4-6 cm. long, those of the branches much shorter ; terminal panicles less than S cm. lon<_r, ovoid, their branches ascending; lateral panicles much shorter, not exceed- ing the leaves; spikelets scarcely 2 mm. long, pubescent. (/'. pubescent ham.) Not known to occur within enr limits, but it has been found in the San Jacinto Mountains by Mr. Hall, and at Glenn Ranch in Lytic Creek Canyon be author. Millet Tribe 25 6. CHAETOCHLOA Seribn. Bbistly Foxtail. Annual or perennial grasses with erect culms, flat leaves, and dense cylindric or somewhat open bristly spike-like panicles. Spikelets hermaphrodite, usually 1- flowered. Glumes t, the outer 3 membranous, the third often subtending a hyaline palea and rarely a staminate flower, the fourth <>r flowering glume chartaceous, Bmooth or transversely rugose, inclosing a palea similar in texture. Stamens .">. Styles distinct, drain free, enclosed within the glume and palea. 1. C. glauca (L.) Seribn. An erect or ascending caespitose glaucous annual, 3-12 dm. high; culms branching at the base, compressed, glabrous; nodes smooth; sheaths glabrous; ligule short ciliate; leaves 5-15 cm. long, 4-8 mm. wide, long acumi- nate, nearly glabrous or scabrous on the upper surface and mar- gins, generally pilose with scattered long hairs at the base; spikes about 1 cm. in diameter; rachis pubescent; setae 5-12 at each spikelet, unequal, yellowish, 3-8 mm. long; spikelets broadly ovate, 3 mm. long; palea convex at the base, concave above, transversely striate. Occasional along streets in Los Angeles, Davidson. 2. C. imberbis (Poir.) Seribn. Perennial; culms erect or ascending, more or less caespitose, from creeping rootstocks, slender, compressed, scabrous below the panicle, otherwise smooth; sheaths glabrous, the lower much longer than the inter- nodes, smooth on the hyaline margins; leaves 1-3 dm. long, 3-7 mm. wide, long tapering to the apex, slightly scabrous on the upper surface and margins; spikes 2-5 cm. long, nearly 1 cm. broad ; rachis angular, pubescent, branches short, 1- or rarely 2- rlowered ; setae 8-12, spreading, 5-10 mm. long, unequal, slender, finely antrorsely scabrous; spikelets ovate, acute, 2-2.5 mm. long; first glume about %-% as long as the spikelet, ovate, acute, 5-7-nerved ; third glume equaling the flowering glume, 5-nerved, subtending a broad palea of its own length; flowering glume elliptic-ovate, finely transversely rugose; palea plane or concave above. Frequent along irrigating ditches. Los Angeles; Santa Ana; San Ber- nardino. 26 Phalarideae 7. CENCHRUS L. Bur-grass. Annua] or perennial grasses with usually flat leaves ami spike-like inflorescence. Spikelets subtended by a spiny involucre, which is deciduous at maturity with them. Glumes 4, the first hyaline, the second and third mem- branous, the latter sometimes subtending a palea and staminate flower, the fourth chartaceous, subtending a palea of similar texture which incloses a perfect flower. Stamens 3. Grain free, enclosed in the glume. 1. C. tribuloides L. Culms erect or decumbent from an an- nual root, usually robust, 15—45 cm. high, freely branching; sheaths generally very loose, compressed smooth ; leaves 6-10 cm. long, 4-8 mm. wide; spikes 25-50 mm. long; involucres crowded on the scabrous rachis, globose, pubescent except at the base, spines stout; spikelets 2-flowered, about 6 mm. long. Occasional in orchards and gardens. San Bernardino, Parish; Rialto. Native of Europe. Tribe 3. PHALARIDEAE. Canary-grass Tribe. Spikelets more or less laterally compressed, 1-flowered or rarely 3-flowered ; glumes 5, the first 2 empty and below the articulation of the rachilla, the third and fourth above the articulation, usually empty or rarely subtending staminate flowers, very unlike the other ones, sometimes reduced to bristles, the fifth glume with a 1 -nerved or nerveless palea and a hermaphrodite (lower. Represented with us by the single genus. 8. Phai.akis. S. PHALARIS L. Canary-grass. Annual or perennial grasses with Hat leaves and Bpike-like, capitate or narrowly paniculate inflorescence. Spikelets crowded, l-flowered. Glumes 5, the first and second aboul equal in Length, strongly compressed later- ally, usually wing-keeled, the third and fourth much Agrostideae 27 smaller or rudimentary, fifth subtending a palea similar to itself and a perfect flower. Stamens 3. Styles dis- tinct. Grain oblong free smooth, enclosed in the glumes. 1. P. minor Retz. Culms simple or somewhat branched, 4-10 dm. high, erect or decumbent at the base, smooth; sheaths usu- ally shorter than the internodes more or less inflated; ligule rounded, 2-6 mm. long; blades 5-15 cm. long, 4-10 mm. wide, smooth or faintly scabrous; spike 2-8 cm. long, dense; spikelets 5 mm. long; empty glumes more or less scabrous, 3-nerved, wing-keeled; third and fourth glumes subulate, hairy; fifth twice as long as the third and fourth, acuminate, pubescent with long appressed hairs. Very common in all our valleys in rather moist or heavy soil. March- May. 2. P. Lemmoni Vasey. Culms rather slender, 3-10 dm. high, smooth; sheaths smooth; blades 3-5 mm. long, acuminate; ligule <) mm. long; spike dense, nearly cylindric, sometimes slightly interrupted or lobed ; empty glumes 4-5 mm. long, acute or acuminate; second pair about 1 mm. long; flowering glume lanceolate, acuminate, about equaling the empty glumes, pubes- cent; palea nearly as firm in texture as its glume and a little shorter. Rather local. First collected near Santa Cruz by Lemmon. Collected by the author at Inglewood, so far the only locality known for it in southern California. Tribe 4. AGROSTIDEAE. Bent-grass Tribb. Spikelets all hermaphrodite, 1-flowered, with 3 glumes, the first 2 empty or rarely wanting, usually exceeding or equaling the third or flowering glume in length ;" rachilla sometimes prolonged behind the palea into a naked or plumose bristle. Palea usually 2-nerved. 28 Agrostideae Flowering glumes awned or mucronate pointed. Awn of (lowering glume terminal or from between the teeth of the bifid apex, sometimes wanting in Epicampes. Awns 3-branched. 9. Ahistida. Awns simple. Awns articulate with the glumes. Awns usually long, geniculate and twisted below, persistent. 10. Stipa. Awns short, caducous, or wanting. 15. Epicampes. Awns not articulate with the glume. 11. Muulendergia. Awn dorsal. Spikelets articulated with the pedicel below the empty glumes. 16. POLYPOGON. Spikelets not articulated below the empty glumes. Empty glumes saccate at the base, several times larger than the flowering glumes; inflorescence spike-like. 18. Gastridium. Empty glumes not saccate, never exceeding the flowering glumes more than a third. Empty glumes smooth or minutely scabrous along the keel. 17. AGKOSTIS. Empty glumes more or less hairy: inflorescence spike-like. 13. ALOPECDRDS. Flowering glumes awnless. Pericarp free from the grain. 14. Sporobolus. Pericarp closely adherent to the grain. Empty glumes abruptly awn-pointed. 12. Pleum. Empty glumes not abruptly awn-pointed. 17. Agrostis. 9. ARISTIDA L. Triple-awned Grass. Plants various in habit and inflorescence, with very narrow, often involute setaceous leaves. Spikelets nar- row, l-flowered. Glumes 3, narrow, the 2 empty ones carinate : the third rigid and convolute, bearing 3 awns, Bometimes rudimentary or rarely wanting. Palea 2-nerved. Stamens 3. Styles distinct. Grain free. tighl ly enclosed in the glumes. I. A. Americana bromoides (II. I'.. K . I Scribti.it Merrill. Calms Blender, branching below and tufted, 8-35 cm. high; Bheaths shorter than the internodes; ligule reduced to a short fringe; sterile Bhoote few, the leaves 2-8 cm. long, involute, Betaceous, Bcabrid above; panicle exserted, spike-like, secund, purplish, 2-5 cm. long; spikelets on short pedicels; empty glumes narrow, linear, abruptly pointed, Bcabrous on the back, the first 3-6 nun. long, Becond 5-9 mm, long; flowering glume Bent-grass Tribe 29 scabrous on the keel, about as long as the second glume; central awn shorter to a little longer than its glume, the lateral ones a little shorter, all scabrous; palea less than 1 mm. long. Occasional in dry open places in the chaparral belt about Pasadena and San Diego; Catalina Island. 2. A. purpurea aequiramea (Schule) Merrill. Rather stout, tufted, glabrous, 3-t> dm. high; culms simple; sheaths longer than the internodes, pilose at the throat; leaves involute, the lower numerous, 3-10 cm. long, 1-2 nun. wide, those of the culm about 3, usually 3-4 cm. long; panicle purplish, the branches capillary, generally erect or ascending, usually many-flowered, 3-5 at each node; spikelets pale or purplish; second empty glume twice as long as the first, equaling the flowering glume, both cleft at the apex, the midnerve excurrent as a scabrous awn, 1-2 mm. long; flowering glume about 10 mm. long, strongly tuberculate-scabrous ; awns equal, 5-7 cm. long. (A. purpurea Californica Vasey.) Occasional in the lower altitudes of the chaparral belt. 10. STIPA L. Feather-grass. Generally rather tall grasses with convolute, rarely- flat leaves and paniculate inflorescence. Spikelets 1- flowered, narrow. Glumes 3, the outer 2 narrow acute or rarely bearing an awn, the third rigid convolute with a hairy callus at the base and bearing a more or less bent awn. which is spiral at the base and articulated to the glume. Stamens 3, rarely fewer. Styles short, dis- tinct. Grain narrow free, tightly enclosed in the glume. *'Awn scabrous or nearly smooth. 1. S. Hassei Vasey. Culms slender and wiry, tufted, more or less branching below, erect, 3-4 dm. high ; leaves very narrowly linear, setaceous, 1-2 dm. long, erect; ligule minute; sheaths narrow, striated; panicle 5-7.5 cm. long, narrow, loose, erect; branches erect, mostly 2-3 together, the larger ones 25 mm. long or more, naked below, others flowering to the base; spikelets small ; empty glumes narrowly linear-lanceolate, acuminate, about 5 mm. long, nearly equal ; flowering glume nearly as long as 30 Agrostideae the empty ones, membranaceous, smooth; rachilla short with a few short hairs; palea half as long as its glume; awn 16-18 mm. long, bent above the middle, twisted below, nearly smooth ; grain oblong, about 2 nun. long. Santa Monica Mountains, Haste. 2. S. eminens Cav. Culms tufted, slender, 3-9 dm. high, pu- bescent at the nodes; leaves convolute-setaceous, basal ones about half as long as the culm, lower culm leaves 15-20 cm. long, the uppermost 5 cm. long; ligule very minute; sheaths striate, smooth; panicle 10-15 cm. long, exserted, somewhat secund, the very slender short rays in pairs, few-flowered; lower glumes about 10 mm. long, the upper 8 nun. long, acuminate, purplish; flowering glume 5-6 mm. long, pubescent; awn about 25 mm. long, slender, bent near the middle, minutely and evenly sca- brous. Occasional on dry ridges in the chaparral belt about Pasadena and San Diego. 3. S. eminens Andersonii Vasey. Culms and leaves more slender; panicle thinner ; empty glumes 6-8 mm. long; flowering glume 4 mm. long, nearly cylindric ; awn 20-24 mm. long. Other- wise like the type. Santa Monica Mountains, Haset . 4. S. coronata Thurb. Culms 10-20 dm. high, stout, 6-8 mm. thick at the base, lower culm leaves often 10 dm. long, 8-12 mm. wide at base, gradually tapering to a long involute point, the uppermost about 15 cm. long, nearly filiform and rigid, all slightly scabrous on both surfaces and margins; ligule short; sheaths rather loose, the uppermost dilated, smooth except the margins, these ciliate especially at the throat; panicle 3-5 dm. long, at l-'ii-th exserted and loose, narrow with erect branches; spikelets Bhort-pedicelled ; empty glumes acuminate and bristle-pointed, slightly scabrous on the nerves, the lower 16 mm. long, the upper 12 nun. long; flowering glume 10 mm. long, silky-pubescent; awn about 25 mm. long, slender, bent below the middle and minutely scabrous ; palea about half the length of its glume; anthers naked. Frequent on dry open ridges in the chaparral belt. Santa Monica. Santa Ana and San Qabrlel Mountains ; also In the foothills of San Diego County. 5. S. Parishii Vasey. Culms tufted, leafy below, 3-4.5 dm. high, rather stout; sheaths Smooth longer than the interuo.len, Bent-grass Tribe 31 the margins of the throat pubescent; blades involute, rigid, smooth below, scabrous above, the lower ones 12-18 cm. long, the upper 8-10 cm. long; panicle included at base by the somewhat inflated upper sheath, 12-15 cm. long, open ; the lower branches in 3's, the upper in 2's or single, rather few-flowered ; empty glumes linear-lanceolate, smooth, first 12-16 mm. long, second about 2 mm. shorter ; flowering glume about 7 mm. long, silky with white hairs often 5 mm. long, 2-toothed ; awn 16-20 mm. long, smooth below, scabrous above. Occasional in the San Bernardino and San Jacinto Mountains, 5000-7000 feet altitude, Pariah, Hull. 6. S. setigera Presl. Culms 3-9 dm. high, tufted, rather stout, pubescent at the nodes ; sheaths hairy at the throat, the lower shorter than the internodes ; basal leaves % as long as the culms ; culm-leaves flat, 4-6 mm. wide, the uppermost nearly equaling the panicle; ligule about 2 mm. long, truncate; panicle 10-25 cm. long, mostly included below, loose, flexuous, more or less secund when young, the slender branches in pairs; pedicels shorter than the spikelets; empty glumes 12-18 mm. long, long- acuminate; flowering glume 10 mm. long, silky-hairy on the nerves ; awn geniculate above the middle, bent again, twisted and pubescent below, 6-10 cm. long; anthers bearded at the apex. Common on the mesas, grassy hills, and in open places in the chaparral belt. * Awn villous or pubescent, at least below. 7. S. speciosa Trin. & Rupr. Perennial; culms tufted, erect, 2-5 dm. high; sheaths shorter than the internodes, the upper- most inflated ; basal leaves half as long as the culms, scabrous, culm leaves, usually 3, 5-15 cm. long, closely involute; panicle often somewhat included, spike-like, 6-20 cm. long, the branches usually in pairs, bearing 1-3 spikelets; empty glumes nearly equal, hyaline, acuminate, about 16 mm. long; flowering glumes silky-pubescent, 8-12 mm. long, 2-toothed at the apex; awn 3-4 cm. long, geniculate below the middle, the twisted portion pilose with white hairs 3-6 mm. long. Occasional on dry hillsides in the lower portions of the chaparral belt. San Fernando Valley; Elsinore; San Bernardino; San Diego. 8. S. viridula Trin. Culms stout, strict, simple, 4-7 dm. high ; sheaths much shorter than the internodes ; blades smooth or 32 A-grostideae scabrid, involute setaceous al the apex; basal leaves about ^ as long as the culm, culm leaves 3-4, 2-6 mm. wide, the upper 3-6 I'm. long; ligule short with some hairs at the throat; panicle exserted, narrow, 12-40 cm. long, the shorterect branches in 2'sor 3's; empty glumes nearly equal, ovate-lanceolate, bristle-pointed, 6-12 mm. long ; flowering glumes pubescent, 5-6 mm. long; awn slender, flexuose, usually twice bent, 2-4 cm. long, pubescent or plumose below; palea about half as long as its glume; anthers naked. Elysian Park, Davidson. Mt. Wilson in open pine woods. 11. MUHLENBEBGIA Schreb. Drop-seed Crass. Perennial or annual grasses with convolute or flat leaves and paniculate inflorescence. Rootstocks often scaly. Spikelets 1— 2-flowered. Glumes 3 or rarely 4 ; the outer ones empty, membranous or hyaline, acute and sometimes awned ; the third o-5-nerved. subtending a palea and perfect flower, obtuse, acute or produced into a capillary awn ; stamens usually .'!. Styles dis- tinct. Callus minute. Grain narrow free, tightly en- cL >sed in the glume. 1. M. Califomica (Vasey). Culms spreading, diffusely branched, 4-8 dm. high ; panicles terminating the long, leafy, ter- minal and lateral branches, 10-15 cm. long, its branches mostly alternate, the lower distant and subspicate ; spikelets sessile and crowded on the branches; empty glumes membranous except the hispid green keel, equal, lanceolate, acuminate, scarcely 4 mm. long, somewhat exceeding the flowering glume ; flowering glume aboul '■'> mm. long, firm, scabrous, acute and terminating in a Btraighl awn of about its own length, sparingly villous at the base; palea about equaling the glume, acute. (M. sylvatica Cali' fornica Vasey, Bot. Gaz. 7:!>3. 1882. M. Parishii Vasey, Bull. Torr. Bot. Club. 18:53. L886. s.ui Bernardino Mountains, Parish; near Pasadena, Davidson; San Diego. 2. M. debilis Trin. Culms tufted, decumbent al base and much branched, purplish throughout, 1-4 dm. high; leaves 26- 50 mm. long, puberulent; ligule l mm. long, lacerate ; panicleSr 12 cm. long, usually spreading, branches 25-35 mm. long, mostly Bent-grass Tribe 33 single, sessile; spikelets 2-3 mm. long, Bhort-pedicellate ; empty glumes nearly equal, l/4 to Vj as long as the flowering glume, mostly obtuse or eroded, hyaline ; flowering glume slender, taper- :abrous throughout, terminated by a slender awn 25-35 nun. long; palea about equal to the flowering glume. Common on dry ridges and exposed places In the chaparral belt. Santa Monica San Gab IS 3, south to San Diego. L2. PHLEUM L. Timothy. Annual or perennial grasses with Hat leaves and spike- like inflorescence. Spikelets 1-flowered. Glumes 3, the 2 outer empty, membranous, compressed keeled, the apex obliquely truncate, midnerve produced into an awn. the third much shorter and broader, hyaline, trun- cate denticulate at the apex. Palea narrow, hyaline. Stamens 3. Styles distinct. Grain ovoid, free, enclosed in. the glume and palea. 1. P. praten.se L. Culms more or less tufted, erect, leafy, 3-9 dm. high, simple; sheaths smooth; blades minutely scabrous; spike about »i mm. wide, 8-10 cm. long; empty glumes about 2 mm. long, hyaline except the 3 scabrous nerves; flowering glunie nearly 2 mm. long. Occasional in lawns, and in mountain meadows. Cuyamaca. U. ALOPECURUS L. Fox-tail Grsss. Annual or perennial grasses with erect or decumbent culms, usually flat leaves and spike-like inflorescence. Spikelets 1-flowered, flattened. Glumes 3; the 2 outer empty acute, sometimes short-awned, more or less united below, compressed, keeled ; keel ciliate or somewhat winged; third glume truncate or obtuse, hyaline, acute, sometimes wanting. Stamens .'!. Styles distinct or rarely united at the base. Stigmas elongated. 1 . A. geniculatus L. Perennial ; culms decumbent and often rooting from the lower nodes, 2-4 dm. high, smooth; sheaths smooth, upper inflated; blades 1-3 mm. wide, the lowest often nearly equaling the culm, the uppermost equaling or exceeding :;i A.grostideae the spike: Bpike 2—4 cm. long, about 4 nun. wide; spikelets 2-3 nun. long: empty glumes silky, obtuse; llowering glumes gla- brous, their margins united to near the middle ; awn about 4 mm. long, slender. In low around on the mesas near [nglewpod. In a similar location near San Diego. 14. SPOROBOLUS R. Br. Drop-seed Grass. Perennial or annual grasses with flat or convolute Leaves and open or contracted panicles. Spikelets usu- ally small, L -flowered, sometimes 2 3-flowered. Glumes in the L-flowered spikelets .".. membranous : the 2 outer empty, the tir-t somewhat the shorter ; the third equals Lng or longer than the empty ones enclosing a perfect flower and a 2-nerved palea. Stamens 2-3. Styles very short, disl inct. ( rrain free. 1. S. airoides Torr. Perennial; culms erect, rather stout and tufted, 4-9 dm. high; sheaths somewhat shorter than the inter- nodes, the throat ciliate; ligule very short; leaves convolute, tapering to a filiform apex, those of the culm 4-0, the upper filiform, 2-3 cm. long ; panicle terminal, ovoid, often partly included at the base, 2-3 dm. long, its branches again branching and hearing scattered spikelets above the middle; spikelets light lead-color or brown; empty glumes obovate, nerveless, first 0.5-1 mm. long, second 1.5-2 mm. long; flowering glume con- cave, broadly oval, 1-nerved, 2 mm. long; palea broader than its glume and a little shorter, truncate. Occasional in low ground. Wilmington; Westminster: San Bernardino; San I) 2. S. asperifolius (Nees.) Thurb. Culms branching; 2—4 dm. high, ascending from stout creeping rootstalks, sheaths smooth, longer than the numerous short inter nodes, leaves flat, scabrous, 3-8 cm. long, 2 mm. wide: panicle included at the base. open, 9-18 cm. long, its branches Bcabrous, bearing Bingle Bpike- lets at tie' ends of very slender stiff branchlets : spikelets tinged with purple; empty glumes lanceolate, 3-nerved, lirst 0.3-0.5 mm. long, second slightly longer; flowering glume oval, obtuse, l-i") mm. long; palea equaling the glume. tear Valley, San Bernardino Mountains. Bent-grass Tribe 35 L5. EPICAMPES Presl. Tall perennial tufted grasses with usually very Long spike-like panicles. Spikelets small, 1-flowered. Empty glumes 2, membranous, slightly unequal, convex on the back, carinate, often finely 3-nerved : flowering glumes 3-nerved, obtuse or emarginate, a little shorter or aboul equaling the empty glumes, usually tipped with a slen- der rather short awn. Stamens 3. Styles distinct, short: stigmas plumose. Grain free, included within the glumes. 1. E. rigens Benth. Perennial, tufted ; culms rigid, erect, smooth, 5-10 dm. high; sheaths longer than the internodes, loose, smooth; Ligule 4-6 mm. long; leaves scabrous, rigid, in- volute apex attenuate, 1-3 dm. long ; panicle exserted or some- what included, erect dense spike-like, 2-5 dm. long, 5-8 mm. broad; spikelets minutely scabrous, elliptic; empty glumes white, about 3 mm. long, nearly equal; flowering glume awnless, minutely pubescent, about 2 mm. long. Frequent in the San Gabriel Mountains, in canyons, confined mostly to the upper portions of the chaparral belt. 16. POLYPOGON Desf. Beard-grass. Annual or rarely perennial grasses with decumbent or erect culms, flat leaves ami spike-like panicles. Spike- lets 1-flowered. Glumes 3 ; the outer 2 empty, each ex- tended into an awn, the third smaller, usually hyaline, short-awned from below the apex, subtending a palea and perfect flower. Palea shorter than the glume. Stamens 1-8. Styles short, distinct. Grain free, en- closed in the glume and palea. 1. P. Monspeliensis (L.) Desf. Annual; culms erect or genicu- late, 2-5 dm. high; sheaths about equaling the nodes, the upper slightly inflated; leaves flat, scabrous; panicle spike-like, oval or cylindric, 3-8 cm. long, 1-2 cm. broad, pale often yellowish- green ; spikelets numerous, nearly concealed by the slender 36 A-grostideae awns; empty glumes pubescent or ciliate, obtuse, elliptic ; awns 4 mm. long; flowering glume 1 nun. Long, hyaline, truncate- jagged; awn equaling or shorter than the glume or wanting; palea 2-toothed. 'iion in low moist places along the coast and along streams through- out our range, ascending the mount a ins to the pine •_'. P. littoralis Sm. Perennial, 3-6 dm. high, ascending from rootstocks; sheaths nearly equaling the internodes, the upper slightly inflated; leaves flat, scabrous; panicle dense, somewhal Iobed, 4-8 cm. long; spikelets 2-2.5 nun. lung; awns equaling tbe empty elliptic glumes; flowering glume 1 nun. long, triturate, hyaline, its awn nearly twice as long; palea 2-toothed. Occasional along streams in the valleys and foothills. 17. AGROSTTS L. Bent-gj Animal or perennial grasses with Hat or bristle-like leaves and paniculate inflorescence. Spikelets L-flow- ered. Glumes 3; the ~ outer empty, membranous, keeled, acute ; the third shorter, obtuse, hyaline, some- times bearing a dorsal awn, subtending a perfed flower. Palea shorter than the glume, sometimes minute or wanting. Stamen- generally 3. Styles short, distinct. ( rrain free, enclosed in the glume. 1. A. verticillata Vill. Perennial from slender rootstocks; culms decumbent, 3-6 dm. high, often rooting from the lower -heaths inflated, smooth; leaves 5-10 cm. long, 2-6 mm. wide, scabrid above; panicle loosely contracted, 4-10 cm. long, 8-12 mm. wide; empty glumes nearly equal, obtuse, L-nerved, scabrous; callus naked: flowering glume 1 mm. long, 5-toothed, glabrous ; palea nearly equaling the glume. Conm earns In the mountains and valleys throughout our southern Eu '_'. A. asperifolia Trin. Annual: culms erect, tufted, leafy, 3-6 dm. high; sheaths minutely scabrid; leaves 7-r> cm. long, 3-5 mm. wide, scabrous; panicle interrupted, Iobed and don-.' above, 10-15 cm, long; branches crowded, erect; Bpikelets 2.5-3 mm. long; empty glumes nearly equal, scabrous on the nerve-; Bent-grass Tribe 37 callus with a tuft of minute hairs at the base of each margin of the flowering glume; flowering glume 1.5 nun. long, glabrous, minutely 2-toothed at tin- apex, awnless; palea obsolete. Occasional in low mo n the coast valleys. 3. A. Diegoensis Vasey. Perennial from slender stoloniferous rootstocks : culms erect, 4-8 dm. 1 1 i jjcIi ; sheaths minutely scabrid ; blades 6-15 cm. long, 2 nun. wide, scabrid; panicle lax, narrow, 6-14 cm. long, its liranches erect; spikelets 3-4 mm. long ; empty glumes nearly equal, scabrid; callus hairy at the base of each margin of the flowering glume ; flowering glume 2.5-3 mm. long, Bcabrid especially on the margins, 4-toothed ; palea obsolete. Nut known within our limits, but occasional in San Diego County and ex- tending north to Washington. is. GASTRIDIUM Beauv. NlT-GRASS. Caespitose annuals with Hat leaves and shining spike-like panicles. Spikelets 1-flowered, hermaphrodite ; rachilla prolonged behind the palea. Empty glumes -. equal, enlarged or saccate at the base, keeled above; flowering glume much shorter titan the empty ones, hyaline, truncate or obtusely 2-lobed, awnless or bearing a slender awn just below the apex. Palea narrow, about the Length of the glume. Stamens:;. Styles short, dis- tinct : stigmas plumose. Grain subglobose, free, included within the ventricose base of the glume. 1. G. lendigerum (L.) Gaud. Culms more or less tufted, erect, 15-60 cm. high; sheaths shorter than the internodes, smooth; leaves, 3-10 cm. lonp, 2-4 mm. wide, acuminate, scabrous; panicle spike-like, 5-10 cm. long, 1 cm. wide, pale green and shining; spikelets lanceolate, 5-6 mm. long; empty glumes scabrous above ; flowering glume hairy, bearing a slender awn below the middle. Common on dry ground in the chaparral belt throughout our range. Na- tive of southern Europe. 38 Aveneae Tribe 5. AVENEAE. Oat Tribe. Spikelets 2 — everal-flowered ; outer empty glumes usually longer than the first flowering glume : 1 or more of the flowering glumes awned on the back or from be- tween the teeth of the bifid apex: awn usually twisted or geniculate. Spikelets articulated with the pedicels below the empty glumes. 19. Holcus. Spikelets not articulate below the empty glumes. Au lis dorsal. Spikelets small, less than 1 cm. long. SO, DESCHAMPSIA. Spikelets 1 cm. long or more. 21. A VENA. Awns terminal, rising from between the lobes or teeth. 22. DANTHONIA, 19. HOLCUS L. Velvet-grass. Annual or perennial grasses with tlat Leaves and spike- like or open panicles. Spikelets deciduous, 2-flowered ; lower flowers perfect, upper staminate. Glumes I: the 2 Lower empty, membranous, keeled, the firsl t-nerved, the second 3-nerved and often shorl awned : flowering glumes chartaceous, the upper ones bearing a bent awn. Palea narrow. 2-keeled. Stamens .">. Styles distinct. Grain oblong, enclosed in the glume. 1. H. lanatus L. Densely and softly pubescent throughout; culms 4-6 dm. high, erect, often decumbent at the base, simple; sheaths shorter than the internodes; ligule 1-2 mm. long; leaves 3-8 cm. long, 4-10 mm. wide; spikelets 4 mm. long; empty glumes white-vilious, the upper awn-pointed; flowering glumes 2 mm. long, smooth and shining, the lower sparsely ciliate on the keel, somewhat obtuse, the upper 2-toothed and bearing a hooked awn below the apex. Santa Anita and Oak Km ill, McClatehit , DdVic 20. DESCHAMPSIA beam. 1 1 aih-ciiass. Annual oi perennial grasses with flat or convolute leave- and contracted or "pen panicles. Spikelets 2- Oa1 Tribe 39 flowered ; both flowers perfect, the hairy rachilla ex- tended beyond or rarely terminated by a staminate one. Glumes 1. the 2 outer empty, keeled, acute membranous, shining, persistent ; the flowering glumes similar in tex- ture, deciduous, bearing a dorsal awn. toothed at the apex. Palea narrow. Stamens •">. Styles distinct. Grain oblong, free and enclosed in the glume. 1. D. calycina Presl. Animal; culms slender, 1-6 dm. high; sheaths smooth; leaves few, 3-6 cm. long, 1 mm. wide or less; panicle spreading, about % the length of the culms, bearing 1-5 spikelets above the middle, the lowest of which are on spreading pedicels; spikelets 2-flowered; empty glumes about 2 mm. long, hairy below, shining above, 5-nerved, emarginate with 4 minute ciliate teeth; awn inserted below the middle, about 6 mm. long, bent near the middle and twisted below. Occasional on dry mesas or in open places in the foothills and mountains. 21. AVENA L. Oat. Annual or perennial grasses with generally flat leaves and paniculate inflorescence. Spikelets 2-several-flower- ed or rarely 1-flowered ; the lower flowers perfect, the upper usually staminate. Glumes 4-many, the 2 outer empty, somewhat unequal, membranous, persistent ; flowering glumes deciduous, rounded on the back, acute, generally bearing a dorsal awn, apex often 2-toothed. Paha narrow. 2-toothed. Stamens 3. Styles short, distinct. Grain oblong, deeply furrowed, enclosed in the glume and palea, free or sometimes adherent to the latter. 1. A. fatua L. (Wild Oat.) Culms usually tufted, 5-15 dm. high; leaves scabrid, rather long and broad; panicle 1-4 dm. long, its branches unequal, long filiform ; spikelets drooping, 2-3- flowered ; empty glumes suhequal, ovate-lanceolate, 20-25 mm. long, 9-11-nerved: flowering glumes 18 mm. long, acute, bifid, yellowish hairy especially below, 9-nerved ; awn from near the 10 Aveneae middle of the glume, 1-2 cm. long, geniculate; palea 15 nun. long, hairy on the nerves. Very common Ln all the valleys and on grassy hills. Native of southern Europe. 2. A. fatua glabrescens Coas. (Bastard Oats.) Like the type excepl that the flowering glumes are glabrous. In this re- Bpect resembling .1. sativa I... the cultivated oat, but it is easily distinguished from that by its longer and geniculate awn and wide, 9-nerved flowering glume. A. sativa is awnless or has :i short straight awn and a 7-nerved glabrous flowering glume. Occasional in our valleys. San Bernardino, Parish,; [nglewood. 22. DANTHONIA DC. Wild Oat-grass. Annual or perennial grasses with flat or convolute leaves and contracted or open panicles. Spikelets 3-many- flowered, the flowers all perfecl or tin' upper stami- : rachilla pubescent extending beyond the flowers. Glumes 5-many, tin' 2 outer empty, keeled, acute, sub- equal, |H'i>i>tciit. generally extending beyond the upper- most flowering glume ; flowering glumes rounded <>n the hack. 2-toothed, deciduous; the awn arising from be- tween the acute or awned teeth, tlat and twisted ,-n base, bent. Palea hyaline, 2-keeled near the margins, obtuse or 2-toothed. Stamens '■'>. Styles distinct. Grain free, enclosed in the glume. 1. D. Californica Boland. Perennial, tufted; culms 4-8 dm. high, erect <>r somewhat decumbent at l>ase; sheaths smooth, villous or bearded at the summit ; blades Hat or convolute, 10-15 can. 1 < 1 1 1 lt . 3-5 nun. wide, scabrous; spikelets 1-5, terminal, 15-25 mm. long, usually purplish ; pedicels slender, spreading, minute- ly hirsute; empty glumes equaling thespikelet; flowers usually 7: flowering glume about 8 mm. long, hairy mi the callus and tie below the middle, teeth about 2 mm. long; awn about equaling 1 he glume, scabrous. In dry Usually stony ground. Ncwhall, Davidson. Chlorideae II Tribe 6. CHLORIDEAE. Finger-grass Tribe. Spikelets 1-several-flowered in 1-sided spikes or racemes : the racemes digitate or fasciculate, rarely soli- tary ; flowering glumes usually keeled, entire and un- armed or toothed and with 1 -'I straight awns. i S imbricated in S rows, forming unilateral spikes, which are scat- tered along a common rachis. 24. SPARTINA. Spikes 8-6, digitate. 23. Cynodox. Spikes slender, alternating and more or less remote along a common axis. 25. LEPTOCBLi i \ . 23. CYNODON Pers. Bermuda-grass. Perennial mostly from running rootstocks, with short flat leaves and spicate inflorescence. Spikes digitate, slender. Spikelets 1-flowered, secund. Glumes 3 ; the 2 outer i-mpiy. keeled ; the third broader membranous, compressed. Palea a Little shorter than the flowering glume, hyaline 2-keeled. Stamens 3. Styles distinct. Grain free. 1. C. Dactylon (L.) Pers. Culms 1-3 dm. high, erect, from long creeping and branching stolons, smooth ; sheaths glabrous or somewhat hairy, crowded at the bases of the culms and along the stolons; ligule pilose; leaves 25-50 mm. long, 4-8 mm. wide, flat, rigid, smooth beneath, scabrous above; spikes 4-5, 12-25 mm. long, digitate; rachis flat; spikelets 2 mm. long; empty glumes hispid on the keel , narrow, the first shorter than the second , about 23 as long as the broad and strongly compressed third one. Common along irrigation ditches and roadsides. Native of Europe. Commonly called Bermuda Grass and extensively used for lawns. 24. SPARTINA Schreb. Cord-grass. Perennial glabrous grasses with long horizontal root- stocks, flat or involute leaves, and an inflorescence of 1 -sided spreading or erect alternate spikes. Spikelets 1-flowered narrow deciduous, borne in 2 rows on the rachis, 12 Chlorideae articulated on very short pedicels below the glumes. Glumes •"> : the outer 2 empty keeled very unequal, the third subtending a perfed flower, keeled, equaling or shorter than the second. Palea often larger than itsglume, 2-nerved. Stamens •">. Styles filiform, elongated : Btig- mas filiform, papillose or shortly plumose. Grain free. 1. S. glabra Muhl. Culms simple, stout, 6-15 dm. high; sheaths glabrous, t lie lower ones crowded; leaves 5-7 dm. long, L— 1.5 cm. wide, usually flat, tapering to a long involute tip, smooth; panicles 2-4 dm. long, strict; spikes 5-15 cm. long; spikelets crowded, 10-14 mm. long; empty glumes glabrous or sparingly scabrous on the keel, the first 6-8 mm., the second 10-14 mm. long; flowering glume 8-10 mm. long; palea slightly exceeding the glume. Occasional in the salt marshes along the coast. Wilmington. 2. S. foliosa Trin. Culms erect, 6-8 dm. high, stout; sheaths smooth, crowded at least above ; leaves 2-3 dm. long, about 1 cm. wide, smooth, tapering to a long involute tip; panicle 10-15 cm. long, nearly cylindric ; spikes 2-5 cm. long, appressed ; spikelets crowded, 12-14 mm. long, glabrous or the empty glumes usually stoutly ciliate on the keels; the first empty glume narrow, 7-8 mm., the second 12-14 mm. long; flowering glume 10-12 mm. long, slightly Bhorter than the palea. This has been found at San Diego and may occur within our limits. It is easily recognized l>y its dense spike-like inflorescence and leafy culms. 25. LEPTOCHLOA Beauv. Mostly rather tal] annual grasses with Hat leaves and aumerous spikes forming u simple panicle, spikelets j}— many-flowered, flattened, alternating in '1 rows on one side of the rachis. Glumes 4 many, the 2 lower empty, keeled, 3-nerved. Palea 2-nerved. Stamens 3. Styles distinct. Grain free, enclosed in the scale and palea. 1. L. mucronata (Michx.) Kunth. Culms .'i-'.i dm. high, erect, branched, Bmooth; sheaths Bhorter than the internodes, smooth; ligule short, lacerate-toothed ; leaves 6-18 cm. long, L'-ti mm. wide, scabrous; Spikes numerous, slender, rigid, ascend- Festuceae 43 ing or sometimes spreading, the lower 5-15 cm. long; spikelets usaally 3-flowered, about •_' nun. long; empty glumes shorter than the spikelets, acute, 1-nerved, slightly scabrous on the keel ; flowering glumes 2-toothed at the apex, ciliate on the nerves. Common in the San Joaquin Valley and at Imperial along irrigating canals. Known within our limits only from near Santa Monica, Davidson. Tribe 7. FESTUCEAE. Fescue Tribe. Spikelets '2 many-flowered, usually hermaphrodite, pedicellate in racemes or panicles, the latter sometimes dense and spike-like. Flowering' glumes usually larger than the empty glumes, awnless or with 1 several straight, rarely bent, awns, which are either terminal or borne just below the apex. Spikelets of 2 kinds in the same inflorescence, hermaphrodite and sterile. Fertile spikelets 2-3-flowered, awnless. 32. Cynosurus. Fertile spikelets 1-flowered, long awned. 33. Lamarckia. Spikelets all alike in the same inflorescence. Plants dioecious, saline or maritime. Spikelets solitary, concealed in the axils of the crowded short and rigid leaves. 26. Monanthochloe. Spikelets in exserted spike-like panicles. 30. Distichlis. Plants not dioecious. Flowering glumes 1-3-nerved or nerveless. Annual; inflorescence a lax panicle. 27. Eragrostis. Perennial: inflorescence a spike-like panicle. 28. Koeleria. Flowering glumes 5-many-nerved. Flowering glumes rounded on the back. Nerves of the flowering glumes prominent. 29. Melica. Nerves of the flowering glumes obscure or manifest only near the apex. Flowering glumes obtuse and awnless. 34. Poa. Flowering glumes acute, often awned. Flowering glumes entire, acute or awned from the apex. 35. Festuca. Flowering glumes usually awned just below the entire or 2-toothed apex. 36. Bromus. Flowering glumes compressed or keeled. Spikelets nearly sessile in dense 1-sided clusters at the ends of the few panicled branches. 31. Dactylis. Spikelets 1-2 cm. long; glumes short-awned. 36. Bromus. Spikelets smaller: glumes awnless. 31. Poa 44 Festuceae 26. MONANTHOCHLOE Engelm. A creeping or stoloniferous grass with Btoul rigid crowded leaves. Spikelets 2-3-flowered unisexual some- what unlike usually sessile in t'a and concealed within the leaf fascicles, the upper floral leaves becoming smaller at length reduced to sheaths and resembling the outer glumes. Flowering glumes membranous rigid obtuse or denticulate. Palea 2-nerved included within the flower- ing glume. Stamens in the staminate plants •".. Styles in the pistillate plants distinct, elongated ; stigmas bar- bellate. Grain free, included within the glume and pa lea. 1. M. littoralis Engelm. Culms firm, creeping or ascending; leaves crowded, subulate, usually aboul 1 cm. long, conduplicate ; flowering glumes 9-12-nerved. Occasional on salt marshes along the coast. San Pedro; San Diego. Am ndo Donax L. (Giant-Reed.) A tall reed-like grasswitb hollow culms, broad Hat leaves and ample terminal panicles. In- troduced from southern Europe and cultivated for ornament, sometimes found as an escape. GYNERIUM ARQENTIOM Nees. (PAMPAS-GRASS.) Tall reed-like grass with solid culms,long narrow leaves and large showy plu- mose panicles. Introduced from South America and cultivated for ornamenl . 27. ERAGROSTIS Beauv. Annual or perennial grasses with flai leaves and con- tracted or open panicles. Spikelets 2-many-flowered, more or less flattened. Glumes 4-many ; the 2 outer empty, unequal, Bhorter than the flowering ones, keeled, 1-nerved or the Becond 3-nerved ; flowering glumes mem- branous, keeled. .' I-ll el'Vi !< I . I'alea > 1 l< > Tt < • T tliall till' glumes, prominently 2-nerved or 2-keeled, usually per- sisting "ii the rachilla after the glume has fallen. Sta- Fescue Tribe 15 mens 2 3. Styles distinct, short. Grain free, loosely en- closed in the glume and palea. 1. E. major Host. Culms 2-6 dm. high, erect <>r decumbent at base, usually branched, smooth; sheaths shorter than the in- ternodes, sparingly pilose at the throat, otherwise smooth ; blades 5-15 cm. long, 2-6 mm. wide, flat, smooth beneath, scabrous above; panicle 5-15 cm. long, the branches spreading or ascend- ing, 2-4 cm. long; spikelets 8-35-flowered, 5-15 mm. long, about .'i mm. wide, flat; empty glumes obtuse, 2-2.5 mm. long, lateral nerves prominenl . Along ditches and streams about Los Angeles and Santa Ana. 2. E. pilosa (L.) Beauv. Annual, 4-5 dm. high, somewhat tuft- ed, smooth; sheaths smooth, shorter than the internodes; leaves flat, 8-15 cm. long, smooth ; panicle spreading, 15-30 cm. long; rays decompound, smooth or slightly bearded in the axils; spikelets on pedicels 4-8 in in. long, narrowly linear, 5-8 ram. long, 7-20- flowered, dark lead color or purplish; empty glumes lanceolate, first 1.5 mm. long, second 2 mm. long, flowering glume ovate, 1 .5-1 .8 mm. long; palea about equaling its glume, scaberulouson the keel; grain 1 mm. long. (E. Orcuttiana Vasey.) Occasional along irrigating ditches about San Bernardino and Santa Ana. 28. KOELERIA Pers. Tufted annual or perennial grasses with flat or setace- ous leaves and mostly spike-like panicles. Spikelets 2- 5-flowered. The 2 outer glumes empty, narrow, unequal, acute keeled, -carious on theuiargins ; flowering glumes 3-5-nerved. Palea hyaline, acute, 2-keeled. Stamens 3. Styles very short. Grain free, enclosed in the glume and palea. 1. K. cristata (L.) Pers. Perennial; culms erect, tufted, 3-7 dm. high; sheaths smooth, equaling or shorter than the inter- nodes; basal leaves %-% as l°ng as tne culms, culm leaves 2-4, 6-12 cm. long, all glabrous; panicle spike-like, somewhat lobed and interrupted, 5-12 cm. long; axis and branches soft-pubescent; spikelets 2-4-flowered, 4-5 mm. long; first glume 2.5-3.5 mm. long, second 3-4 mm. long; flowering glume equaling the second empty one. Common on grassy hills. 1:6 Festuceae 2. K. cristata pinetorum. Closely resembling the type in babil and floral characters, bu1 the sheaths and l raves soft-pubes- cent. I k~. cristata pubescent Vasey, not of Beauv.) Occasional in open pine forests. Wilson's Peak; San Bernardino Moun- Lto Mount B ■ 29. MELICA L. Melic-gbass. Perennial ofteD tufted grasseswith usuallyflal Leaves and contracted or open panicles. Spikelets 1 several- flowered, often secund. The rachilla extended beyond the flower.- and generally bearing 2-3 empty club-shaped or hooded glumes, convolute around each other. Two outer glumes empty, membranous, 3-5-nerved : flowering glumes Larger, rounded on the back, 7 13-nerved, some- times bearing an awn, the margins more or Less scari- ous. Palea broad, shorter than the glume, 2-keeled. Stamens 3. Styles distinct. Grain free, enclosed in the palea and glume. 1. M. imperfecta Trin. Culms slender, somewhat tufted, 3-10 dm. high; sheaths exceeding the internodes; blades ii-7. flat or becoming involute, usually glabrous or more or less scabrous, 15-20 cm. long, ahout 2 mm. wide; panicle 2-.'] dm. long, its branches in remote clusters, unequal, the longer 5-7 cm. long; spikelets scabrid l-Ho\vered, with an imperfect flower or rarely 2-flowered; empty glumes ovate or nearly so, the first ahout 3 mm. long, 3-nerved, second slightly longer, 5-nerved; flowering glume about 4 mm. long, ovate, obtuse, 7-neived, often purplish; palea nearly as long as its glume. Common on grassy slopes on the mesas and grassy hills. Maroh-May, 2. M. imperfecta flexuosa Boland. Much resembling the type in habit and foliage, but the branches of the panicle few- flowered, generally in pairs, often reflexed ; spikelets larger, er, paler ami more coriaceous. Sail! ;i Mo :;. M. imperfecta minor Scribn. Usually densely tufted; culms compressed "r angular; leave- mostly basal; branches of Fescue Tribe 1 i the panicles short, divergent or rerlexed; spikelets smaller than in the species; the outer glumes shorter and more obtuse. San Fernando Mountains, near Chatsworth Park. 4. M. imperfecta refracta Thurb. Densely velvety-pubescent throughout; panicle slender, flexuous, its branches few, distant, strongly refracted; spikelets very acute. Santa Monica. Davidson. 30. DISTICHLIS Raf. Salt-grass. Dioecious grasses of saline or maritime habit with rigid culms, creeping or decumbent at the base. Hat or convolute leaves and spike-like paniculate inflorescence. Spikelets flattened more on the staminate plants than on the pistillate. Two outer glumes empty, narrow, keeled, acute ; flowering glumes longer than the empty ones, many-nerved, acute, rigid ; palea 2-keeled. Stamens 3. Styles thickened at the base, rather long, distinct. ' i rain free, enclosed in the glume and palea. 1. D. spicata (L.) Greene. (Salt-grass.) Culms rather stout, from creeping scaly rootstocks, rigid, erect, 1-5 dm. high ; sheaths numerous, glabrous, bearded at the throat; blades pale green, 3-10 cm. long, 8 mm. wide at base, spreading, rigid, margins minutely ciliate ; panicle spike-like, 3-8 cm. long, its branches ap- pressed; spikelets 8-12 mm. long, keeled; empty glumes obtuse, first 2-3 mm. long, second 4 mm. long; flowering glume of sterile spikelets 3-5 mm. long, of fertile spikelets 5-6 mm. long. Very common in low subsaline places along the coast and in our interior valleys. 31. DACTYLIS L. Orchard-grass. A tall perennial grass with fiat leaves and paniculate inflorescence. Spikelets 3-5-flowered, short pedicelled, in dense capitate clusters. Flowers perfect or the upper staminate. The 2 outer empty glumes thin membran- ous, unequal, keeled, mucronate ; flowering glumes larger than the empty ones, rigid, 5-nerved, keeled, the mid- nerve extended into a point or short awn. Palea shorter 18 Festuceae than the glume, 2-keeled. Stamens •">. Styles distinct. Grain free, enclosed in the glume and palea. 1. D. glomerata L. Culms 6-12 dm. high, tufted, erect, simple, smooth : sheaths shorter than the internodes, smooth or rough; ligule 2-4 mm. long; blades 7-20 cm. long, 2-6 mm. wide, flat, scabrous; panicle 7-18 cm. long, its branches spreading or as- cending in flower, erect in fruit, the lower 25-60 mm. long; spike- lets in dense capitate clusters, 3-5-fiowered ; empty glumes 1-3- nerved, the first shorter than the second; flowering glumes 4-6 mm. long, rough, pointed or short awned, ciliate on the keel. ( Occasional in yards about Los Angeles. 32. CYNOSURUS L. Annual or perennial tufted grasses with tint Leaves and dense spike-like inflorescence. Spikelets consisting of narrow empty glumes with a continuous rachilla, the terminal spikelets of 2-4 broader glumes with articulate rachilla, and subtending perfect flowers. The "2 outer glumes broad, L-3-nerved, pointed or short awned ; upper glumes narrower, usually empty. Glumes of the sterile spikelets pectinate, spreading, linear-subulate; 1-nerved. Stamens .">. Stylos distinct, short. Grain finally adherent to the pa Lea. 1. C. cristatus L. Perennial; culms tufted, erect, slender, :'>-»; dm. high; sheaths smooth, shorter than the internodes; blades of the culm flat, 2-10 cm. long, 1.5-3 mm. wide ; spike near- ly cylindric, oblong or linear, 3-10 cm. long; the clusters of spike- lets all turned to one side, the empty ones forming involucres to each cluster. On lawns, rarely seen. Los Angeles, Davidson. Native of Europe. 33. LAMARCKIA Moeneh. A Low annual grass with Hat leaves and showy L-sided panicles of crowded fasciculate Bpikelets, the fertile spikeletfi nearly enclosed by the numerous Bterile ones. The terminal spikelel of each fascicle fertile, the others Fescue Tribe 19 (1-3) linear and consisting of many distichously imbri- cated obtuse empty glumes. Fev\ tie spikelets L -flowered, with rachilla prolonged into a slender stipe and bearing a small empty awned glume or reduced to an awn. Empty glumes 2, L-nerved, acuminate or short-awned, slightly unequal; flowering glume broader, l-nerved, bearing a slender awn just below the apex. Palea nar- rows-keeled. Stamens."!. Styles short, distinct ; stig- mas barbellate. 1. L. aurea (L.) Moench. (< ;oldex-top.) Annual; culms tufted, 2-5 dm. high; sheaths smooth; hlades 5-8 mm. wide; panicle linear or oval, 5-8 cm. long; empty glumes of the fertile spikelets narrow, keeled, 4-4.5 mm. long; flowering glume 3 mm. long, ova!, hearing a dorsal awn a little below the apex, 6-9 mm. long. Common on grassy plains and hills. Native of southern Europe. 34. POA L. Meadow-grass. Annual or perennial grasses with flat or convolute leaves ami contracted or open panicles. Spikelets 2-6- flowered, compressed, the rachilla usually glabrous. Flowers perfect or rarely dioecious. (Humes membran- ous, keeled ; the 2 lower empty. 1-3-nerved ; the flower- ing glumes longer than the empty ones, generally with a tuft of cobwebby hairs at the base, 5-nerved, the mar- ginal nerves usually pubescent, often also the dorsal one. Palea a little shorter than the glumes, 2-nerved or 2-keeled. Stamens .'!. Styles short, distinct. Grain free or sometimes adherent to the palea. * Annuals. 1. P. annua L. Annual; culms weak, compressed, 5-30 cm. long, decumbent ; ligule 2-3 mm. long ; blades of the sterile shoots )4r% as l°1]g as the culms ; culm leaves 3, flat ; panicle subsecund, ovoid, 2-5 cm. long, its branches usually in pairs, the longest 2.5 cm. long, bearing spikelets above the middle; spikelets nearly 50 Festuceae sessile, 3-7-flowered, 4-<> mm. long; empty glumes compressed, about 2.5 mm. long; flowering glume ovate, smooth, erose at apex, 2.8-3.1 mm. long, with soft hairs on the keel and Lower part of the lateral nerves; palea 2.5-2.8 mm. long, ciliate or puhescent on the keels. Common in moist places in all our valleys. Native of Europe. 2. P. infirma II. 1'. K. Annual ; culms slender, spreading, 1-2 dm. long; sheaths compressed, loose; ligule 2 mm. long; leaves smooth; panicle ovoid, 2-4 cm. long, its branches mostly in pairs bearing 2-5 spikelets above; Bpikelets subsessile, oblong, 2-4- Qowered, 3-4 mm. long; empty glumes scarious on the tips and margins, the second larger than the first, 2-2.2 mm. long; flower- ing glume broadly oval, about 3 mm. long, scarious toward the apex and on the margins, ciliateon the keels and margins below ; palea nearly equaling the glume, ciliate on the keels. In moist rather shady places. Glenn Ranch, Lytle Creek. ** Perennial*. 3. P. pratensis L. (Kentucky Blue-grass.) Perennial; culms terete, glabrous, from running rootstocks, 3-6 din. high; sheaths smooth ; ligule truncate, 1.5 mm. long ; leaves of the ster- ile shoots flat, abruptly concave-pointed, those of the culms 3, smooth or scabrous; panicle usually rather open pyramidal, its branches in half whorls of 3-6, densely flowered on the upper half; spikelets 3-6-flowered, 4-7 mm. long; empty glumes acute, scabrous on the keels, first 2.5-3 mm. long, second 3-3.5 mm. long; flowering glume webbed at the base, scabrous toward the apex, pubescent on the marginal nerves and on the keel below; palea linear, 2.5-3 mm. long, scabrous on the keels. Frequent in lawns and occasional in mountain meadows. Bear Valley; Cuyamaca. 4. P. Fendleriana (Steud.) Vasey. Perennial; culms tufted, 3-7 dm. high, usually dioecious ; leaves of sterile shoots usually flat, (MO cm. long, 2 mm. wide, culm leaves 2-3, conduplicate, 1-10 cm. long; ligule 3-5 mm. long; panicle spike-like, 8-12 cm. Ion).', its branches in 2's or 3's, flower-bearing on the upper half; spikelets ovate-lanceolate, flattish, often tinged with purple, 3-7- flowered ; empty glumes nearly equal, compressed, 4-5 nun. E\ scue Tribe 51 long; (lowering glume oblong, 4-5 nun. long, often denticulate at the apex, scabrous; palea lanceolate, scabrous, shorter than or equaling its glume. Frequent on dry open hillsides in the chaparral belt. 5. P. scabrella (Thurb.) Vasey. Perennial; culms slender, 4-7 dm. high, scabrid; leaves of the sterile shoots flat or con- duplicate, 12-20 cm. long, 1-2 mm. wide, those of the culm 2-3,5-7 cm. long; ligule 5-12 mm. long; panicle rather open, 12— 15 cm. l"ii<_r. its branches in pairs, the longest 5-7 cm. long; spikelet flower-bearing at least above the middle; spikelets 5-6 mm. long, 3-5-flowered; first empty glume 2.5 mm., the second 3 mm. long: flowering glume 3 mm. long, rough, hairy on the lower part of the nerves, apex denticulate; palea slightly shorter. Occasional in the canyons of our coast mountains. Pasadena, Davidson; Santa Monica Mountains. 35. FESTUCA L. Fescce-grass. Mostly tufted perennial grasses with flat or convolute leaves and paniculate inflorescence. Spikelets 2-several- fiowered. The 2 lower glumes empty, more or loss un- equal, acute, keeled ; flowering glumes membranous, narrow, rounded on the back, 5-nerved, usually acute and often awned at the apex. Palea scarcely shorter than the glume. Stamens 1—3. Styles very short, dis- tinct. Grain glabrous, elongated, often adherent to the glume or palea. 1. F. microstachys (Munro) Nutt. Annual; culms slender, erect, tufted, 1-4 dm. high; sheaths shorter than the internodes, smooth or pubescent; ligule 0.5 mm. long or less; culm-leaves 2—1, erect, 3-8 cm. long, very narrow; panicle 3-10 cm. long, its branches secund, divergent, remote, the longer 3-5 cm. long; spikelets remote, 5-10 mm. long, 1-5-flowered ; empty glumes awnless, scabrous or glabrous, the first 3 mm., the second 5 mm. long; flowering glume 3-4 mm. long, scabrous; awn slender, 6-8 mm. long. Occasional in the chaparral belt and in our dry interior valleys. 52 Festuceae 2. F. microstachys Grayi. Spikelets or a1 least the flower- ing glumes more or less densely pubescent. Otherwise a> in the type. | /•'. microstachys ciliata Gray.) Cuyamaca Mountains. Not known within our limits, bul intermediate forms have bei d near San Bernardino. 3. F. Myuros L. Annual; culms slender, smooth, mostly erect, 2-5 . Stigmas sessile, inserted below a hairy cushion at the top of the ova ry. < > ra in ad herenl to the pa lea. Fescue Tribe 53 * Awn nder, usually twisted or bent. 1. B. hordeaceus L. Annual; culms erect, 2-8 dm. high, usually pubescent at the nodes; sheaths retrorsely soft pilose- pubescent; ligule L.5-2 mm. long laciniate; leaves linear, pilose- pubescent it nearly smooth, 5-15 cm. long, 3-5 nun. wide; pan- icle contracted, 5-14 cm. long, 2-4 cm. wide; spikelets 5-13- flowered, 1l'-1"> mm. long, 4-6 mm. wide, ovate-lanceolate, be- coming obtuse; empty glumes coarsely pilose or scabrous-pubes- cent, the lower 3-5-nerved, 1-6 mm. long, the upper 5-7-nerved, 7-8 mm. long; dowering glume 8-9 mm. long, coarsely pilose or scabrous- pubescent; awn rather stout, rough, straight or some- becoming twisted, 6-9 mm. long. ( /.'. mollis L.) Frequent in our coast valleys along roadsides. Native of southern Europe. 2. B. secalinus L. Annual; culms 3-7 dm. high, smooth throughout or somewhat pubescent on the nodes; sheaths smooth or sometimes sparsely pilose-pubescent; leaves 1-2 dm. long, coarsely and sparsely pubescent above, smooth beneath ; panicle 8-18cm. long, erect, the upper part drooping in fruit; spikelets ovoid-lanceolate, LO-18 mm. long, 6-8 mm. wide in fruit; empty glumes smooth, obtuse, the first 4-6 mm. long, 3-5-nerved, the second broader, 6-7 mm. long, 7-nerved ; flowering glume 7- nerved, 6-8 mm. long, elliptic, obtuse, smooth or scabrous; awn undulate, 3-5 mm. long; palea equaling the glume. Los Angeles River, Davidson. 3. B. Trinii Desv. Annual ; culms 3-6 dm. high, often branched above, smooth or pubescent at the nodes ; sheaths pilose-pubescent or nearly smooth; leaves 6-15 cm. long, 3-5 mm. wide, usually pilose-pubescent throughout or nearly smooth ; panicle rather crowded and narrow, suberect, 8-20 cm. long; branches slender ascending; spikelets lanceolate, 5-7-flowered, 1.5-2 cm. long; empty glumes lanceolate, acuminate, smooth, the first 1-nerved, 8-11 mm. long, the second broader, 3-nerved, 13-16 mm. long; flowering glume coarsely and rather sparsely pubescent, 5-nerv- ed, 12-15 mm. long, acuminate, with 2 narrow teeth 2-3 mm. long; awn 15-20 mm. long, twisted below, bent below the mid- dle. {Trisetum harbatum Steud.) Occasional in the foothills and in the dry interior valleys. Pasadena; Santa Ana Mountains; San Bernardino: San Diego. .") i Festuceae 4. B. Trinii pallidiflorus Desv. A more robust and larger plant, 6-12 dm. high; sheaths pilose-pubescent; leaves broadly linear-lanceolate, smooth or somewhat sparsely pilose-pubescent; panicle more elongated, mostly 2-4 - (or more) flowered. Spikelets placed with one edge against the rachis. 37. Lot.icm. Spikelets placed with one side against the rachis. 39. AGROPYRON. Spikelets 2-3 at each joint of the rachis. Spikelets 3 at each joint of the rachis. 40. HORDEUM. Spikelets 2 at each joint of the rachis. Axis of the spike continuous; empty giumes entire. 41. Elymus. Axis of the spike articulate; empty glumes usually 2-many-cleft. -i-i. SlTANION. 37. JLOLIUM L. Darnel or Ray-grass. Annual or perennial grasses, with simple erect culms, flat leaves and terminal spikes. Spikelets several- flowered, solitary, sessile and alternate in the notches of the usually continuous rachis. compressed, the edge of the spikelet turned toward the rachis. Glumes rigid, the first in the lateral and the 2 lower in the terminal spikelets empty : flowering glumes rounded on the hack, 5-7-flowered. Palea 2-keeled. Stamens .">. Styles dis- tinct, very short; stigmas 2. Grain adherent to the palea. 1. JL. perenne L. (English Ray-grass.) Perennial; culms 3-6 dm. high, erect or commonly geniculate at the base, smooth; sheaths smooth; leaves scahrid on the edges and upper side; spike 1-3 dm. long, bearing 6-10 spikelets; rachis smooth, chan- neled; spikelets 6-8 mm. long, smooth, shining, 7-1 1-flowered ; empty glumes strongly ribbed, much shorter than the spikelet; 58 Hordeae flowering glume linear-oblong, terete, obtuse to shortly awned, ribbed. Occasional in moist places along irrigating ditches and in low ground. Flowering i be \ ear round. 2. L. perenne multiflorum (Lam.) Auct. Annual or biennial ; spikes often purplish, somewhat curved ; spikelets 15-30-rlowered ; flowering glumes usually with a short, slender awn. In similar locations and apparently more common than the type. 0. L. tern ulen turn L. (Darnel.) Annual ; culms rather stout, 3-8 dm. high, smooth ; sheaths smooth, usually somewhat exceed- ing the nodes; spikes stout, with 9-15 spikelets; spikelets 5-7- Qowered ; empty glumes not ribbed, equaling or usually exceeding the spikelets; flowering glume turgid, awnless or commonly with a straight awn l' cm. long or less. Occasional along roadsides and in grain fields. 38. I/EPTURUS R. Br. Bard-grass. Mostly low annual grasses, with narrow leaves and Btricl or curved elongated slender spikes; spikelets 1-2- floweredj sessile and single in alternate notches of the jointed rachis. Empty glumes 1-2, narrow, rigid, acute, 5-nerved ; flowering glumes much shorter, hyaline, keeled, 1-sided to the rachis. 1'alea hyaline. 2-nerved. Sta- men- 3 or less. Styles short, distinct. GraiD narrow glabrous free, i aclosed iii the glume. 1. L. cylindricus Trin. Culms slender, erect, straight, 2-4 dm. high, somewhat tufted, simple or commonly branched, smooth; sheaths smooth, much shorter than the internodes; leaves ascending, 1-2 mm. wide, 3-8 cm. lung, smooth; spike green, 5-15 cm. long, straight; empty glume very acute, aboul 1 nun. long. Occasional on borders of salt marshes toward the coast. Mesmer; Wil- mington ; < Iceanside. 2. L. incurvatus (L.) Trin. Culms much branched, internodes more or les> curved, more or less purplish throughout ; spikes DUmerOUS, incurved ; empty glumes 2, about 6 mm. long, narrow, acute. .Not known within our limits, but it oocurs on the salt marshes al San San Franc) ioi i Barley Tribe 59 39. AGROPYRON J. Gaertn. Wheat-grass. Animal or perennial grasses with flat or involute leaves and terminal -pike-. Spikelets 3-many-flowered, sessile, single and alternate ,-it each notch of the rachis, the sides of the spikelet turned toward the rachis. The Lower glumes empty, narrower and usually shorter than the flowering glumes, acute or awned; flowering glumes rigid, rounded on the back, 5-7-nerved, usually acute or awned at the apex. Palea 2-keeled, the keels often ciliate. Stamens 3. Styles very short, distinct, drain pubescent at the apex, usually adherent to the palea. 1. A. Parishii Scribn. & Smith. Culms 5-10dm. high, smooth, retrorsely pubescent on the nodes; sheaths pubescent below, sparingly ciliate on the margins, the lower shorter, the upper longer than the internodes; leaves smooth below, scabrous above and on the margins, the lower 1-2 dm. long, the uppermost 2.5-5 cm. long, 4-6 mm. wide at the somewhat constricted base, linear attenuate ; spike composed of 8-12 compressed oblanceolate spike- lets; spikelets 5-7-flowered, 16-20 mm. long, shorter than the internodes of the rachis, these scabrous on the margins; empty glumes -3 as long as the spikelet, nearly equal, linear, acute or acuminate, 5-nerved, scarious on the margins; flowering glume lanceolate, acute, 9-11 mm. long, 5-nerved and scabrous above, minutely 3-toothed, awnless or awned; awn straight, slender, 6-8 mm. long; palea equaling its glume, acute or obtuse. Occasional in the San Bernardino Mountains. First collected in Water- man's Canyon by S. B. Parish. 2. A. Parishii laeve Scribn. & Smith. Habit of the type, but nodes and sheaths glabrous ; awns equaling or exceeding the glumes in length. Ballona Creek, near Mesmer: Santa Ana Mountains ; San Bernardino Mountains. First collected in the Cuyamaca Mountains by Palmer. 40. HORDEUM L. Barley-grass. Annual or perennial grasses, with flat leaves and ter- minal cylindric spikes. Spikelets 1-flowered, usually in 3's at each joint of the rachis, the lateral generally short 60 Hordeae stalked and Imperfect; rachilla produced beyond the flower. Empty glumes 2, all alike and subulate; flowering glumes narrow Lanceolate, rounded on the back, rigid, persistent, obscurely 5-nerved above, usually awned. Palea nearly equaling the glume, 2-keeled. Stamens 3. Styles very short, distinct. Grain usually adherent to the glume, hairy at summit. 1. H. nodosum L. Perennial; culms erect, slender. 2-6 dm. high, sheaths glabrous; leaves often deflexed, flat, scabrous, 5-8 nun. wide; spike slender, compressed, usually nodding, 6-10 cm. 8-10 mm. wide; rachis very brittle ; lateral spikelets awn- less, staminate or neutral: flower of central spikelei sessile; empty glumes not flattened or dilated above the base, all alike and sui hi late; flowering glume including its awn L4-18 nun. long; awn usually brownish or purplish. Frequent inmoisl places in all our valleys. 2. H. nodosum depressum Scribn. & Smith. Lower ami more tufted than the type; culms geniculate at the base or erect , 1-.*! dm. high : upper sheaths inflated : leaves shorter than in the type, usually pubescent; empty glumes L8 mm. long; fertile flowering glume with an awn equaling its own length. Occasional in marshes along the coast. Resembling the next in habit. 3. H. maritimum L. Annual, rather glaucous; culms more or less decumbent at base, tufted. 1-2 dm. high; spikes 2-4 cm. long, rather pale; lateral spikelets neutral or sometimes slami- nate, their inner empty glumes obliquely lanceolate, l mm. wide; Eertile (lower sessile. Occasional alonu' the coast. SanDiego. 4. H. Gussoneanum Pari. M ueh resembling the last in habit , but the inner empty glumes only narrowly flattened instead of wing margined along the inner side. 0.5 nun. wide. Occasional a Ion I mai shes. 5. H. murinum L. Annual ; culms tufted, decumbent at base, 2-5 dm. high; upper sheaths smooth, scariotis on the margins, often dilated, the Lowerpilose; leaves softly pubescent and sca- brous; spikes stout, compressed, 5-10 cm. long; central spikelet pedicelled ; empty glumes lanceolate, flat, filiate ; awns 18-24 mm. Barley Tribe (51 long; outer empty glumes of lateral spikelets similar, the inner awn-like and not ciliate; flowering glume about 1 — mm. long, scabrous above ; awn 2-6 cm. long; flowering glumes of the lat- eral spikelets smaller; awn L5-40 mm. long; palea ciliate on the keels. a very common and troublesome grass in all our valleys, especially in pastured land. Commonly called Fox-tail. 41. ELYMUS L. Wild Rye. Mostly erect rather tall grasses with Hat leaves and closely flowered terminal spikes. Spikelets 2-6-flowered, the uppermost imperfect, sessile, in 2's rarely in 3's ol- d's at the alternate notches of the continuous or articu- late rachis : rachilla articulate above the empty glumes and between the flowers. Empty glumes -. nearly equal, rigid, narrow. 1-3-nerved, acute or awn-pointed, persistent, and subtending the flowers like an involucre ; flowering glumes shorter, rounded on the back, obscure- ly 5-nerved, obtuse, acute or awned from the apex. Palea a little shorter than the glume, 2-keeled. Sta- mens 3. Styles short, distinct. Grains adherent to the glumes and palea. hairy at the summit. 1. E. condensatus Presl. Calms stout, from stout creeping rootstocks, 10-25 dm. high ; sheaths smooth : ligule 2-4 mm. long ; leaves 3-5 dm. long, 25 mm. wide or less at the base, long acuminate, smooth or nearly so toward the hase, becoming sca- brous toward the apex, flat, the edges somewhat involute above; spike rather dense and ample or somewhat lobed, 2-5 dm. long, erect; spikelets imbricated in 2's or 3's or more, 4-5-flowered ; empty glumes subulate, scabrid, about 12 mm. long; flowering glumes scabrous below, 11 mm. long, 8 mm. wide, 7-nerved ; palea equaling the glume, scabrous and ciliate on the keels above. Frequent in canyons and in somewhat moist places on all the hills and in the chaparral belt of the mountains. 2. E. triticoides (Nutt.) Buckley. Culms rather slender, smooth and usually glaucous, from slender rootstocks, 6-10 dm. high; sheaths smooth; ligule a ciliate ring; leaves 15-30 cm. long, 5-8 mm. wide, scabrous on the margins and nerves above; 62 Hordeae spike ''-Is cm. Long, about 1 cm. wide or less; rachis puberulent and with a narrow ciliate w ing ; spikelets in 2's or 3's, rather dis- tant below, crowded in the mi. Mir, often single above, 4-6-flo^ er- ed; empty glumes 8-10 mm. long, subulate, scabrous on the nerves above: flowering glumes 6-10 mm. long, 3 nun. wide, 9- nerved, glabrous; palea about equaling its glume, scabrous on the keels. Common in low ground, especially in the const valleys. 3. E. Orcuttianus Vasey. Culms usually several from short rootstocks, 5-10 dm. high, slender, leafy; sheaths smooth ; ligule a short ciliate ring; leaves erect, 15-25 em. long, 3-8 mm. wide, scabrous on the margins; spike L0-15 cm. long, erect, loosely flowered; spikelets 2 or frequently only 1 at each joint, 5-7-flowered ; empty glumes linear-lanceolate, rigid, long- pointed, 8-12 mm. long; lower (lowering glumes 8-10 Dim. long, lanceolate, acuminate, rounded and smooth on the back, scabrous at the apex, 5- nerved on the inside, the upper ones shorter and more scabrous ; palea ' .,-'3 shorter than its glume, ciliate on the keel-. in Park, Davidson; near San Diego, Orcutt. Closely related to the preceding and possibly only a form of it. 4. E. glaucus Buckl. Culms erect and tufted, from stolonifer- ous rootstocks, 6-10 dm. high, smooth ; sheaths smooth or mi- nutely scabrid; ligule about 0.5 mm. long, entire; leave- flat,sca- brid on both -ides, 6-10 mm. wide, the lowest about 2 dm. long; -pike linear, erect, 6-15 cm. long, 5-8 mm. wide; spikelets usual- ly in 2's, sometimes in 3's, 3-4-flowered ; empty glumes 8-12 mm. long; awn-pointed, scabrid on the L'-4 prominent nerves; flower- ing glume- scabrid above, 9-12 mm. long, tapering into a straight awn 7-14 mm. long; palea scabrid, 9-10 mm. long, emarginate; rachis scabrid on the margins. Frequent in open shady places in the upper portions of the chaparral belt and in the pine bell Sani tabrlel and Santa Ana Mountains. June-July. li'. SITANION Raiin. Csespitose perennials, with usually flat Leaves and bearded spikes. Spikelets usually 2 (1-3) a1 each joint of the articulate rachis of the spike, 2— several-flowered. Barley Tribe 63 Empty glumes 2 or sometimes ■".. many-parted from near the base or bifid or Bubulate and rutin', awned : flower- ing glumes terminating in a Bingle awn or trifid or 3-awned. Palea as long ;is its glume, entire, bidentate or 2-awned. Stamens 3. Styles short. Grain adherent to its glume and palea, hairy at the summit. * Empty glumes deeply cleft into 8-11 or more sectaceo"* awns. l.S. jubatum Smith. Culms erect, 6-9 dm. high, smooth; lower sheaths hirsute, the upper minutely pubescent or sparsely hirsute, becoming smooth ; ligule 1 mm. long; leaves 10-18 cm. long, 3-5 mm. wide, strigose-pubescent throughout and sparsely hirsute above, midnerve prominent beneath ; spike 1-2 dm. long, densely flowered ; empty glumes 4,3-many-parted from about the middle, the lobes setaceous, mostly 8-10 cm. long; spikelets 2-4- flowered, the second hermaphrodite, the other sterile or the upper etaminate; flowering glume linear-lanceolate, 8-10 mm. long, smooth below, sparsely scabrous above, 5-nerved, trifid at the apex, lateral lobes setaceous, the middle prolonged into a slender scabrous awn, 8-12 cm. long; internodes of the rachis 5-7 mm. long, glabrous. Ojai Valley, Hubby; Coldwater Canyon, San Antonio Mountains, growing under pines at about T()fKJ feet altitude. 2. S. multisetum Smith. Culms tufted, 3-5 dm. high, gla- brous or minutely strigose-pubescent ; sheaths scarious on the margins, strigose-pubescent and hirsute ; ligule very short ; leaves 5-10 cm. long, erect or ascending, linear, pungently pointed, sparsely hirsute on the back, scabrous on the margins, hirsute and scabrous above ; spike erect, 5-8 cm. long, usually reddish ; usually only 1 spikeletat each joint fertile; empty glumes 3-many-parted nearly to the base; awns slender, scabrous, mostly 2-6 cm. long; lowest flowering glume of the sterile spikelet subulate, resembling the segments of the empty glumes; flowering glume of fertile spikelet 8-9 mm. long, smooth below, keeled and scabrous above, 3-awned, the middle awn 5-6 mm. long ; palea equaling its glume ; internodes of the rachis 4-5 mm. long, smooth, scabrous on the margins, compressed. Rather common on mesas and grassy hills. March-May. 64 Cyperaceae ** Some of the empty glumes bifid above the middle or all enti ' i 0U8. ::. S. Californicum Smith. Culms tufted, ascending, 1.5-2.5 dm. high, rather densely pubescent above; lower sheaths densely hirsute, the upper minutely puberulent; ligule obsolete ; leaves 2-8 cm. Long, 3-4 mm. wide, scabrous above and on the margins, densely puberulent on the back; spike rather loosely flowered, 5-8 cm. long : lowesl flower of one or both spikelets sterile : empty glumes 4, entire. 3-5 cm. long : flowering glume linear. 10-] L' mm.. long, finely scabrous, awn stout, about 1 cm. long; palea 2 mm. shorter than its glume, scabrous on the nerves below; internodes of the rachis 4-5 mm. long, scabrous throughout. Rather common in open pine woods in the San Gabriel and San Bernar- dino Mountains. June-August. Another closely related species, S. glabrum Smith, is frequent in the San Jacinto and Cuyamaca Mountains, it Is read- ily dist inguished by the glabrous culms and Shi 4. S. anomalum Smith. Culm- erect, scarcely or not at all tufted, 5-6 dm. high, smooth; sheath- -month or the lower sparsely hirsute, .ciliate on the margins, shorter than the inter- uodes; ligule 1 mm. long; leaves 4-12 cm. long, 3-4 mm. wide, scabrous throughout; spike rather loosely tlowered, 1-1. •"> dm. long, reddish; spikelets 4-flowered; empty glumes lanceolate. entire, those of the lowest -pikelets bifid above the middle with short awn 1-4 cm. long; flowering glumes 1<» mm. long, linear- lanceolate, smooth below, scabrous above, 3-awned; lateral awns 1-2 mm. long, the middle one erect 3-4.5 cm. long; palea shorter than it< glume, scabrous on the margins. 31 collected near Pasadena by O. D. Allen. Ballona Creek, near r, and on the Smith Fork of the Santiago Creek, Santa Ana Mounts ns. Family 1. CYPERACEAE. Sedge Family. Grass-like or rush-like annual or perennial herbs from fibrous roots or running rootstocks. Sinus slender Bolid, triangular, quadrangular, terete or flattened. Leaves narrow, with <-l<>ser stipitate ; ovule 1, ana- tropous, erect ; style 2-3-clefl or rarely simple or 2-toothed. Frnit a lenticular plano-convex or trigonous achene. Endosperm mealy. Embryo minute. Flowers perfect. Scales 2-ranked. Spikelets flattened: perianth none. 1. Cvperds. Spikelets scarcely flattened; perianth of 3-6 bristles. 5. Schoenus. Scales spirally imbricated. Styles not dilated at base. 2. Scirpds. Styles dilated at base. Spikelets solitary, terminal, bractless. 3. Ef.eocharis. ' Spikelets in umbels, involucrate. 4. Fimbristylis. Spikelets polygamous; scales spirally imbricated, only the terminal perfect. 6. Cladium. Flowers monoecious or dioecious ; pistillate enclosed in a sac-like perigy nium. 7. Carex. 1. CYPERUS L. Galingale. Annual or perennial herbs. Stems mostly simple, triangular, leafy near the base and with 1 or more in- volucrate leaves at the base of the simple or compound, umbellate or capitate inflorescence. Rays of the umbel sheathed at the base, usually very unequal. Spikelets flat or nearly terete, composed of few-many persist- ent or deciduous scales, these concave, conduplicate or keeled, 2-ranked, all flower-bearing or the lower empty. Flowers perfect. Perianth none. Stamens 1-3. Styles 2-3-cleft, deciduous from the summit of the lenticular or 3-angled achene. 1. C. diandrus capitatus Britton. Stems tufted, slender, 1-4 dm. high; leaves about 2 mm. wide, those of the involucre 1-2, elongated ; spikelets sessile in a capitate cluster, appearing some- 66 Cyperaceae what lateral, 8-20 mm. long, linear or linear-oblong; scales with brown margins appressed, coriaceous, obtuse, shining; stamens generally 3; style 2-cleft, scarcely exserted ; achene lenticular, oblong or oblong-ovate, somewhat pointed, dull. (C. diandrui ctt&taneus of the Bot. Cal.) Occasional in moist sandy places on river bottoms. Los Angeles; San Bernardino. 2. C. laevigatus L. Perennial, with slender creeping rhizomes ; stems tufted, slender, 8-15 cm. high, terete, with 2-3 short brown sheaths at the base, the upper bearing a short, erect, subtriangu- lar leaf, otherwise naked ; involucre of usually 2 leaf-like bracts, 1 a continuation of the stem, erect, the other spreading, 3 cm. long or less; umbel sessile, capitate, apparently lateral ; spikelets sessile, many-flowered, 4-6 mm. long, pale green; scales broad, obtuse, about 2 mm. long; rachis deeply pitted transversely; stamens 3; style 2-cleft ; achene broadly obovate, 12 mm. long. Occasional in moist places about Los Angeles and San Bernardino. 3. C. inflexus Muhl. Stems very slender, tufted, 3-15 cm. high ; leaves 2 mm. wide or less, nearly equaling the stems, those of the involucre 2-3, exceeding the umbel ; umbel sessile, usually capitate ; spikelets linear-oblong, 4-6 mm. long, 6-10-flowered ; scales pale brown, lanceolate, firm, tapering into a long recurved awn; stamen 1 ; style 3-cleft ; rachis narrowly winged, the wings persistent; achene 3-angled, narrowly obovoid or oblong, obtuse, mucronulate. (C aristatus Boeckl.) In moist sandy soil. Laguna, San Joaquin Hills, Orange County; Bear Valley, San Bernardino Mountains. 4. C. esculentus L. Perennial by scaly horizontal tuber-bear- ing rootstocks ; stems rather stout, 3-6 dm. high; leaves light green, 4-8 mm. wide, usually longer than the stem, with promi- nent midvein, those of the involucre 3-6, the longer much exceed- ing the umbel; umbel 4-10-rayed, usually compound ; spikelets numerous in loose spikes, straw-colored or yellowish brown, spreading, 12-24 mm. long, 3 mm. wide, many-flowered ; scales ovate-oblong, subacute, 3-5-nerved ; rachis narrowly winged; stamens 3; style 3-cleft ; achene obovoid, obtuse, 3-angled. Fnquent in river bottoms about Los Angeles, Santa Ana and San Ber- nardino. 5. C. erythrorhizos Muhl. Annual; stems tufted, usually rather stout, 2-. S. Olneyi (J ray. Perennial by long stout rootstocks ; stems stout. 6-25 dm. high; sharply 3-angled with concave sides; leaves 1-3, 3-12 cm. long, or sheaths sometimes leafless; involucral bract stout, erect, 1-3 cm. long; spikelets appearing as if lateral, capitate in dense clusters of 5-12, oblong or obovoid-oblong, obtuse, 5-8 nun. long ; scales oval or orbicular, dark brown with a green mid vein, emarginate or niucronulate, glabrous; bristles usually 6, slightly shorten than or equaling the achene, retrorsely barbed ; stamens 3; styles 2-cleft; achene obovate, plano-convex, brown, mucronate. Common in marshes and along running steams throughout our range. June-September. 4. S. lacustris occidentalis Wats. Stems stout from creeping rootstocks, terete or rarely obscurely 3-sided, 1-:; m. high, leafless or the basal sheaths bearing a short nearly terete leaf; involucral bract stout, shorter than the inflorescence; spikelets numer- ous, scattered or more or less clustered in an irregularly com- pound umbel, oblong-ovoid, (1-10 mm. long; scales broadly ovate, obtuse, usually pubescent; bristles (i, equaling or longer than the achene, slender, retrorsely barbed ; style 2-cleft ; achene obovate, plano-convex, abruptly mucronate, grayish. Common along streams and marshes. This and the next are commonly called "Tule." June-September. ">. S. Californicus (C. A. Myer) Britton. Much resembling the last in habit and size; stems obtusely 3-angled ; involucral bract very short, stoutly subulate; umbel compound; spikelets 6-10 mm. long, oblong; scales brown, ovate, awn-pointed by the excurrent midvein ; bristles shorter than the achene. rather stout, strongly ciliate at least below; style '2-cleft; achene ODO- Sedge Family 69 vate, planO-coiives:, nearly white or brown, narrowed above into a short point, contracted at l>ase, 1-1.25 nun. broad. ( s, Tatora Kunth.) With the last and apparently more common. Typical forms are readily distinguished by the stouter and shorter strongly ciliate bristles, stouter filaments, and smaller acbene tapering at the apex. Intermediate forms, apparently hybrids, are occasionally found. ■*-+- Injlorescence terminal; stem leafy. • i. S. robustus Pursh. Perennial by large rootstocks ; steins stout, sharply 3-angled with flat sides, smooth, 6-15 dm. high; leaves equaling or exceeding the stem, smooth, 5-10 mm. wide, midvein prominent; involucral leaves 2-4, elongated, erect, sim- ilar to those of the stem, often 3 cm. long; spikelets in a dense, often compound terminal cluster of 6-20, ovoid-oblong, obtuse or subacute, 16-24 mm. long, 8-10 mm. broad; scales ovate, brown, puberulent, lacerate or 2-toothed, midvein excurrent into an at length reflexed awn; bristles 1-6, shorter than the achenes, or none; style 3-cleft; achene compressed, flat on the face, convex or with a low ridge on the back, obovate-orbicular, dark brown, shining, 3 mm. long. (S. maritimus of the Bot. Cal.,not of L.) Common in marshes, especially in somewhat saline places. June-October. 7. S. atrovirens Muhl. Perennial by slender rootstocks; stems 3-angled, rather slender, leafy, 6-12 dm. high; leaves elongated, nodulose, rough on the margins, 6-12 mm. wide, 1-2 usually exceeding the inflorescence ; involucral leaves usually several, unequal, the longer equaling or exceeding the rays; um- bel 1-2-compound or rarely simple ; spikelets ovoid-oblong, acute, densely capitate in 6's-20's at the ends of the rays or raylets; scales greenish-brown, oblong, acute, midvein excurrent ; bristles usually 6, retrorsely barbed above, naked below, about equaling the achene; style 3-cleft; achene oblong-obovoid, 3-angled, pale brown, dull. Marshes in Los Angeles and Glendale, Davidson. 8. S. microcarpus Presl. Perennial; stems 6-12 dm. high, rather stout; leaves rough-margined, exceeding the stem; the longer involucral leaves usually exceeding the inflorescence ; um- bel 1-2-compound ; spikelets 3-25 together in capitate clusters at the ends of usually spreading raylets, ovoid-oblong, 3-4 mm. long, 70 Cyperaceae acute; scales brown, with a green midvein, blunt or subacute; bristles 4, barbed nearly or quite to the base, somewhat longer than the achene; stamens 2; styles 2-cleft; achene oblong- obovate, nearly white, plano-convex or with a low ridge on the back, pointed. Rather common in meadows and along streams in the pine belt of all the mountains. Oak Knoll, near Pasadena, McClatchie. 3. ELEOCHARIS R. Br. Spike-rush. Annual or perennial herbs, with simple, usually terete stems, and leaves reduced to mere sheaths or the lower rarely bearing a blade. Spikelets solitary, terminal, erect, several— many-flowered, not subtended by an involucre. Scales concave, spirally imbricated. Perianth of 1-12 usually retrorsely barbed bristles, or sometimes wanting. Stamens 2-3. Styles 2-cleft and achene Lenticulai or biconvex, or 3-cleft and achene more or less distinctly 3-angled. Base of the style persistent on the summit of the achene, forming a terminal tubercle. 1. E. palustris (L.) R. & S. Perennial by horizontal root- stocks; stems stout, terete or nearly so, striate, 3-8 dm. high; basal sheaths brown, rarely bearing a short blade, the upper one obliquely truncate ; spikelet ovoid-cylindric, 6-24 mm. long, 3-4 mm. broad, thicker than the stem; scales ovate-oblong or ovate- lanceolate, purplish-brown, with scarious margins and a green midvein; bristles usually 4, slender, retrorsely barbed, longer than the achene, sometimes wanting; stamens 2-3; style 2-3- cleft; achene brownish or yellowish-brown, smooth, obovate; tubercle conic-triangular, constricted at the base, flattened, XA-X.> as long as the achene. Common in wet places along streams throughout our range. May-August. 2. E. acicularis (L.) R. & S. Perennial by filiform rootstocks or stolons; stems filiform, tufted, obscurely 4-angled and groov- ed, erect or spreading, 4-10 cm. long; sheaths truncate; spikelet compressed, narrowly ovate, acute, 3-10-fiowered, 3-8 mm. long, 1 mm. broad; scales oblong, obtuse, thin, pale green, with a nar- row band of brown on each side of the midvein, deciduous, many usually sterile; bristles 3—4, fugacious, shorter than the achene; Sedge Family 71 stamens 3 ; style 3-cleft ; achene obovoid-oblong, obscurely 3- angled, with a rib on each angle and 6-9 intermediate ones, con- nected by tine ridges ; tubercle conic, acute, % as long as the achene. Frequent in moist places along streams and on borders of ponds. April- June. 3. E. montana (II. B. K.) R. c*c S. Perennial; steins slender, sulfate, 15-45 cm. high, erect ; basal sheaths brown ; spike oblong or sometimes ovate, 4-10 mm. long, rounded at the apex; scales numerous, closely imbricated, ovate, very obtuse, brown with green midvein, scarious margined; bristles 4-6, about equaling the achene; style 3-cleft; achene obtusely 3-angled, oblong- obovate, about 1 mm. long, greenish brown, smooth; tubercle broad at the base and slightly constricted, deltoid, acute. (E. arenicola Torr.) Frequent on river bottoms and borders of marshes throughout our range. 4. E. rostellata Torr. Perennial ; stems rather slender, com- pressed, strongly sulcate, 3-8 dm. high; often reclining and root- ing at the apex ; basal sheaths light colored, truncate ; spike ob- long, 6-10 mm. long; scales straw-colored or pale brown, ovate, obtuse, carinate and rather firm, about 4 mm. long; bristles 6, exceeding the achene ; style 3-cleft; achene obovate, obtusely 3- angled, about 2 mm. long; tubercle not constricted at the base, pyramidal, about 1 mm. long. (E. rostellata occidentalis Wats.) Frequent in marshes and on river bottoms about Los Angeles and San Bernardino. 4. FIMBRISTYLIS Vahl. Annual or perennial herbs with stems leafy below. Spikelets umbellate, several-many-flowered, subtended by 1-many-leaved involucre, their scales spirally imbri- cated, mostly deciduous, all fertile. Perianth none. Stamens 1-3. Style 2-3-cleft, pubescent or glabrous, its base much enlarged, falling away from the achene when mature. Achene lenticular, biconvex or 3-angled. 1. F. thermalis Wats. Perennial by short matted rootstocks ; stems 3-6 dm. high, flattened and somewhat roughened, striate; leaves 2-4 mm. wide, flat, becoming more or less revolute, some- 12 Cyperaceae what pubescent or nearly glabrous, rougb on the margins; in- volucral bracts linear-subulate, acuminate, scabrous, 15-25 mm. long, shorter than the rays; spikelets umbellate, solitary on the ends of the rays, ovate to linear-oblong, 8-18 mm. long; scales ovate, obtuse, mucronate, dull brown, pubescent; style 2-cleft, flattened and ciliate ; acbene obovate, lenticular, obscurely striate, 1.5 mm. long; tubercle soon deciduous. Hot Springs, near San Bernardino, Wright; Waterman's Hot Springs, Parish. 5. SCHOENUS L. Ours perennia] herbs from rootstocks, with Blender erect tufted stems and slender subterete basal leaves. Involucral bract erect appearing as a continuation of the stem. Spikelets sessile in capitate Lateral clusters, few- flowered. Scales imbricated in 2 rows, the lower ones empty, the upper bearing perfect flowers. Perianth of b' scabrous or pubescent bristles. Stamens :'>. Style 3-cleft, not dilated at the base. Acbene more or less 3-angled, with a very short beak. 1. S. nigricans L. Stems tufted, slightly compressed, slender, 5-7 dm. high ; leaves rigid, subterete, channeled, rough on the mar- gins, shorter than the stems; sheaths black; involucral bract 3-5 cm. long; spikelets capitate clustered, ovate lanceolate, com- pressed, 6-8-rlowered ; racbis zigzag; scales ovate, acute, com- pressed, keeled, very dark brown; bristles 6, unequal, dilated at the l>ase, barbed above, longer than the acbene; achenes globose- oblong, 3-angled, white and shining. Arrowhead Hot Springs, near San Bernardino, Parish. Otherwise known in North America only from Florida. 6. CLADIUM K. Br. Perennial herbs with stoul rootstocks, stoul tall leafy stems and elongated channeled Leaves. Spikelets small. usually clustered in terminal corymbs, panicles or cymes. Scales mosl Ly about 5, closely imbricated, brown, the lower empty, the terminal one fertile and the 1-2 Sedge Family 7.". below it staminate. Perianth none. Stamens 2-3. Style 2-3-cleft, Bomewhat dilated at the base, continuous with the ovary. Achene ovate or oblong-ovate, smooth, acute with the obscure persistent base of the style. 1. C. mariscus Californicum Wats. Stems in rather dense tussocks, stout, 18-24 dm. high; leaves equaling the stem; pan- icle diffuse, drooping; spikelets in clusters of 2-3, narrowly ob- long, 4-6 mm. long; lower scales ovate, acutish or acute, the upper lanceolate, acute or acuminate, light brown ; achene brown, ovate, attenuate above. " The variety has been collected in a swamp near San Gabriel {Bn wer) and in southern Nevada, Wheeler." Watson, Bot. Cal. 2:224. This has not been seen by recent collectors, and it is doubtful if Brewer's plant came from San Gabriel. 7. CAREX L. Sedge. Grass-like sedges, perennial by rootstocks, with mostly 3-angled stems. Leaves 3-ranked, the upper elongated or short ami subtending the spikes of flowers or wanting. Flowers monoecious or dioecious, solitary in the axils of scales. Spikes either wholly pistillate or staminate, or bearing staminate and pistillate flowers (androgynous). Perianth none. Staminate fiowTers of 3 stamens. Pis- tillate of a single pistil with a style and 2-3 stigmas borne on a very short axis in the axil of a scale-like bractlet (perigynium) which completely encloses the achene. Achene 3-angled, lenticular or plano-convex. * Spikelets unisexual, all distinct and sometimes remote, stain i ante uppermost. 1. C. Pseudo-Cyperus Americana Hochst. Stems stout, 4-6 dm. bigh, angles sharp and scabrous; leaves rigid, nodose, 5-10 mm. wide, long, tapering; spikelets 4-6, densely flowered, the uppermost staminate, linear, 25-80 mm. long; pistillate spikelets 4-7 cm. long, 8-15 mm. wide, cylindric, approximate or the lowest remote ; scales pale, attenuate to a long hispid point, lanceolate or oblong, those of the staminate linear-lanceolate; perigynium 74 Cyperaceae coriaceous, pale olive, ovate to lanceolate, attenuate to a long beak ; beak bidentate, the teeth about 2 mm. long; nutlet obovoid, chestnut colored. (C Pseudo-Cyperus comusa Boott.) Canyon near Burbanlt, Davidson. 2. C. spissa Bailey. Stems stout, 1-12 m. high, smooth or near- ly so; leaves numerous, rigid, glaucous, serrate, about equaling the stem, 10-15 mm. wide; lower bract long, leaf-like, the upper- most short or nearly obsolete; spikelets 6-12 or more, the lowest 10-15 cm. long, long-pedicelled, the upper becoming sessile, all erect, cylindric; staminate 4-6 or more, 3-10 cm. long; scales with a stout toothed awn; perigynium about 3 mm. high, elliptic or obovate, coriaceous, few-flowered, yellowish-green. Occasional in the canyons of all the mountains and foothills. 3. C. filiformis latifolia Boeckl. Stems 3-8 dm. high, stolon- iferous ; leaves often exceeding the stems, 2—4 mm. wide, spike- lets 3-4, purple, staminate 1-4, linear, 3-5 cm. long, more or less pedicelled, the lower sessile; pistillate 2-4, oblong or cylindric, 2-5 cm. long, 6-8 mm. wide, densely flowered, remote, sessile or the lowest pedicelled; pedicels scabrous; scales purple, pale in the middle, acute, ciliate at the apex ; perigynium coriaceous, hispid, ovoid, obtusely angled, olive-colored; beak short, with short divergent scabrous teeth, broader and usually shorter than the scales. Occasional in fresh-water marshes in the coast valleys, Davidson. 4. C. laciniata Boott. Stems stout, sharply angled, (i-11 dm. high; leaves rather numerous, nearly equaling the stems, 4-8 mm. wide; bracts very long; spikelets 4-6, cylindric; staminate 1-2, commonly pedicelled, 2.5-7 cm. long, 4-6 mm. wide; pistill- ate 5-8 cm. long, 4-9 mm. wide, remote, the upper sessile, the lower long-pedicelled, nodding; scales purple or ferruginous, pale in the middle, ciliate, acute or with rough awn; perigynium abruptly or gradually beaked, nearly entire to bidentate with serrate teeth, compressed-lenticular, punctate, sparingly toothed on the upper margins. First collected at Santa Barbara by Nuttall. Occasional in marshes in our coast valleys. 5. C. Barbarae Dewey. Stems 5-10 dm. high, leafy, irlaucous. sharply angled and rough at least above; bracts leaf-like, the lower long; pistillate spikes 2-4, 25-75 mm. long, narrow, the Sedge Family 75 lower with slender pedicels, 7.5-10 cm. long, attenuate at the base, usually truncate at the apex, scales white backed and brown edged, obtuse; perigynium nerveless, abruptly contracted into a short distinct beak. Occasional in marshes about Los Angeles and Santa Barbara. 6. C. triquetra Boott. Stem 3-5 dm. high, slightly scabrous, leaves pale, 2-5 mm. broad, equaling or shorter than the stem; spikelets 3-5, oblong ; staminate about 18 mm. long, 2 mm. broad, subsessile ; pistillate 12-18 mm. long, 3-4 mm. broad, erect, the upper approximate, the lower pedicelled, all with abortive flowers above; scales pale chestnut, ovate, numerous, margins hyaline; perigynium pale, covered with long white hairs, ellipsoidal, sharply 3-angled, acute at each end, with a short bidentate beak, 1— 4-nerved, longer and broader than the scale; nutlet filling the perigynium. Frequent on dry ground in the Santa Monica, San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains. 7. C. multicaulis Bailey. Culms very numerous, 3-6 dm. high, stiff and wiry, terete, smooth or minutely scabrous beneath the flowers ; sheaths leafless or produced into stiff and appressed tips, 2 cm. long or more, or on sterile stems 8-15 cm. long and spreading ; the lower scales leaf-like and prolonged into a slender tip, dilated and hyaline at the base ; pistillate flowers 2-6, the lower often remote; perigynium 6-8 mm. long, strongly 3-angled, many-nerved; beak very short, entire; nutlet punctate, com- pletely filling the perigynium. Frequent on dry ridges in the pine belt of all our mountains. ** Spikelets androgynous, rarely dioecious, usually clustered in rather compact spikes. 8. C. siccata Dewey. Eootstock creeping, clothed with short lanceolate scales; stems slender, sharply angled, 15-60 cm. high, scabrous above; leaves rather rigid, 1-4 mm. wide, shorter than the stems, scabrous on the margins above; bracts scale-like, the lowest cuspidate, usually shorter than its spikelet; spikes oblong, 2-5 cm. long, 4—8 mm. broad, ferruginous; spikelets 4-12, alter- nate, simple, ovoid, 4-16 mm. long, 2-8 mm. broad, crowded or distinct below, the terminal pistillate at least at base, the in- termediate staminate or all variously mingled ; scales ovate- lanceolate, acute, ferruginous, with broad hyaline margins ; peri- 76 Cyperaceae gynium oval or ovate, tapering to a long, sharply bidentate beak, fissured on the outer side, unequally serrate on the margins, plano-convex, nerved, about equaling the scale; nutlet oblong, dark chestnut. Common on borders of marshes throughout our ranges. Cienega: Ballona; Santa Ana; San Bernardino. 9. C. marcida Boott. Stem 3-6 dm. high, scabrous above; leaves 2 mm. wide, shorter than the stem; spike 2-4 cm. long, 6-10 mm. wide, dull brown ; spikelets many, crowded or contigu- ous, closely imbricated, 4-6 mm. long, 2 mm. broad, the lower compound; bracts clasping, scale-like, setaceously pointed, the lowest exceeding its spikelet ; scales ovate, acute or cuspidate, margin hyaline, brownish ; perigynium nearly black in fruit, orbicular with a short, or ovate and with a longer bidentate beak, stipitate, plano-convex, margins incurved, serrate above, nerved, equaling the scales; nutlet ferruginous, lenticular, produced at the base. Frequent in marshes in the coast valleys. 10. C. teretiuscula Gooden. Stems slender, pale green, erect, scabrous at least above, 3-7 dm. high; leaves usually 2 mm. wide, shorter than the stems; bracts minute or none ; spike nar- rowly oblong, compact or interrupted, 25-50 mm. long; spikelets several-many, staminate above; scales thin, ovate, brownish, acute or short-awned ; perigynium ovate-oval, smooth, few- nerved, tapering to a beak of about its own length, serrate on the margins above. In canyons near Altadena, McClatchu . 11. C. occidentalis Bailey. Glaucous; stems 3-6 dm. high; leaves nearly equaling the stems; spike slender, 25-50 mm. long; spikelets somewhat crowded, or the lowest usually distinct; bracts scale-like, minute; scales muticous; perigynium turgid, ovate, abruptly short beaked, nearly marginless. " East Santa Monica Range," Davidson. 12. C. Hookeriana Dewey. Stems slender from creeping rootstocks, 2-6 dm. high, sharply angled, scabrous; leaves shorter than the stem, 2 mm. wide, tapering to a slender setaceous tip; bracts ovate, awned, commonly exceeding the spikelet, the lowest setaceous and often 25-50 mm. long; spike 2-4 cm. long, oblong or cylindric ; spikelets 4-10, approximate ; staminate (lowers few ; scales ovate or lanceolate, acute, chestnut-colored with green Lemnaceae 7< midnerve, margin hyaline; perigynium oval, abruptly tapering to a sharply bidentate beak, serrate above on the sharp incurved margins, shorter than the scale. Frequent on borders of the coast ma rshes . Family 8. LEMNACEAE. Duckweed Family. Minute perennial floating plants without Leaves or with only very rudimentary ones. The plant body con- sisting of a disk-like thallus, with usually 1 or more rootlets from the middle below. Florets imbedded in the frond, without perianth, naked or bracteate with 1—2 stamens and a sessile 1-celled, 1-several-ovuled ovary. Style simple with funnelform stigma. Fruit a utricle ; embryo straight. Roots more than 1, fascicled. 1. Spirodela. Root solitary. 2. Lemna. Roots none. 3. Wolffiella. 1. SPIRODELA Schleiden. Stipe attached (peltately) to the frond back of and under the basal margin. Reproductive pouches 2, tri- angular, opening as clefts in either margin of the basal portion of the frond. Roots more than 1. fascicled. Spadix of 1 pistillate and 2 staminate flowers from the reproductive pouches; spathe sac-like; filaments curv- ing upward from the margin of the frond ; anthers 2-celled, longitudinally dehiscent. Fruit rounded lenticu- lar, with wing margins. 1. S. polyrhiza (L.) Schl. Fronds solitary or united in colonies of 2-5, roundish obovate, flat on both sides, sessile or nearly so; 5-15-nerved, 3-6 mm. long, 2.5-4.5 mm. wide ; roots 4-16; rootcap large, sharp pointed ; spathe a complete sac, opening at the upper end: pistil flask-shaped; fruit somewhat winged; seed slightly compressed, smooth. Near San Bernardino, Pariah. This, as well as all the other members of the family occurring with us, is rarely fertile. 78 Lemnaceae 2. LEMNA L. Duckweed. Stipe attached to the basal margin of the frond. Re- productive pouches 2, triangular, opening as clefts in either margin of the basal portion <>f the frond. Root solitary. Spadix of 1 pistillate and 2 staminate flowers; spathe various ; filaments curving upward from the mar- gin of the frond. Anthers 2-celled, transversely dehis- cent. 1. Li. gibba L. Fronds from solitary to 4 in a colony, com- monly 2, orbicular to obovate, 2-5 mm. long, 2-4 mm. wide, more ; capsule subulate, 3- sided, exceeding the perianth. (J. nudosus megacephalus Torr.) Occasional along streams. Los Angeles River, Davidson. 9. J. phaeocephalus Engelm. Stems from a creeping root- stock, ancipital, 3-7 dm. high; leafy; leaves flat 2-6 mm. wide, often exceeding the stems ; flowers in a single or few many- flowered heads; perianth segments brownish, 3-4 mm. long, lanceolate acuminate; stamens 6; anthers usually exceeding the filaments; style long exserted; capsule acute ; seeds ovate, close- ly reticulated. Frequent along streams and in low brackish places. May-July. 10. J. phaeocephalus paniculatus Engelm. A more robust form of the last; heads several in a compound panicle, rather few- flowered. With the last or in similar places. Family 10. LILIACEAE. Lily Family. Scapose or leafy-stemmed herbs from bulbs or corymbs or rarely with rootstocks or a woody caudex. Leaves various. Flowers solitary or clustered, regular, mostly perfect. Perianth segments 6, distinct. Stamens (>. hypogynous or borne on the perianth or at the base of its segments; anthers 2-celled, mostly introrse. Ovary superior, 3-celled. Ovules few or numerous, in each cavity ; styles united ; stigma 3-lobed. Fruit a loculi- eidal capsule ; endosperm copious. * Fruit a capsule. Herbs with bulbs or corms. Flowers not umbellate. Stems from a tunicated bulb. Styles 8, distinct. l Ztqaobrug Styles united, more or less 3-cleft. -' ChloroqaIjUM. Stems from a scaly bulb. Perianth very showy, its segments refiexed. 9. Lii.hm. Perianth segments not reriexed. 10. I-'uitii.i.ahia. Stems from a ci inn; Boweri showy. 11. OALOOBOSTUS. Lily Family 83 Flowers umbellate. Perianth segments distinct or nearly so. Odor and taste alliaceous ; ovules 1 or 2 in each cell. 3. Allium. Odor and taste not alliaceous ; ovules several in each cell. Flowers greenish-white. 4. Muilla. Flowers yellow. 5. Bloomeria. Perianth segments united below into a tube. Stamens 6. Perianth-tube more or less inflated; inner stamens appendaged. 6. Bkodiaea. Perianth-tube funnelform; stamens unappendaged. 8. Tritelia. Stamens 3; staminodia3. 7. Hookera. Plants with short stout woody caudex and large panicle of showy flowers. 12. Hesperoyucca. ** Fruit a berry. Leaves scale-like; branchlets numerous, filiform. 13. Asparagus. 1. ZYGADENUS Michx. Zygadene. Stems simple, scale-like, from a tunicated bulb, gla- brous and somewhat glaucous, with linear mostly basal leaves and greenish-white flowers, in a raceme or panicle. Perianth nearly rotate, segments ovate to oblong-lanceo- late with a green glandular spot at the narrowed base. Stamens free from the segments and about equaling them : filaments subulate. Styles distinct persistent. Capsule deeply 3-lobed. Seeds brownish, angled. 1. Z. Fremontii Torr. Bulb oblong, 2-5 cm. long, with dark coats ; stems 4-8 dm. high ; basal leaves 2-4 dm. long, 1.5-2.5 cm. broad at the base, somewhat falcate-curving; stem leaves few, shorter, sheathing at the base ; flowers few to many in a raceme or panicle; lower pedicels 2.5-4 cm. long; segments 8-14 mm. long, the outer not clawed, the inner with a broad claw; gland greenish-yellow, toothed on its upper margin; stamens about as long as the segments; capsule oblong, about 2 cm. long. Occasional on the northern slope of the Santa Monica Mountains and Verdugo Hills. April. 2. CHLOROGALUM Kunth. Soap-plant. Stems from a fibrous-coated bulb, tall almost leafless paniculately branched above, the branches loosely race- 84 Liliaceae mose. Basal Leaves tufted long-linear, the stem leaves much reduced. Bracts small and scarious. Pedicels jointed at the summit. Perianth white or purplish, per- sistent and at length twisted over the ovary, its segments distinct ligulate spreading, with '■) closely approximate nerves down the middle. Stamens (i, inserted on the base of the segment ; anthers versatile. Style long-fili- form slightly 3-cleft. Capsule broadly turbinate, 3- valved. loculicidal. Seeds 1 or 2 in each cell, ohovate. somewhat rugose. 1. C. pomeridianum (Ker) Kunth. Bulbs large, about 1 dm. long, densely and coarsely fibrous-coated; stem and spreading panicle 6-15 dm. high; leaves 2-5 dm. long, 12-30 mm. broad, carinate and undulate; pedicels slender, about 6 mm. Inn.'; perianth rotate, its segments 16-20 mm. long, white with purple veins; capsule about (3 mm. long. Common on dry hillsides and plains. May-July. 3. ALLIUM L. Onion. Scapes from a tunicated bulb or rarely from a coated conn, with mostly narrowly linear basal leaves. Herb- age with the characteristic odor and taste of onions. Flowers in a terminal simple umbel, 'subtended by 2 or 3 membranous, separate or united bracts. Pedicels slen- der, not jointed. Perianth persistent, its segments dis- tinct or united at the base. Stamens inserted on the bases of the perianth segments; filaments filiform or dilated, sometimes toothed. Style filiform, jointed. Capsule obovate-globose, obtusely 3-lobed, often crested, loculici- dally dehiscent. Seeds obovoid, wrinkled, black. 1. A. haematochiton Wats. Scape slender, 1-3 dm. high, somewhat compressed and 2-edged ; tunicated bulb oblong, crow n- ing a horizontal rhizome, its coats deep reddish-purple, sinning; Naves several, linear, flat and rather thick, 2-4 nun. broad, about equaling the scape; bracts 2, short connate; umbel erect or Lily Family 85 somewhat nodding, deep purple or rose-color; segments ovate- lanceolate acute, 6-8 mm. long; stamens and style very Blender, scan-civ equaling the segments; ovary truncate with very short, rounded crests; capsule ohcordate, 4 mm. long. On dry rocky hillsides. Santa Monica Mountains and Wrdugo Hills. April-May. 2. A. serratum Wats. Scape terete, slender, about 1 dm. high : bulb nearly globose, without rhizome, its coats with a dis- tinct close horizontally serrate denticulation; leaves 2 or more, Bomewhat shorter than the scapes; bracts narrowly acuminate ; perianth segments broadly ovate-lanceolate, 8-12 mm. long, acute or somewhat acuminate, nearly straight and rather rigid, the inner shorter and sometimes serrulate; filaments all with a nar- rowly deltoid base; crests very narrow central. Glendale, Davidson. 4. MUILLA Wats. Scape from a fibrous corm and bearing' an umbel sub- tended by several small scarious bracts. Leaves mostly few, very narrow, nearly terete. Pedicels not jointed. Perianth subrotate persistent, of 6 nearly equal slightly united oblong-lanceolate segments, greenish- or yellowish- white with a dark 2-nerved midrib. Stamens inserted near the base ; filaments filiform, slightly thickened to- ward the base or petaloid ; anthers versatile. Ovules 8-10 in each cell ; style clavate, persistent and at length splitting. Capsule globose scarcely lobed, loculicidal. Seeds compressed and angled. 1. M. serotina Greene. Scapes 3-5 dm. high, glabrous; leaves 3-4 dm. long, subterete, the upper surfaces nearly plane, the lower convex and sharply 7-striate, the striae retrorsely scabrous; umbel 40-70-flowered ; pedicels nearly 10 cm. long; perianth rotate about 12 mm. broad, greenish-white; outer segments oblong-linear, the inner oblong; filaments stout, subulate, little compressed ; anthers 1 mm. long, lurid purple. Frequent in dry stony places in the plains and foothills. April-May. 86 Liliaceae 5. BLOOMERIA Kell. (Jolden Stars. Scape from a fibrous coated corm, with linear carinate basal leaves and many yellow flowers in a terminal umbel, subtended by membranous bracts. Pedicels jointed at the summit. Perianth persistent, of 6 nearly equal distinct linear-oblong somewhat spreading seg- ments. Stamens 6, inserted on the base of the segments and a little shorter ; filaments filiform with a somewhat cup-shaped winged and often bicuspidate appendage surrounding the base ; anthers oblong, attached near the base but versatile. Ovules several in each cell ; style filiform-clavate. persistent and splitting with the capsule. Capsule subglobose, membranous, obtusely 3-lobed, loculicidally dehiscent. Seeds subovoid, angular and wrinkled, black. 1. B. aurea Kell. Bulb about 15 cm. in diameter, becoming densely covered with brownish fibres; scape scabrous, 2-5 dm. high; leaf solitary, equaling or exceeding the scape, <>-12 mm. broad; bracts narrowly lanceolate; pedicels numerous 3-6 cm. long; perianth nearly rotate in bloom ; segments 8-12 mm. long; appendages about 2 mm. long, bicuspidate, minutely papillose. Frequent in the foothills and on the plains. April-June. 6. BRODIAEA Smith. Wild Hyacinth. Scape tortuous or twining from a depressed fibrous coated corm. Leaves usually 2, fleshy linear. Umbel Bubtended by '■'> or more thin spathaceous bracts. Peri- anth tube thin, more or less inflated and angular" or sac- cate, about equaled by the segments. Stamens r>. the inner with a free lanceolate appendage on each side, sterile in some species, the outer ones naked ; anthers basifixed. Ovules 3-8 in each cell; style persistent, with short divergenl stigmas. Capsule ovate to oblong, more or less attenuate above. Seeds angled, black. Lily Family 87 1. B. capitata Benth. Scape 1.5-5 dm. high, very tortuous, not rarely twining; leaves about equaling the scape carinate; bracts purple, darker than the flowers; flowers several, capitate clustered on short pedicels 12 mm. long or less ; perianth tube funnel form, shorter than the segments; appendages comment, forming a corona. Common on the plains and foothills. March-May. 7. HOOKERA Salisb. Scapes erect straight from a fibrous coated corm5 with few linear leaves and a solitary umbel subtended by several membranous bracts. Perianth tube thick turbi- nate, segments equaling the tube spreading at the tip. Stamens 3 opposite the inner segments, the outer stamens being reduced to staminodia. 1. H. minor (Benth.) Britton. Scape-slender, 5-15 cm. high; pedicels 2-5, mostly 2-5 cm. long; perianth about 3 cm. long, violet-purple or paler, its limb rotate, the segments with a strong midvein, the outer narrower mucronulate ; anthers 4-6 mm. long, shorter than the retuse or emarginate staminodia. (Brodiaea minor Wats. Occasional in heavy soil. March-April. 8. TRITELEIA Dougl. Scapes slender from a fibrous coated corm, with few thin linear leaves and bearing an umbel of yellow, white, blue or purple flowers. Perianth tube rather short or funnelform, not inflated angular or saccate ; the seg- ments erect or spreading. Stamens 6 unappendaged, all antheriferous ; anthers versatile or basifixed. Ovary on a slender stipe. 1. T. laxa Benth. Scape 3-6 dm. high ; umbel 10-30-flowered ; pedicels 3-6 cm. long; perianth 3-4 cm. long, funnelform, violet, cleft nearly to the middle; anthers versatile, ovate-lanceolate, 2-lobed at base, bluish or white. {Brodiaea laxa Wats.) On low hills, Los Felis, Davidson. 88 Liliaceae 9. LILIUM L. Lilt. Tall bulbous herbs, with Bimple leafy Btems and Large erect or drooping flowers. Perianth deciduous funnel- form or campanulate, <>f 6 distinct spreading or recurved segments, each with a nectar-bearing groove at its base within. Stamens 6, mostly shorter than the perianth, slightly attached to the segments ; filaments filiform or subulate; anthers linear versatile. Ovules numerous; style Long somewhat clavate above; stigma 3-lobed. ( Sapsule ob- long or obovoid loculicidally dehiscent. Seeds numer- ous flat, packed in '2 rows in each cell. 1. Li. Humboltii Roezl. & Leicht. Bulbs large, 5-15 cm. in diameter, white or purplish; stems stout, purplish, puberulent or glabrous, 15-30 dm. high; leaves usually in 4-fi whorls of 10-20 each, oblanceolate, undulate, 10-15 cm. long, 20-25 mm. wide, acute, somewhat scabrous or pubescent on the margins and beneath; flowers usually many on short and widely spreading pedicels, 7-15 cm. long or more, scattered; segments 6-10 cm. long, 12-24 mm. broad, reflexed, strongly revolute above the shorl abruptly narrowed claw, reddish-orange with maroon spots, papillose-rigid toward the base; stamens 4-5 cm. long, about equaling the style; anthers oblong, 8-1 fi mm. long, red ; capsule large, obovoid, acutely 6-angled. Frequent in canyons of the San Gabriel and Santa Monica Mountains. June-July. 10. FRITILL.ARIA L. Mission Bells. Stems erect from scaly bulbs with thick fleshy scales. Leaves scattered or verticillate, mostly narrow and sessile. Flowers solitary or racemose Leafy-braeted, mostly dull-colored, nodding. Perianth campanulate or funnelform deciduous, of 6 distinct equal oblong-oblance- olate concave segments, more or less blotched or tinged with purple or yellow or white ami with a smooth nectar- iferous pit near the base. Stamens inserted on the base of the segments ; filaments slender ; anthers oblong ver- Lily Family 89 satile extrorse dehiscing laterally. Ovules many ; style slender, united to the middle or throughout, deciduous. Capsule membranous ovate oroblong, 6-angled or winged, Loculicidally 3-valved. Seeds flat in "2 rows in each cell, brownish. 1. F. biflora Lindl. Bulb of a few very thick and fleshy ovate scales, (3-10 cm. long; stem usually stout, 15-45 cm. high, 1-3- flowered ; leaves 2-6, mostly near the base, somewhat verticillate or scattered , lanceolate or oblong-lanceolate, 5-10 cm. long; perianth dark brownish-purple tinged with green ; segments spreading, oblong-lanceolate, about 25 mm. long; stamens 8-10 mm. long; anthers 4 mm. long, mucronate; styles distinct above ; stigmas linear; capsule broadly obovoid, somewhat (3-angled, 12-18 cm. long. Occasional in open places in the foothills. April. 11. CALOCHORTUS Pursh. Mariposa Lily. Stems usually flexuous and branching from membranous or rarely fibrous coated corms, with few linear-lanceolate leaves, those of the stems alternate clasping. Flowers few showy terminal on the branches or umbellately fas- cicled. Perianth deciduous, of 6 distinct more or less concave segments, the inner mostly broadly cuneate-obo- vate, usually with a conspicuous glandular pit near the base. Stamens 6, inserted on the base of the segments ; anthers linear to oblong, basifixed. Ovules many; stigmas sessile recurved persistent. Capsule elliptic to oblong. * Petals arched; capsule broadly elliptical, deeply triquetrous. 1. C. albus Dougl. Glaucous; stems 15-45 cm. high, mostly branching; bracts foliaceous ; flowers subglobose, nodding; sepals shorter than the petals, greenish; petals white, ovate-orbicular, 15-25 mm. long, bearded above the gland with long white hairs ; anthers oblong, obtuse, mucronate; capsule 2-5 cm. long, 1-2 cm. wide; seeds pitted. Common on shady banks in the San Gabriel Mountains. 90 Liliaceae ** Petals not arched; pedicels stout, erect. •*- Capsule oblong, obtuse at both ends. 2. C. Catalinae Wats. Sterne branching, 3-0 dm. high, bulb- iferous at base, leaves and bracts linear; sepals ovate-lanceolate, purple-spotted near the base, nearly equaling the petals; petals cuneate-obovate, 3-5 cm. high, lilac, with a large ovate purplish blotch at base; gland oblong, yellow or brown, covered with brown or yellowish hairs; anthers obtuse pinkish, 5 mm. long, on filaments 3 times as long; capsule 2.5-5 cm. long, about 1 cm. wide. Common on the plains and in the foothills. Onofree Mountains; Santa Ana Mountains: San Pedro Hills. Extending as far north as the Santa [nez Mountains. ■*-■•- Capsule narrowly oblong, attenuate into a beak. 3. C. Weedii Wats. Stems often much branched above, 3-5 dm. high; bracts linear; sepals oblong with an acuminate tip nearly as long as the petals or exceeding them, yellow orange- spotted at the base; petals cuneate-obovate, sometimes truncate, 2.5-3.5 cm. long, deep yellow, usually dotted with brown, the upper margin ciliate, densely clothed with hairs at least on the lower two-thirds ; anthers about equaling the filaments. Dry hills in the coast mountains and foothills of San Diego County. 4. C. Weedii purpurascens Wats. Like the type as to struc- tural characters, but petals more or less purplish and conspicu- ously blotched with brown. (C. Weedii restus Purdy.) In the chaparral belt of the coast mountains from the Santa Ana to the Santa Inez Mountains. 5. C. clavatus Wats. Stems rather stout, 3-5 dm. high, bulbiferous near the base; bracts linear; sepals ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, about equaling the petals; petals cuneate-obovate, yellow, tinged with brown below, the lower half clothed with long clavate hairs; gland circular, deep, bordered with imbricated scales; anthers purple, obtuse, 8-10 mm. long, about equaling the filaments; capsule narrow, about 5 cm. long. Santa Monica Mountains; Newhall. 6. C. splendens Dougl. Stems single 3-fi dm. high, usually branched above, bulbiferous at base; sepals lanceolate-acumi- nate, recurved, yellowish, with an oval purple spot near the base within ; petals obovate-cuneate, 3-4 cm. long and of greater Lily Family 91 width, lilac with a small purplish blotch at base surrounding the densely hairy gland, the lower third sparsely hairy to, but not below, the gland; anthers obtuse, usually shorter than the fila- ments. Frequent in the chaparral belt of the San Qabriel and Santa Ana Moun- tains. 7. C. invenustus Greene. Stems 1-4 dm. high, bulbiferous at the base; flowers in a 2-several-flowered umbel; sepals ovate- oblong, shortly acuminate, striate and scarious margined, the tips not recurved, shorter than the petals; petals about 3 cm. long, obovate-cuneate, the rounded summit centrally apiculate, dull white, tinged greenish and purplish, the short claw purplish ; gland oblong, covered with light hairs, and with a few scattered hairs near; anthers 5-7 mm. long, obtuse at apex, yellow, on narrowly margined filaments a little shorter, capsule 4 cm. long. Frequent in the coniferous belt of the San Bernardino Mountains; Mt. Santiago, Santa Ana Mountains. 8. C. venustus Dougl. Stem 2-5 dm. high; leaves and bracts narrow; sepals oblong-lanceolate, 3-5 cm. long, acute, about equaling the petals; petals broadly obovate-cuneate, broader than long, white, shaded above with lilac, a conspicuous reddish- purple spot near the summit, a brownish-yellow arch in the cen- ter, and a brown base, or these markings sometimes obscure; gland oblong or lunate, densely hairy and surrounded by a few scattered hairs ; anthers oblong, obtuse on dilated filaments of nearly equal length ; capsule narrow, 5-7 cm. long. Open hills about Newhall, Davidson. 9. C. venustus sulphurous Purdy. Petals light yellow, with eye in center and a rose-colored blotch at summit. Newhall, Davidson. 12. HESPEROYTJCCA Baker. Spanish Bayonet. Subacaulescent with a short stout woody caudex and straight needle-pointed rough-margined flat leaves and ample panicle. Perianth broadly campanulate, of sub- equal distinct thin broadly lanceolate concave segments. Filaments evidently adnate to the perianth below, clavate, suberect ; anthers didymously cordate. Ovary oblong- ovoid or obovoid, mostly longer than the short slender 92 [ridaceae style : stigma capitate, Long-papillate, minutely per- forate. Fruit capsular incompletely 6-celled, 3-valved through the Laciniate false septa. Seeds thin Hat. 1. H. Whipplei (Terr.) Baker. Simple or sometimes caespi- tose; leaves ascending, rigid, 3-10 dm. long, about 15 mm. wide, plano-convex subtriquetrous or keeled on both faces, sometimes falcate striate glaucous, keenly but finely denticulate, with very fine slender pungent end spine; panicle 2-5 m. high, long peduncled, glabrous; flowers creamy-white, pendent, fragrant, capsule about 5 cm. long. {Yucca Whipplei Torr. ; )". Whipplei graminifolia Wood.) Common in the chaparral belt in all our mountains. June-July. Yucca arborescexs (Torr.) Trelease. (Joshua Tree.) The large yucca of the Mohave Desert. 13. ASPARAGUS L. Asparagus. Stem at first Bimple fleshy scaly, at length much branched, the branchlets filiform and mostly clustered in the axils of the scales and usually flattened. Flowers small solitary o'r clustered. Perianth segments all alike. Stamens inserted at the base of the segments ; anthers in- trorse. Ovules 2 in each cell ; style slender ; stigmas •"> short recurved. Berry globose. 1. A. officinalis L. An escape from cultivation and becoming well established. .May. Family 11. IRIDACEAE. Cms Family. Perennial herbs with narrow equitant 2-ranked leaves and perfect regular or irregular mostly clustered flowers subtended by bracts. Perianth of 6 segments or 6 lobes, its tube adnate to the ovary, the segments or lobes in 2. series, convolute in the bud withering-persistent. Sta- mens ."». inserted on the perianth opposite the outer series of segments or lobes ; filaments filiform distinct or uinted; anthers 2-Celled extrorse. Ovary inferior Orchiclaceae 93 mostly 3-celled ; ovules mostly numerous in each cell ; style 3-cleft, its branches sometimes divided. Capsule 3-celled Loculicidally dehiscent, many-seeded. 1. SISYRINCHIUM L. Blue-eyed Grass. Perennial tufted slender herbs with short rootstocks simple or branched 2-edged or 2-winged stems. Linear grass-like leaves and rather small mostly blue terminal flowers, umbellate from a pair of erect green bracts. Perianth-tube short or none the segments oblong or obo- vate, equal mostly aristulate. Stamens more or less monodelphous. Style branches filiform undivided, alter- nate with the anthers. Capsule globose or obovoid. Seeds mostly rounded smooth or pitted. 1. S. bellum Wats. Stems 2-4 dm. high, glabrous or with sca- brous margins, with 1-3 fioriferous nodes at the summit ; peduncles usually 2 at each node ; spathes of 2, nearly equal bracts, sca- brous on the keel, 4-7-flowered ; perianth deep blue-purple with yellowish base, 2 cm. broad or more; stamens united to near the summit; anthers very small; capsule round-obovoid, 6 mm. high ; seeds 1.5 mm. thick, obscurely pitted. Frequent on grassy slopes, both in the valleys and mountains from near sea-level to 6000 feet. April-August. Family 12. ORCHIDACEAE. Orchid Family. Perennial herbs, with eorms, bulbs or tuberous roots, sheathing entire leaves sometimes reduced to scales. Flowers perfect irregular bracted solitary, spiked or racemed. Perianth of 6 segments : the outer (sepals) similar or nearly so ; 2 of the inner ones (petals) lateral, alike ; the third (lip) dissimilar, usually larger, often spurred, sometimes inferior by torsion of the ovary or pedicel. Stamens variously united with the style into an unsymmetrical column; anther (in ours) 2-celled; pol- len in 2-8 pear-shaped usually stalked masses (pollinia), 94 Orchidaceae united by elastic threads, waxy or powdery attached at the base to a viscid disk (gland). Style often terminating in a beak at the base of the anther or between its sacs ; Btigma a viseid surface. Ovary inferior, usually long and twisted, 3-angled, 1-celled ; ovules numerous on 3 parietal placentae. Capsule 3-valved. Seeds numerous minute mostly spindle-shaped ; endosperm none ; embryo fleshy. Perianth with a spur. 1. Piperia. Perianth spurless. 2. Gvrostachys. 1. PIPERIA Rydb. Rein-orchis. Somewhat leafy below, the leaves usually withering be- fore anthesis, those of the stem bract-like. Flowers green- ish or white ; sepals and petals 1-nerved ; the upper sepal ovate or lanceolate, erect ; the lateral ones spreading, linear to lanceolate, their bases united with the claw of the lip ; upper petals free, lanceolate to linear-lanceo- late, oblique; the blade of the lip linear-lanceolate to ovate, obtuse, truncate or hastate at the base. Anther- cells parallel, opening nearly laterally. Stigma a small beak in the angle between the anther-cells ; ovary sessile, ellipsoid in fruit. 1. P. lancifolia Rydb. Stem stout, 3-5 dm. high ; basal leaves and lower stem leaves lanceolate, alternate, 10-15 cm. long, 1-2 cm. wide, withering after anthesis; spike many-flowered, lax, 2-3 dm. long ; bracts ovate, acute, striate, about % as long as the flowers; flowers greenish, 11-13 mm. long; upper sepal ovate, obtuse, about 4 mm. long; blade round-ovate, scarcely at all hastate, thick with prominent medium ridge; spur Aliform, slightly clavate, about twice as long as the lip and about equaling the ovary. (Ilabenaria Unalaschensis of recent authors, in part, not of Spreng.) Occasional in the canyons of the Santa Monica Mountains, Haste', San Gabriel Mountains. April. Saururaceae 95 2. P. longispica (Durand.) Rydb. Stem stout, 3-7 dm. high; basal leaves and lower stem leaves 2-4, lanceolate, acute, 10-15 cm. long, 2-3.5 cm. wide, withering about the time of anthesis; spike many-flowered, rather lax, 1-3 dm. long; bracts ovate- lanceolate, 5-10 mm. long, acuminate; flowers greenish, about 5 mm. long; lateral sepals ohlong-lanceolate, obtuse; petals broad- ly lanceolate ; blade of the lip ovate-hastate, distinctly auricled and truncate at base; spur filiform, 2.5 times as long as the lip. Santa Monica .Mountains, ffOSSi . 2. GYROSTACHYS I'ers. Ladies' Tresses. Stems erect, Leafy, from a cluster of tuberous routs. Flowers in a twisted spike white, spurless. Sepals and petals narrow, erect or more or less connivent ; lip ob- long sessile or nearly so, the base embracing the column, with a callous protuberance on each side, the dilated summit spreading and usually entire. Column very short oblique, terminating in a short terete spike. Stigma ovate, with an acuminate bifid beak. Anther sessile or nearly so at the base of the stipe behind, acuminate. Pollen-masses 2, thin and powdery. 1. G. Romanzoffiana (Cham.) MacM. Stems rather stout, glabrous, 1-5 dm. high, bracteate above ; leaves oblong-lanceolate to linear; spike dense 3-ranked, conspicuously bracteate; sepals and petals connivent; lip recurved, ovate-oblong, summit wavy- crenulate; callosities smooth, sometimes obscure; the oblong- linear gland and slender bifid beak 1.5 mm. long ; capsule oblong, 6-12 mm. long. (Spiranthes Romanzoffiana Cham.) Occasional in canyons in our foothills. Family 13. SAURURACEAE. Lizard-tail Family. Perennial herbs with broad entire alternate petioled leaves and small perfect bracteolate flowers in peduncled spikes. Perianth none. Stamens 6-8 or sometimes fewer, hypogynous ; anthers 2-celled, the sacs longitudi- nally dehiscent. Ovary 3-4-carpelled ; the carpels dis- 96 Juglandaceae tinct or united. 1— 2-ovuled : ovules orthotropus. Fruit capsular or berry-like, composed of 3— 4, mostly indehis- cent carpels. Seeds globose or ovoid ; endosperm copi- ous, mealy ; embryo minute, cordate. 1. ANEMOPSIS Hook Yerba Manse. Stems nodose scape-like, stoloniferous from aromatic creeping rootstocks. Leaves mostly radical, minutely punctate. Flowers in a compact spike surrounded at the base by a persistent colored involucre of 5-8 bracts : each flower except the lowest also surrounded by a small colored bract. Stamens 6-8. Ovary sunk in the rachis of the spike, 1-celled ; stigmas 3-4. Capsule dehiscent at the apex. 1 . A. Californica H. & A. Stem 15-50 cm. long, with a broad- ly ovate clapping leaf above the middle and a fascicle of 1-3 small petioled leaves in the axil; basal leaves elliptic-oblong, rounded above, more or less narrowed toward the cordate base, 5-15 cm. long, on petioles 10-20 cm. long; spikes 1.5-4 cm. long; involu- cral bracts white, often reddish beneath, oblong, 1-3 cm. long; floral bracts white, obovate, unguiculate, 5-6 mm. long ; ovules 6-10 on each placentia. Frequent in wet saline places throughout our range. March-August. Family 14. JUGLANDACEAE. Walnut Family. Trees or shrubs, with alternate pinnately compound leaves and monoecious hraeteolate flowers, the staminate in long drooping aments, the pistillate solitary or sev- eral together. Staminate flower consisting of 3-numer- ous stamens, with or without an irregularly Lobed peri- anth adnate to the hractlet. Anthers erect, 2-celled, dehiscent by a longitudinal slit ; filaments short. Pis- tillate flowers bracted and usually 2-bracteolate, with a 3-5-lobed (usually 4-lobed) calyx, or without both calyx and petals. Ovary inferior, 1-cellcd or incompletely Myricaceae 91 2— 4-celled ; ovules solitary, erect, orthotropus ; styles 2. Fruit in ours a drupe, with indehiscent, fibrous woody exocarp, enclosing the bony endocarp or nut, which is incompletely 2-4-celled. Seed Large, 2-4-lobed ; endo- sperm none : cotyledons corrugated, oily. 1. JUGLANS L. Walmt. Trees or large shrubs, with a somewhat resinous-aro- matic bark and foliage, superposed buds and odd-pin- nate leaves, with nearly or quite sessile leaflets. Stami- nate flowers borne on the twigs of the previous year; perianth 3— 6-lobed : stamens 8—40, in 2 or more series. Pistillate flowers solitary or several together on a termi- nal peduncle at the end of shoots of the season; calyx 4-lobed, with 4 small petals adnate to the ovary at the sinuses ; styles fimbriate, very short. Drupe large glo- bose or ovoid, the exocarp somewhat fleshy, the endo- carp rugose or sculptured, 2-4-celled at the base. 1. J. Californica Wats. Arborescent shrub growing in clumps, 5 m. high, or rarely a tree and attaining a height of 12 m., more or less tomentose, sometimes nearly glabrous; leaves 15-25 cm. long; leaflets 11-17, oblong-lanceolate, serrate, 4-6 cm. long; aments often in pairs, 7-12 cm. long; perianth of staminate flowers 3 mm. long; stamens 30-40; drupe globose, slightly com- pressed, 1.5-2.5 cm. in diameter; nut shallowly sulcate. Confined mostly to the foothills below 30C0 feet. Frequent in the Santa Monica Mountains and Puente Hills, less so on the southern borders of the San Gabriel, San Bernardino and Santa Ana Mountains. Family 15. MYRICACEAE. Bayberky Family. Shrnl >s or trees with alternate, mostly coriaceous and aromatic simple leaves and small monoecious or dioecious flowers, in linear, oblong or globular, bracted aments. Flowers solitary in the axils of the bracts. Perianth none. Staminate flower with 2-16 (usually 4-8) stamens, 98 Salicaceae inserted on the receptacle ; filaments short, distinct or somewhat united ; anthers ovate 2-celled, dehiscing by a longitudinal slit. Pistillate Mowers with a solitary, 1-celled ovary, subtended by 2-8 hractlets ; ovule solitary, ortho- tropus : style very short ; stigmas 2, linear. Fruit a small oblong drupe or nut, the exocarp often waxy. Seed erect ; endosperm none. 1. MYRICA L. Wax Myetle. Shrubs or small trees, with entire, dentate or lobed mostly resinous-dotted leaves, monoecious or dioecious. Staminate aments oblong or narrowly cylindric ; stamens 4-8. Pistillate aments ovoid or suhglohose : ovary sub- tended by 2—4 short bractlets. Fruit globose, waxy. 1. M. Californica C. & S. Thickly branched evergreen shrub, 2-3 in. high; leaves thick, glabrous, oblong or oblanceolate, tapering to an acute apex, narrowed below to a short petiole, (3-12 cm. long, remotely serrate or nearly entire; flowers monoe- cious; staminate aments below the pistillate, 2 cm. long or less; stamens 7-16, united by their filaments; bractlets 2, narrowly oblong, hairy at apex; pistillate aments in the axils of the upper leaves, <>— 10 mm. long; ovary ovate, with 2 exserted styles, red; bractlets minute; fruit brownish-purple, covered with a whitish wax, 4 mm. in diameter. Rustic Canyon near Santa Monica, Basse. Family 16. SALICACEAE. Willow Family. 'Frees or shrubs, with simple alternate stipulate leaves anil dioecious flowers in terminal aments. Each flower subtended by a scale-like bract. Perianth none. Sta- mens 2-several, centra] or scattered on a glandular disk. Ovary L -celled ; stigmas 2-1. Fruit a 2-4-valved cap- sule, with numerous comose seeds. Bracts fimbriate or incised ; st aim 'lis numerous ; Btigmas I'inn^at i'd. I. POPULUS, Bracts entire; stigmas Bhorl 8 sw.ix. W'ilh.w Family 99 1. POPULUS L. Poplar or Cottonwood. Trees with scaly resinous buds, terete or angled twigs, and broad or narrow, usually petioled leaves, the stipules minute fugacious. Bracts of the aments fimbriate or incised. Disk cup-shaped, oblique, lobed or entire. Staminate aments dense, pendulous, their flowers with 4-60 stamens, with distinct filaments. Pistillate aments pendulous, erect or spreading. Ovary sessile; style short : stigmas 2-4, entire or 4-lobed. Capsule 2-4-valved. Coma of the seeds often very long and copious. 1. P. trichocarpa T. & G. Tree with a broad bead of ascend- ing branches, 8-15 m. high; leaves ovate or oblong-ovate, round- ed at base, acute at apex, serrulate, dark green and shining above, pale beneath, 5-8 cm. long, on terete petioles, 3-5 cm. long ; staminate aments 3-5 cm. long ; disk oblique, bearing 40-60 stamens, with purple anthers; pistillate aments 5-7 cm. long, loosely flowered ; ovary hoary tomentose ; capsule 3-valved. Frequent in the canyons of all our mountains and sometimes extending down into the valleys. March. 2. P. Fremonti Wats. Tree with a broad head of wide- spreading branches, 6-15 m. high; leaves deltoid-orbicular, 4-10 cm. long, somewhat broader; crenate or sinuate-crenate, abrupt- ly acute at apex, truncate or subcordate at base, green or yellow- ish-green on both surfaces; staminate aments 25-35 mm. long; stamens 60 or more, with dark red anthers ; pistillate aments 5 cm. long, loosely flowered; ovary glabrous; capsule on pedicels 4 mm. long, minutely rough-tuberculate. Rare within our limits. Fernando. Common in the San Bernardino Valley, and in San Diego County south of the San Luis Rey River. 2. SAL.IX L. Willow. Trees or shrubs with mostly long narrow usually acute leaves, and persistent or early deciduous broad or minute stipules. Bracts entire or denticulate. Disk gland-like, small or minute. Staminate aments dense, erect, spreading or drooping, their flowers with 1-11 100 Salicaceae stamens with filaments distinct or sometimes united be- low. Pistillate usually ered orspreading ; ovary sessile or short-stipitate ; style shorl or filiform, with 2 entire or '1 cleft stigmas. Capsule mostly 2-valved. * Stamens S or more; aments terminating leafy branchlets. 1. S. nigra vallicola Dudley n. var. Tree 8-12 in. high, 'with dark, rougli hark ; leaves green on both surfaces, glabrate, nar- rowly lanceolate. 5-12 cm. long, 8-12 mm. wide, closely serrulate, acute or acuminate, narrowed at hase to petioles 4-6 mm. long, which are quite puherulent or nearly glabrous at maturity; stip- ules lanceolate when well developed, the larger 8-10 mm. long, all glandular toothed, often with similar glands on the lower sur- face and on the serratures of the young leaves ; ameuts expand- ing with the leaves, terminating the short lateral branches, the staminate 3-6 cm., the pistillate 2.5-5 cm. long; stamens 5-11, their filaments tomentose below; bracts pale, obovate or round- ish, usually very tomentose; style short; stigmas 2. lobed; capsule ovoid, glabrous or moreor less pubescent, mostly 4-5 mm. long, from slightly longer to twice the length of the smooth pedicels. The largest willow in southern California. Frequent along the Santa Ana River from Santa Ana to San Bernardino: also along the San Diegulto and San Diego Rivers in San Diego County. The type of this heretofore unde- scribed willow is the author's no. 3356, collected along the Santa Ana ' River near Orange. 2. S. lasiandra Benth. A middle-sized tree with rougli hark; leaves rather broadly lanceolate, 7-15 cm. long, abruptly taper- ing at the base, acuminate at apex, sharply and closely serrulate, pale beneath ; petioles glandular at the base of the blade ; stipules small, glandular-serrate; aments on long peduncl.es, the pistillate 5-7 cm. long; bracts of the staminate yellowish, toothed ; sta- mens usually 5; ovary glabrous; stigma nearly sessile, bifid; capsule lanceolate, 6-8 mm. long, on pedicels 2 mm. long. Occasional along streams in the valleys. Los Angeles River, Dear Cahu- enga Pass. A form with smaller leaves and aments is apparently frequent along all the streams in the valleys; it is near the type, but the petioles and stipules are inconspicuously glandular. H. S. laevigata Behl). Tree 10-15 in. high ; branches reddish- brown ; leaves lanceolate to oblong-lanceolate, serrulate, green Willow Family 101 and shining above, more or less glaucous beneath, 8-12 cm. long, glabrous; petioles about 1 cm. long; puberulent above and somewhat grooved ; staminate amenta usually flexuose, 5-7.5 cm. long; bracts more or less elliptic, woolly at base, glabrous and pallid towards the apex: stamens 5-6; filaments pubescent below; capsule conic from a thick base, acute, glabrous, on ped- icels 3—4 times as long as the gland; stigma nearly or quite sessile, emarginate. Frequent along all our streams, especially in the canyons. ** Stamens &, rarely 1. ■*- Aments subsessile on leafless peduncles. 4. S. lasiolepis Benth. Tree or large shrub, 4-8 m. high; leaves oblong or somewhat broadest above the middle, obscurely and irregularly serrulate, dull green above, more or less gray- pul'escent beneath, 12-20 mm. broad, 5-7 cm. long, on petioles 5-10 mm. long; aments appearing before the leaves, suberect ; the staminate 2-4 cm. long; stamens 2; pistillate 2.5 cm. long or less; capsule acute, smooth, short pedicelled; styles rather short ; stigmas erect. The most common willow, covering a considerable area along the Santa Ana and San Gabriel Rivers toward the coast. +-•*■ Aments terminating leafy branchlets. 5. S. Parishiana Rowlee. Slender shrub, 1-3 m. high ; young twigs cinereous strigose; leaves linear-lanceolate, minutely and remotely denticulate, 5-7 cm. long, 3 mm. wide, silky canescent when young, glabrous and somewhat coriaceous when mature, veins few but very prominent; stipules none; aments on long leafy peduncles, 2-3 cm. long, the upper leaves of the branch much surpassing the anient; flowers dense; scales white, densely villous all over, oblong, acute; filaments scanty hairy at the base ; capsules densely villous, oblong, closely sessile; style distinct; stigmas linear. Not uncommon around San Bernardino according to Parish. This and the following species are very doubtful and might, with apparently good reasons, be put into a single species, but the author has preferred to retain them until our California forms of this difficult group are better known. 6. S. macrostachya Nutt. Shrub or small tree, 1-6 m. high, often in dense thickets; bark light brown, cinereous, young branches villous; leaves 5 cm. long, 1 cm. wide, sessile or nearly 102 Salicaceae so, oblanceolate or narrowly elliptic, acute at both ends, more or less villous-pubescent; stipules none; aments on short leafy lat- eral branches, 2-3 cm. long, densely flowered, oblong; scales densely villous all over, oblong; filaments crisp villous upon tbe lower half; capsules clothed with long lax hairs, closely sessile; style evident; stigmas divided, linear. Common along streams and washes throughout our valley region. 7. S. macrostachya leucodendroides Rowlee. Shrub 1-3 m. high; leaves 10-12 cm. long, 1 cm. wide, densely white tomentose on both sides, largest remotely denticulate ; aments cylindric, 4-5 cm. long, otherwise as in the type. San Bernardino Valley. 8. S. exigua Nutt. Small shrub or becoming a small tree; branches light brown ; leaves 4 cm. long, 1-2 cm. wide, yellowish, closely sessile, entire or nearly so, canescent when young, usual- ly becoming quite glabrous at maturity, very narrowly elliptic, veins very indistinct; stipules none; aments 2-5 cm. long, on peduncles about the same length, appearing with the leaves, rather densely and evenly flowered, sometimes the lower flowers remote; scales in the staminate ament oblong to obovate, in the pistillate narrower and longer, smooth or more or less crisp villous on the margins; capsule closely sessile, lanceolate, gla- brous, light green ; stigmas short and thick, sessile, sometimes even appearing slightly sunken in the apex of the capsule. In the interior valleys, mostly beyond our limits. 9. S. exigua virens Kowlee. Leaves 10-12 cm. long, 1 cm. wide, nearly glabrous, veins conspicuous on both sides, distinctly denticulate; stipules large, oblong denticulate; aments large, the pistillate 4 cm. long, 1 cm. thick, sometimes borne in 3'a at the ends of the long leafy shoots. San Bernardino, Wright. 10. S. argophylla Nutt. Tree or large shrub forming chimps, young twigs puberulent, branches nearly glabrous and very tough; bark turning from brown to yellow or orange before blooming; leaves narrowly lanceolate, 5 cm. long, 1-2 cm. wide, closely sessile, entireor rarely minutely and remotely dent iculate, clothed equally en hoth sides with an appressed silky pubescence ; stipules none or very minute <>n vigorous shoots; aments Hiipassed by their leafy peduncles, :'.-•"> cm. long, 1-2 cm. thick, Betulaceae 103 often in pairs or in 3\s at the ends of the branches; scales oblong, obtuse in the staminate aments, narrower and more acute in the pistillate, glabrous on the back, crisp hairy on the margin and toward the base, erose above; lower half of the filament densely crisp hairy; capsule lanceolate, covered with straight appressed silky hairs, closely sessile; stigmas sessile, oblong, about twice as long as thick; mature capsule often becoming nearly glabrous. Mostly east of our limits in dry washes. Family 17. BETULACEAE. Birch Family. Monoecious trees or shrubs, with alternate petiolecl simple Leaves and small flowers in aments. Staminate aments pendulous, with 1-3 flowers in the axils of each bract, consisting of a membranous 2-4-parted calyx or none, and 1-10 stamens. Pistillate aments erect or drooping, spike-like or capitate, their flowers with or without a calyx adnate to the solitary 1-2-celled ovary ; style 2-cleft ; ovules 1-2 in each cell, pendulous. Fruit a small compound or ovoid-globose nut or samara. En- dosperm none ; cotyledons fleshy. 1. ALNUS Gaertn. Alder. Shrubs or trees with dentate or serrulate leaves, and both pistillate and staminate flowers in aments ; the staminate pendulous; the pistillate erect, clustered. Staminate flowers 3-6 in each axil, consisting of a most- ly 4-parted perianth, 1-1 stamens and subtended by 2-4 minute bractlets ; ovary 2-celled ; bracts woody, per- sistent, o-toothed or erose. Nut small, compressed, winged or wingless. 1. A. rhombifolia Nutt. Tree 7-14 m. high, with a light gray trunk; leaves narrowly or broadly ovate to elliptic, 2.5-10 cm. long, irregularly serrulate, somewhat pubescent beneath; stam- inate aments 7-15 cm. long; bracts obtuse; stamens usually 2 104 Fagaceae L-3 : pistillate amenta 4-6 mm. long; cones broadly oblong, 12—20 mm. Long; seeds acutely margined. Common along mountain streams and occasionally extending down Into t he \ alleys. Janua ry . Family 18. FAGACEAE. Beech Family. Trees or shrubs with evergreen or deciduous alternate petioled leaves and small monoecious Mowers, the stam- inate in pendulous erect or spreading aments, the pistil- Late solitary or several together, subtended by an invo- lucre of more or less united bracts, which becomes a bur or cup. Petals none. Staminate flowers with a 4-7- lobed perianth and 4 20 stamens ; filaments slender, dis- tinct ; anther sacs longitudinally dehiscent. Pistillate flowers with a 4 8-lobed urn-shaped or oblong perianth, adnate to the 3-7-celled ovary; ovules 1-2 in each cell, only 1 in each ovary maturing, pendulous, anatropous ; styles ;i~ many as cells to the ovary, linear. Fruit a, 1-seeded nut. with coriaceous or bony exocarp. Endo- sperm none ; cotyledons large, fleshy. Represented with us by a single genus. 1. Qverccs. 1. QUERCUS L. Oak. Trees or shrubs with persistent or deciduous leaves and -mall green or yellowish monoecious flowers, the staminate numerous in slender mostly drooping aments. the pistillate solitary in many-bracted involu- cres. Staminate flowers subtended by caducous bracts, <•> >i i-ist in. short. Fruit (acorn) consisting of the imbricated and more or less united bracts of the involucre (cup). Bubtending or nearly enclosing the 1 -seeded coriaceous nut. Beech Family 105 * Stigmas sessile or nearly so; nuts not densely tomentose on inner surface; scale* of the rather shallow cup thick and often tuber culate. White Oak. +■ Acorns maturing the first year. 1. Q,. lobata Nee. (Valley Oak, Roble.) Stately tree with slender, often long and pendulous branches; leaves oblong or obovate, 6-12 cm. long, deeply lobed or pinnatifid, pale green, acorns subsessile; nut long-conic, 3-6 cm. long; cup deep- hemispheric, strongly tuberculate. Chats-worth Park and San Fernando. A single tree has also been ob- served aear Santa Monica {Hasse) and another near Lamanda Park by the author, which is the southern limit of this oak as far as known. 2. Q,. Douglasii II. & A. (Blue Oak.) Middle-sized tree wit li rounded head, branches numerous, erect-spreading ; leaves decid- uous, 5-6 cm. long, oblong, sinuate or with shallow lobes, bluish- green above, pubescent beneath; acorn sessile or short pedun- cled; nut elongated-oblong, 2-3 cm. long, mostly acutish ; cup hemispheric, with ovate-lanceolate, thick or somewhat tubercled scales. Encino, San Fernando Valley, Davidson. 3. Q,. Engelmanni Greene. A middle-sized tree, 8-15 m. high, with light colored and rather smooth bark, trunk often (3-10 dm. thick, branches spreading to form a well rounded scarce- ly depressed head; leaves short-petioled, oblong, 5-8 cm. long, entire or sometimes with a few coarse teeth, obtuse or retuse at the apex, rounded or slightly cordate at the base, those of young shoots sometimes acutish at both ends and coarsely serrate- toothed throughout, somewhat coriaceous, almost without retic- ulation, downy-pubescent when young, becoming glabrous in age ; acorns sessile or peduncled ; cup hemispheric, tuberculate ; nut oblong, about 2 cm. long. Frequent from Altedena to Monrovia; also occurring at Azusa and Glen- dora, as well as in the foothills of San Diego County. 4. Q,. dumosa Nutt. Shrub 1.5-5 in. high, the slender branches tomentose when young; leaves coriaceous, sometimes persistent, 2 cm. long or more, oblong, obtuse, sinuate or sinuate-toothed, dark green above, pubescent beneath; acorns sessile; nut oval, 2-3 cm. long; cup deep-hemispheric, 1-2 cm. broad, usually strongly tuberculate, occasionally with somewhat flattened scales. Common in the chaparral belt of all our mountains. What seem to be hybrids between this and Q. Engelmanni are not infrequent wherever the range of these two approach each other. lot; Urticaceae +-+■ Acorns developing the second year. 5. Q. chrysolepis Liebm. (Canyon Oak.) Usually a large tree; leaves evergreen, oblong, acute or cuspidate, obtuse or sub- cordate at base, usually entire or spinose-denticulate, pale and glaucous green above, more or less fulvous-toinentose beneath, becoming glabrate in age; acorns variable in size; nut oval, obtuse, 15-30 mm. long; cup hemispheric, very thick, its scales usually almost hidden by fulvous tomentum, 1-3 cm. broad Common in the canyons of all our mountains above 2500 feet. ** Stigmas on long styles; nuts densely tomentose on the inner sur- face; scales of the deep cup thin. Black Oak. 6. Q,. agrifolia Nee. (Live Oak, Encina.) Large, widely spreading tree; leaves persistent, oval to oblong, 4-7 cm. long, sinuately spinose-dentate, somewhat stellate pubescent when young, in age mostly convex above, pale and nearly glabrous beneath; acorns annual, sessile or nearly so; nut narrow and tapering, 2-3 cm. long, 6-8 mm. wide; cup turbinate, rather deep with lanceolate slightly pubescent brown scales. The common oak of our valleys and foothills. 7. Q. Wislizeni A. DC. A spreading shrub or a small tree with us ; leaves persistent, coriaceous, lanceolate or oblong- lanceolate, acute, entire or somewhat spinose-dentate, usually plain, green on both faces, glabrous; acorns biennial; nuts nar- row as in the last; cup turbinate, very deep. Frequent in the chaparral belt of all our mountains except the Santa Monica Range. Q. Californica (Torr.) Cooper. A middle-sized tree with large deeply toothed deciduous leaves ; fruit developing the second year ; cups deep, with thin scales. Common in the pine belt of the San Bernardino, San Jacinto and Cuya- maca Mountains. Family L9. URTICACEAE. Nettle Family. Ours animal or perennial herbs, with mostly stipulate, simple leaves ami often with stinging hairs. Flowers in racemed or panicled cymea (ament-like), with small persistent bracts, monoecious or polygamous, small, NTettle Family 107 greenish. Petals none. Calyx mostly 4-parted or sepals distinct, with as many stamens opposite the lobes ; filaments inflexed and anthers reversed in the bud, straightening elastically at anthesis. Ovary super- ior 1-celled, 1-ovuled ; style and stigma 1. Fruit an achene. Endosperm oily, not copious ; embryo straight. Herbs with stinging hairs; leaves opposite. Sepals 4, distinct. 1. Urtica. Staminate calyx 4-parted; pistillate unequally 2-4-toothed. 2. Hesperocnide. Herbs without stinging hairs; leaves alternate. 3. Pabietabia. 1. URTICA L. Nettle. Annual or perennial, simple or branching herbs, with stinging hairs, and opposite 3-7-nerved petioled serrate or dentate stipulate leaves. Flowers clustered in axillary geminate racemes or heads. Staminate flowers 4-mer- ous. Pistillate calyx with unequal sepals, the inner larger and at length enclosing the flattened achene. Stigma sessile, tufted. * Annual. 1. U. urens L. Erect, branching from the base or sometimes simple, 25-50 cm. high ; leaves ovate or oblong-ovate, deeply and sometimes doubly serrate, 1-4 cm. long, on slender petioles of about the same length; stipules 4 mm. long; flower clusters rather dense, mostly shorter than the petioles; flowers androg- ynous, mainly pistillate. Common in gardens and waste places. Native of Europe. ** Perennials. 2. U. holosericea Nutt. Stems simple, stout, 1-3 m. high or more, more or less bristly and finely pubescent; leaves finely and densely pubescent beneath, less so above or with only a few scat- tering bristles, ovate to lanceolate, 5-10 cm. long, the upper much shorter, on petioles % as long, coarsely serrate; stipules narrow- ly oblong, acute or obtuse, 6-10 mm. long; staminate flower clusters rather loose, nearly equaling the leaves ; pistillate denser 108 Urticaceae ami shorter: inner sepals ovate, densely hispid, 1 nun. long, about equaling the broadly ovate achene. Very common along streams and in low ground in the valleys and the lower altitudes of the mountains. May-September. 3. U. Breweri Wats. Much resembling the last, -ravish with a short hispid pubescence or nearly glabrous and with scattered bristles; petioles slender, 2.5-5 cm. long, about ,l2 the length of the leaves; flower clusters rather open, scarcely exceeding the petioles ; sepals obovate or somewhat rounded, obtuse, minutely hispid, nearly 2 mm. long and about twice the length of the broadly ovate achene. "Frequent about Los Angeles (/>*/> wer) and ranging eastward to southern Colorado and western Texas." Bot. Cal. ft : 64. 1880. Not seen by us, nor has it been by recent collectors. 2. HESPEROCNIDE Torr. Western Nettle. Annual herbs distinguished from Qrtica by the pistil- Late perianth, which is a membranous flattened oblong- ovate sac, with a minutely 2 4-toothed orifice. 1. H. tenella Torr. Slender and weak, 25-50 cm. high, simple or branched, somewhat hispid with branching hairs and bristly; leaves 1-:-} cm. long, thin, ovate, obtusely serrate; petioles slen- der, )4 as long; flower clusters rather dense, nearly glomerate, shorter than the petioles; calyx thin, hispid, with hooked hairs, in fruit 1-1.5 mm. long; achene membranous, striately tubercu- late with minutely rough points. Sepulveda Canyon, Santa Monica Mountains; San Pedo Hills; also near San Diego and on Catalina Island. 3. PARIETAFvIA L. Ours Blender annuals without stinging hairs. Leaves alternate, entire, 3-nerved petioled, without stipules. Flower- in axillary glomerate clusters, polygamous, sub- tended by Leafy bracts. Calyx of the perfect (lowers 4-parted, in the pistillate tubular-ventricose, 4-cleft with connivenl Lobes. Style slender or none ; stigma Bpatu- late. recurved, densely tufted. Achene ovoid, smooth Loranthaceae 109 and shining, enclosed in the dry brownish nerved calyx. 1. P. debilis Forst. Very slender, usually diffusely branch- ing from the hase, 10-25 cm. high, somewhat hispid; leaves 5-10 mm. long or more, broadly ovate, obtuse, rounded at the base or abruptly cuneate; petioles slender, ahout equaling the leaves: achene 1 mm . Long . Growing in moist shady places, especially in the chaparral belt. Santa Monica Mountains; Verdugo Hills; Santa Ana Mountains. Family 20. LORANTHACEAE. Mistletoe Family. Evergreen shrubs or herbs, ours parasitic <>n shrubs or trees and absorbing food from their sap through special- ized roots (hanstoria). Stems dichotomously branched, swoolen at the joints and bearing opposite thick coriace- ous entire exstipulate leaves, foliaceous or reduced to connate scales. Flowers dioecious, regular, clustered or solitary, small and greenish. Petals none. Calyx-tube adnate to the ovary, 2-5-lobed. Stamens equaling the calyx-lobes and inserted upon them ; anthers 2-celled or continently 1 -celled. Ovary inferior, 1 -celled, 1-ovuled ; style simple or none ; stigma 1. Fruit a berry ; seed solitary with glutinous testa and copious endosperm ; embryo straight, terete or angled. Leaves scale-like; anthers 1-celled; pollen spinulose. 1. Razoumofskya. Leaves foliaceous; anthers 2-celled; pollen smooth. 2. Phoradendron. 1. RAZOUMOFSKYA Hoffm. Plants yellow or greenish-brown with fragile jointed angled stems. Leaves reduced to opposite connate scales. Flowers solitary or several from the same axil. Staminate flowers mostly 3-parted, compressed. An- thers sessile on the lobes, circular, 1-celled, dehiscent at the base by a circular slit ; pollen grains spinulose. Pistillate flowTers ovate, compressed, 2-toothed, subsessile, 110 Polygonaeeae at length exserted on reflexed pedicels. Berry fleshy compressed, dehiscing elastically at the circumscissile base. Cotyledons very short. 1. R. occidentalis (Engelm.) Kuntze. Stems much branched, 5-15 cm. long, 3-5 mm. thick; Btaminate plants brownish-yellow, bearing numerous dense spikes, many-flowered ; calyx-lobes 3-4 mm. long, lanceolate, acuminate; pistillate plants olive-brown; spikes short, 5-S-flowered or with the upper reduced to 1 ; berry brown, oblong, tapering to each end, 4-5 mm. long. (Arceutlio- limn occidentalis Engelm.) Frequent on pines. 2. PHORADENDRON Nutt. Mistletoe. Woody plants with terete usually jointed and brittle stems. Leaves foliaceous, entire, faintly nerved, or re- duced to connate scales. Flowers sunk in the jointed rachis, usually several in the axil of each bract. Stami- na n- flowers with a mostly 3-lobed globose calyx, bearing a sessile transversely 2-celled anther at the base of each lobe. Pistillate flowers with a similar calyx adnate to the inferior ovary. Berry sessile ovoid or globose, fleshy. 1. P. villosum Nutt. Foliage deep green; leaves elliptic, obtuse, 3-nerved, pubescent, 2-2.5 cm. long, on short petioles; berries pinkish, 3 mm. in diameter. On oaks about Pasadena. 2. P. macrophyllum (Engelm.) Cockerell. Foliage deep green ; leaves orbicular-obovate, 5-7 cm. long, usually 5-nerved ; spikes large; flowers pubescent. Common on the sycamores. Family 21. POLYGONACEAE. Buckwheat Family. Herbs or rarely shrubs, with alternate or vert ieillate leaveB, which are often only radical, with sheathing stipule- or none. Flowers mostly perfect, od jointed Buckwheat Family 111 pedicels. Calyx of 4-9 sepals, usually petaloid, persist- ent. Stamens as many as the sepals, perigynous. Styles 2-4. distinct or somewhat united, opposite the angles of the lenticular or triquetrous achene. Seed erect ; em- bryo straight within the mealy endosperm or curved around it. Leaves without stipules. Involucre bract-like. Flowers solitary, surrounded by a 2-lobed bract, becoming elongated in fruit. 1. Pterostegia. Flowers capitate, each surrounded by a bract. 2. Nemacaulis. Involucre wanting; calyx involucre-like. 3. Lastarriae. Involucre tubular with 3-6 cuspidate or awned often hooked teeth. 4. Chorizanthe. Involucre turbinate with 18-20 acicular awns. 5. Acanthoscyphus. Involucre campanulate or turbinate, deeply 3-5-cleft, the lobes ending in straight awns or awnless. 6. Oxytheca. Involucre oblong, campanulate or turbinate, 4-8-toothed or lobed, awnless, usually many-flowered. 7. Eriogonum. Leaves with sheathing stipules. Sepals 6, the outer 3 smaller; stigmas 3, tufted. 8. Rcmex. Sepals 4-6, equal ; stigmas 2-3, capitate. 9. Polygonum. 1. PTEROSTEGIA F. & M. Very slender annuals, diffusely dichotomous from the hase, with opposite leaves and foliaceous bracts. Invo- lucres axillary, sessile, solitary, consisting of a single 2-lobed bract, shorter than the solitary sessile flower, enlarged in fruit, scarious and reticulated, loosely en- closing the achene, gibbously 2-saccate on the back. Calyx 6-parted or rarely 5-parted. Stamens 3-6, insert- ed at the base of the calyx-lobes. Achene triangular, glabrous ; cotyledons accumbent. 1. P. drymarioides F. & M. Stems several from the base, 10-30 cm. long or more; lower leaves petioled, 4-12 mm. long, fan-shaped, 2-lobed, the lobes crenately toothed or slightly lohed ; upper leaves obovate-spatulate, entire or more or less toothed ; bracts similar, 2 mm. long; involucres 2-3 mm. long in fruit, the margins of the lobes toothed or laciniate; flowers about 1.5 mm. long, sessile ; calyx-lobes lanceolate. Common and general below 4000 feet. The whole plant often reddis when growing in exposed places. 1 1- Polygonaceae 2. NEMACAULIS Xutt. Slender diffuse annuals with spatulate mostly radical Leaves and no stipules. Flowers capitate, each with a free herbaceous bract, perfect. Calyx 6-cleft, colored, enclosing the achene. Stamens 3. Styles '■'< : stigmas capitate. Achene short-ovoid, obscurely 3-angled. 1. N. denudata Nutt. Stems prostrate or ascending, L5-30 cm. long, glabrate, reddish; Leaves narrowly spatulate, 2-5 fin. long, including the short petiole, densely tomentose-hairy on both sides; hractlets of the flower clusters obovate-spatulate, 2 nun. long, the outer flowerless, the inner smaller, woolly within and glabrous without; flowers yellowish, scarcely 1 nun. long, short pedicellate, glabrous; inner segments broadest; achene 0.7 nun. long. (X. Nuttallii Benth.) Occasional on sand-dunes along the seashore and in sandy soils in our interior valleys. 3. LASTARRIAEA Kemy. A small diffuse rigid fragile annual, with the aspect of Chorizanthe. Involucre wanting. Perianth involucre- Like, coriaceous, tubular. 5-6-cleft to the middle ; the narrow teeth rigid, awned, recurved and uncinate. Stamens :;. inserted on the throat : filaments very short, with small membranous appendages intervening at their insertions. Achene triangular; embryo curved. 1. Li. Chilensis Rerny. Branches procumbent or ascending, 5-15 cm. long, hirsute; lowest leaves linear, obtuse, hispid-ciliate, l-l' cm. long, cauline in whorls of 4-5, unequal ; bracts 3-6 mm. long concealing the flowers; perianth L'-.'J mm. long, its tube triquetrous ; teeth 5, 3 long and 2 short ; anthers small, orbicular : style very short. Occasional on dry hillsides, especially in sandy soils. April. 4. CHORIZANTHE \l. Br. how dichotomously branched annual herbs, with rosulate basal leaves ami opposite or ternate stem-leaves, often reduced and bracteate. tnvolucre L-flowered. or Buckwheat Family 11.". rarely 2-3-flowered, tubular or funnelform, sessile, 3-6- angled or costate, 3-6-toothed or 3 6-cleft, its teeth divaricate, cuspidate or awned. Flowers pedicellate or nearly sessile, included within the involucre, or tin' seg- ments protruding. Calyx 6-parted or 6-cleft, colored. Stamens usually '•'. rarely 3 or 6, adnate to the base of the calyx-tube. Ovary glabrous. ■ Glabrous or glandular-pubescent. 1. C. Thurberi (Gray) Wats. Somewhat glandular-puberu- lent, usually about 1 din. high, branching from the base; leaves 2.5 cm. long, glabrous, slightly ciliate; bracts oblong, more or less united, 2-6 mm. long; involucres glabrous, chartaceous, tri- angular-prismatic, obscurely reticulated, 4-6 mm. long, 1-2 mm. broad, with 3 broad straight awned spurs at base and 3-5 broad sbort erect teeth ; flowers 1 or 2 on slender pedicels, pubescent at base, nearly 2 mm. long; segments oblong-spatulate, obtuse or emarginate, the alternate ones slightly shorter. Occasional on dry sandy plains, mostly farther inland than our range. 2. C. leptoceras (Gray) Wats. Very slender and nearly gla- brous; leaves and bracts as in the last; involucre 4-6 mm. long, somewhat hirsute, deeply 4-6-cleft, the coriaceous turbinate base surrounded by as many rigid usually uncinate awn-like spurs; lobes rigid, narrow, unequal, attenuate into straight rigid some- what divergent awns ; flowers 2 or 3, occasionally exserted, villous- pubescent, 1 mm. long; segments narrowly oblong to ovate, nearly equal. On dry sandy plains from San Gabriel eastward. 3. C. Californica Gray. Hirsute and glandular, 3 dm. high or less, often reddish ; bracts 1-2 cm. broad, lateral or rarely per- foliate, lobed ; involucres on contracted branchlets and often clustered in the axils, 4-6 mm. long, obtusely angled, 2-3-toothed and 2-3-sided; segments of the perianth obovate, entire, villous- pubescent on the midvein. Common on sandy soil along the coast and in the interior valleys. ** Villous-puhescent or hirsute, not glandular. •*- Bracts not foliaceous. 4. C. staticoides Benth. Erect or decumbent, rather stout, 1-4 dm. high, with spreading branches, villous-puhescent, often 114 Polygonaceae purplish, leaves all basal, tomentose beneath, oblong, obtuse, 2.5-6 cm. long ; bracts not acerose ; involucres in rather close cymes, 3-6 mm. long, the alternate teeth larger, nearly equal; flowers nearly sessile, 4-5 mm. long, glabrous or sparsely villous on the mid vein, cleft to near the middle; segments oblong, en- tire, the alternate ones about half as long and narrower; stamens inserted at l>ase. Very common and general. May-July. 5. C. procumbens Nutt. Slender, procumbent, branching from the base and diffuse, villous-pubescent, often yellowish ; leaves spatulate, 2.5 cm. long or less, not tomentose, bracts mostly small; involucres 2-3 mm. long, the alternate teeth strongly divergent, about equaling the tube, uncinate; flowers sessile, 2.5 mm. long, glabrous or somewhat villous, segments equal, narrowly oblong, obtuse, entire; stamens inserted at the base. Frequent in the San Gabriel Mountains, Davidson,. ■*-■*- Bracts more or less foliaceous. H. C. Parryi Wats. Branching from the base, 5-8 cm. high, villous-pubescent; leaves narrowly oblanceolate, 2.5 cm. long, not tomentose; lower bracts as large, similar, pungent; tube of the involucre 2 mm. long, the alternate teeth strongly divergent, as long or longer ; flowers nearly sessile, white or pinkish, 3 mm. long, villous on the nerves, cleft nearly to the middle; segments recurved, somewhat undulate, oblong-ovate, acutish, crenate, the inner ones about the same length, but narrower; stamens insert- ed at the base. Scarcely reaching our eastern borders, but rather frequent on dry plains and foothills in San Bernardino and Riverside Counties. 7. C. Fernandina Wats. Procumbent, rather stout, strongly silky-pubescent, 6-10 cm. long; leaves narrowly oblanceolate, not tomentose ; lower bracts foliaceous, the upper narrowly linear; tube of involucre 2 mm. long, the teeth stout, with straight awns; flowers white, 2 mm. long; lobes nearly equal, broadly oblong, the alternate ones Blightly narrower. First collected in San Fernando Canyon. Otherwise only known from Chatsworth Park. 8. C. Xanti Wats. Branching diffusely from near the base, 6-15 cm. high, villous-pubescent and tomentose; leaves ovate- Buckwheat Family 115 oblong, 4-12 mm. long, tomentose beneath ; lower bracts similar or linrar-oblanceolate ; involucres tomentose, in diffuse cymes, tin- tube 4 mm. long with strongly divergent teeth half as long or more, the alternate ones much smaller; flowers rose-colored, 5 mm. long, sessile, villous ; segments linear-oblong, entire, acutish, the alternate ones only half as long; stamens inserted at the base. Common in the chaparral belt of all our mountains. 5. ACANTHOCYPHUS Small. Slender nearly glabrous acaulescent annual herbs, with erect wiry forking scapes. Leaves basal firm dentic- ulate with spinulose teeth, dilated at the base. Bracts scale-like, ternate, united at the bases, inclined to one side of the axes. Involucres turbinate, truncate, on wire-like peduncles, with 18-20 hard ribs, which are prolonged into as many rigid acicular awns, these sur- passing the tube in length. Flowers 5-14, of 2 kinds : staminate, included ; pistillate, exserted. Pedicels sub- tended by linear or linear-spatulate bractlets. Perianth glabrous, segments 6. Stamens 9, inserted at the base of the perianth. 1. A. Parisbii (Parry) Small. Slender, 2-5 dm. high; stems with short-stalked glands at the base and for a short distance above the forks, otherwise glabrous and more or less glaucous ; leaves 3-4 cm. long, finely spinulose-denticulate, tube of invo- lucre 2 mm. long, much surpassed by its slender whitish bristles. (Oxytheca Parishii Parry.) Common in the pine belt of the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains. 6. OXYTHECA Xutt. Slender dichotomously branched annuals, stipitate- glandular at the nodes. Leaves in a rosette at base. Bracts foliaceous and more or less united, usually ter- nate. Involucres few-flowered, more or less distinctly pedicellate, campanulate or turbinate, 3-5-cleft, the 1K> Polygonaceae teeth bearing an awn or awnless. Flowers equal, gland- ular-pubescenl on the outside. Stamens 9. 1. 0. trilobata Gray. Much branched from the base, 1 dm. high or less; leaves somewhat villous, oblanceolate, 2-3 cm. long ; bracts ternate, oblong-lanceolate, awned, not refiexed ; in- volucres broadly turbinate, 5-parted nearly to the base, strongly nerved, 3-4 mm. long, with awns slightly shorter than the lobes; pedicels spreading, 4-10 mm. long; flowers 3-5 in each involucre, light rose color, 2 mm. long; segments ligulate-ohlong, 3-cleft, the lobes lanceolate, acuminate, slightly erose on the sides; ovary triangular. Not common within our limits, but found on dry plains in San Bernardino, Riverside and San Diego Counties. 7. ERIOGONUM Miehx. Annual <»r perennial herbs or rarely shrubs, with basal, alternate or verticillate leaves, without stipules, and perfect involucrate flowers. Involucre campanulate, turbinate or oblong, 4-8-toothed or 4-8-lobed, awnless, usually many-flowered : the more or less exserted pedi- cels intermixed with scarious narrow setaceous bracts or bractlets. Perianth 6-parted or deeply 6-cleft, petaloid. Stamens 9, inserted on the base of the perianth. Styles ."» : stigmas capitate. Achene triangular, rarely lenticu- lar. * Involucres nerveless, pedicellate; perianth-lobes unequal. 1. E. Thurberi Torr. Annual, very slender, about 15 cm. high, much branched below the middle, with ovate acute bracts at the forks, tomentose below the panicle, leaves subbasal, rounded-ovate, about 1 cm. long, undulate rugose, pubescent above, white tomentose beneath; pedicels slender, about - cm. long, erect or spreading, involucres campanulate, less than '2 mm. high, cleft nearly to the middle; (lowers rose-colored or white, outer segments rounded, much hroader than the inner lanceolate ones. Common on dry plains and foothills from Pasadena eastward; also in the Santa Ana Mountains. Buckwheat Family 1 1 i ** Involucres B-6-nerved, mostly sessile; perianth-lobes similar. +- Involucres capitate or fascicled. ** Perennials with stout short woody caudex. 2. E. latifolium Smith. Caudex indurate, its branches few, short, very leafy; scapes not flstulose, 2-5 dm. high; leaves ob- long to ovate, 2.5-5 cm. long, often undulate and becoming gla- brateabove; bracts triangular ; heads large and dense, 12-20 nun. broad, solitary and terminal or few in a simple umbel ; involucre tomentose, 4 nun. long; flowers glabrous, light rose color, 3 mm. long. Bluffs near Santa Monica. :;. E. nudum Dougl. Caudex sparingly leafy: scapes ratlier slender, flstulose, 3-6 dm. bigh, sparingly branched above; leaves broadly ovate or oblong, obtuse, 1-5 cm. long, on slender petioles, undulate, densely tomentose beneath, becoming gla- brate above; involucres usually 3-6 in each cluster, glabrous or nearly so, 4-6 mm. high; flowers glabrous or somewhat villous, 2-3 mm. long, white or rose color. Occasional on Catalina Island and on the mainland east of our territory. August-September. **■**■ Perennials, shrubby, leaf;/; leaves often fascicled ; bracts foli- aceous. 4. E. cinereum Benth. Shrubby, 8-15 dm. high, in dense clumps, hoary-tomentose throughout; leaves orbicular to oblong, 12-18 mm. long, on very short petioles, obtuse, undulate, strongly nerved ; peduncles elongated, sparingly dichotomously branched, bearing few rather loose heads; bracts short; involucres 4 mm. long; perianth very villous, rose-colored, 2-3 mm. long. Bluffs along the seashore at Santa Monica and San Pedro. 5. E. parvifolium Smith. Shrubby, about 3 m. high, more or less white-tomentose throughout ; leaves broadly ovate to oblong, 8-18 mm. long, acute, abruptly narrowed at base to the very short petiole, revolute and undulate on the margins, becom- ing glabrate above; lower bracts conspicuous, the upper smaller; involucres tomentose, about 3 mm. long; perianth rose-colored, glabrous, about 3 mm. long. Common on the sand-dunes along the seashore. 6. E. fasciculatum Benth. (Wild Buckwheat.) Shrubby^ 5 dm. high or more, more or less tomentose; leaves narrowly 118 Polygonaceae oblanceolate, revolute, tomentose beneath, glabrate above, 6-18 nun. long, much fascicled ; peduncles short or elongated, bearing a short cymosely divided umbel; bracts rather conspicuous; involucres about 4 mm. high, glabrate; flowers rose-colored or whitish, glabrous or somewhat villous. Very common on the plains and in the foothills. ■*-•*- Involucres solitary, often seciuid along the virgate branches. ** Perennials, white -tomentose ; panicle sparingly branched and virgate. 7. E. saxatile Wats. Caudex densely leafy, sparingly branch- ed ; leaves rounded or obovate, obtuse, 12-16 mm. broad, cuneate at base, densely tomentose on both sides ; petioles short and thick; branches of the cymose panicle 1-2 dm. long, spreading; bracts subfoliaceous, triangular; involucres 3-4 mm. long, teeth acute; perianth rose color, 2-3 mm. long, the lobes appressed to the nearly glabrous achene, this abruptly narrowed at base. Frequent in the higher altitudes of the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains. 8. E. Wrightii Torr. Much branched, leafy at base, 2-5 dm. high, rather slender; leaves oblong-ovate, 15-25 mm. long, acute, narrowed at base to a 4-8 mm. long petiole; bracts all small, triangular; involucres loosely spicate along the ascending branches, 3 mm. high, the teeth rigid, acute ; perianth rose color, 3 mm. long; achene scabrous on the angles above, these acute at base. Frequent in the San Gabriel Mountains in the pine belt. 9. E. Bloomeri Parish. Caudex as in the last ; leaves dense- ly white-tomentose or somewhat brownish, oval, ovate or obo- vate; scapiform peduncles numerous, 2-4 dm. high, erect, repeat- edly branched; lower bracts foliaceous; involucres distant, 4 miii. high; the teeth subacute, few-flowered; perianth 8 mm. high, attenuate at base, glabrous, yellowish; filaments hairy at base ; achene glabrous, attenuate above. Frequent in the pine belt of the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Moun- tains. 10. E. elongatum Iienth. Stems erect, rather slender, from a sparingly branched base; leaves usually somewhat scattered, oblong-lanceolate, 2-3 cm. long, acute, narrowed t<> a short peti- ole, becoming glabrate above ; bracts ovate-triangular to lanceo- Buckwheat Family 119 late, acute; involucre* distant on the few elongated branches, 5-6 nun. high, obtusely toothed ; flowers white or pale rose color, 2-3 nun. long; achene glabrous. Common in the chaparral belt of all our mountains, as well as in the in- terior valleys. -"--,*- Annuals. 11. E. virgatum Benth. Slender, 3-6 dm. high, tomentose throughout, branches few, ascending, elongated, strictly virgate or flexuous ; bracts lanceolate, shorter than the involucres, some- time- including 1 or more leaves; involucres tomentose, narrow, 4 mm. long; perianth 2 mm. long, white or yellowish, glabrous. Frequent in the foothills. 12. E. vimineum Dougl. Glabrous or tomentose toward the base, erect, 2-1 dm. high, much branched from near the base, the branches elongated and virgate, the lower commonly in whorls of 4-5 ; lower forks often leafy ; leaves orbicular to broadly ovate, 6-18 mm. long, white-tomentose beneath, becoming glabrate above, the margins undulate, on petioles of about the same length ; involucres very narrow, 2 mm. high ; flowers few, pale rose color or yellowish, 2 mm. long, outer segments obovate; inner oblong. Frequent in the coast ranges. 13. E. gracile Benth. Floccose-tomentose throughout, rather diffusely branched, 2-6 dm. high; leaves oblanceolate or broadly oblong, tomentose on both sides or less so above ; bracts more or less elongated, the lower foliaceous ; involucres rigid, acute, often dark brown ; perianth white or pale rose color, 1.5 mm. long. Common in sandy soil, especially toward the coast. 14. E. gracile leucocladon (Benth.) Torr. Less branched, the branches strict, becoming glabrate ; flowers pale rose color. Dry sand-washes of the interior. 8. RUMEX L. Dock. Perennial or annual leafy-stemmed herbs. Stem grooved, usually branched. Leaves entire or undulate, flat or crisped, with scarious obliquely truncate cylindric sheathing stipules. Flowers green, usually perfect, in a simple or compound often panicled raceme. Calyx 120 Polygonaceae 6-parted, the 3 outer sepals unchanged in fruit, the 3 inner ones (wings) usually bearing a grain-like callosity on the back, larger and enclosing the achene. Stamens (I : filaments short, glabrous; anthers oblong. Style 3-parted : stigmas peltate, tufted. Achenes 3-angled. * Flowers dioecious; leaves hastate. 1. R. Acetosella L. Perennial by slender running rootstocks, slender erect or nearly so, simple or branched, 2-4 dm. high, gla- brous; leaves narrowly hastate, petioled, the uppermost leaves somewhat entire; panicle narrow, naked, becoming reddish; calyx green, 1 mm. long; stamens exserted; achene granular, exceeding the persistent calyx. In moist grassy places about Los Angeles. Native of Europe. ** Flowers perfect; leave* not hastate. ■*- Inner calyx-lobes with slender awned teeth. 2. R. pulcher L. Stems erect, 5-8 dm. high, with rigid di- varicately spreading branches ; leaves scabrous beneath, the basal oblong or lanceolate, acute, cordate or obtuse at base ; (lowers on short stout rigid pedicels; wings ovate, 2-3 mm. long, with 4-f> rigidly awned teeth on each side. Sparingly introduced, Inglewood. Native of Kurope. 3. R. persicarioides L. Annual, pubescent, pale green ; stem erect, simple or branched, 2-6 dm. high, sometimes spreading, very leafy; leaves lanceolate or oblong, 2 dm. long or usually less, narrowed at the base or cordate, acute at the apex, the margins undulate and somewhat crisped; panicle simple or branched; racemes erect, leafy bracted ; whorls dense, usually rather distant; pedicels equaling or somewhat exceeding the inner calyx-lobes, jointed at the base; inner calyx-lobes oblong, 2 mm. long, with 1-3 bristles on each margin, each bearing an OVOid or oblong -rain; achene about 1 .5 mm. long, pointed, reddish. Frequent Inmoisl plaoes, especially along the margins of ponds. Native of Europe. • Inner calyx-lobes with i ntire or dentate or erost margins, herbage glabrous. 4. R. salicifolius Weinm. Glabrous and BOinewhal glaucous; stems asceiidinj <>r spreading, simpleor branched, grooved, llexu- Buckwheat Family L21 ous, 4-S dm. long; leaves mostly lanceolate, acute or acuminate, petioled, not undulate or crisped; racemes dense, interrupted below in fruit; (lowers in dense clusters; wings 2 1 long, undulate or subdentate, each bearing a large ovoid grain ; acbene 2 nun. long, dark red. Frequent in moist places along the coast and in the mountains. •"). R. conglomerates Murr. Stems slender, erect, commonly branched, 3-9 dm. high ; leave.- oblong to lanceolate, 15 cm. long or less, somewhat undulate and crisped, the lower long petioled, cordate at base, acute or ohtuseat apex, the uppershort petioled ; panicle very loose, much branched; racemes slender, inter- rupted; (lowers loosely wdiorled, the whorls distant; pedicels Blender, shorter than or equaling the wings; wings ovate, fiddle- shaped, 3 mm. Ion--, toothed near the base, each bearing a large oblong grain ; acbene about 1.5 mm. Ion-, pointed, red. Common in damp land, especially toward the coast. 6. R. crispus L. Stems simple or branched above, erect, rather slender, 3-10 dm. high ; leaves crisped and undulate, the lower oblong or oblong-lanceolate, 15-30 cm. long, long petioled, the upper narrowly oblong or lanceolate, short petioled, all cordate or ohtuseat base; panicle rather open; racemes simple or com- pound; (lowers rather loosely wdiorled; calyx green; fruiting pedicels about twice the length of the wings, jointed near the base; wings cordate, 3-4 mm. long, truncate or notched at base, erose-dentate or nearly entire, each bearing a grain ; achene 2 mm. long, dark brown. Common in moist places. 7. R. hymenosepalus Torr. Stems erect, 4-0 dm. high, stout, leafy, simple or branched above; leaves attenuate to a short thick fleshy petiole, oblong to broadly lanceolate, often 3 dm. long, acute, strongly undulate; racemes panicled about 3 dm. long; pedicels 6-12 mm. long; wdngs 8-12 mm. broad, rose color, deeply cordate, strongly reticulate-veined, grains entirely wanting; acbene 4 mm. long. Frequent in dry sandy soil. Canaigre of commerce. 9. POLYGONUM L. Knotweed. Annual or perennial, terrestrial or aquatic herbs, with alternate entire leaves and naked, ciliate or foliaceous margined sheaths. Flowers usually perfect, often colored^ 122 Polygonaceae variously clustered. Pedicels jointed. Calyx 4-5-part- edj usually petaloid, the outer segments slightly larger than the inner ones. Stamens 5-9 ; filaments glabrous ; anthers oblong. Style 2-3-parted or 2-3-cleft ; stigmas capitate. Aehene lenticular or 3-angled, invested by the persistent calyx. 1. P. incamatum Ell. Annual, glabrous or nearly so; stem erect, simple or branched above, more or less swollen at the nodes, 8-12 dm. high; leaves lanceolate, 6-18 cm. long, acumi- nate at both ends, short petioled, sparingly punctate and ciliate : sheaths loose, long, sometimes ciliate when young, becoming naked; racemes panicled, drooping, 4-10 cm. long, linear; calyx white or pink, small ; stamens 0 ; style 2-parted to near the base ; aehene ovoid-oblong, lenticular, smooth and shining. Marshes about Los Angeles. Probably introduced from the Atlantic coast. 2. P. lapathifolium L. Stem simple or much branched, erect or ascending, swollen at the nodes, 3-12 dm. high, the peduncles and petioles glandular; leaves lanceolate or oblong- lanceolate, 5-20 cm. long, attenuate to the apex, tapering to the short petiole, ciliate, inconspicuously punctate; sheath cylindric, ribbed or striate; racemes panicled, 2.5-10 cm. long, drooping, narrow, rather dense, calyx pink, white or greenish, 5-parted : stamens (i ; style 2-parted to below the middle ; aehene lenticular, 2 Mini. long. (P. nodosum Pers.) Occasional along streams. 3. P. hydropiperoides Michx. Stems rather stout, 3-10 dm. high, erect or decumbent, clothed with short appressed hairs; leaves lanceolate, obtuse; sheath cylindric, loose, ciliate; racemes panicled, terminal, erect, narrow, more or les> in- terrupted, 3-7 em. Long; calyx white or whitish, often conspicu- ous; stamens 8; style 3-parted to below the middle; aehene 3-angled, ovoid or oblong, 2-2.5 mm. long, smooth. i '!'• ■ si nams, especially toward the coast. 4. P. aviculare L. Annual or perennial, slender, glabrous, bluish-green; stem prostrate or ascending, simple or much branched, l-n dm. long; leaves linear to oblanceolate, commonly oblong, 6-18 mm. long, nearly sessile; sheath oblique, -parted Chenopodiaceae 123 or becoming lacerate; flower clusters axillary, 1-o-flowered ; flowers small, short pedicelled ; calyx green, its 5 lobes with white or pinkish margins; stamens 5-8; style short 3-parted to near the base; achene 3-angled, ovoid, 2 mm. lung, reticulated. A common weed in waste places. 5. P. Convolvulus L. Annual, glabrous, scurvy; stem twin- ing or trailing, branched, 1-10 dm. long; leaves ovate-sagittate, long-petioled, acuminate, slightly ciliate, 1-7 cm. long; sheath oblique, rough on the margin; axillary clusters loosely flowered; flowers greenish, pendulous on slender pedicels; calyx 5-parted, closely investing the achene; stamens 8; style short, nearly entire; stigmas 8; achene 3-angled, granular. Cultivated fields about Pasadena, McClatchie. Family 22. CHENOPODIACEAE. Goosefoot Family. Herbs or shrubs often succulent mealy or scurvy, some- times fleshy. Leaves alternate or rarely opposite, some- times wanting-, without stipules. Flowers perfect or uni- sexual, with an herbaceous calyx of 2-5 often keeled rigid sepals, or sometimes wanting in pistillate flowers. Stamens distinct, as many as the sepals and opposite them or fewer ; anthers 2-celled. Ovary superior, 1-celled, 1-ovuled, becoming an achene or utricle in fruit. Embryo annular and surrounding the endosperm or spiral and with the endosperm lateral or wanting. Leaves various, not semiterete and fleshy nor spiny. Flowers perfect or polygamous. Calyx 3-5-cleft or 3-5-parted. Calyx 3-cleft; stamen 1; leaves entire. 1. Aphanisma. Calyx mostly 5-cleft, herbaceous in fruit; stamens mostly 5; flowers in panicled spikes. 2. Chenopodicm. Calyx 3-5- toothed, dry in fruit; flowers few or solitary in the axils; leaves pinnatifid. 3. Rodbieva. Calyx of 1 sepal; stamen 1. 4. Monolepis. Flowers monoecious or dioecious. 5. Atriplex. Leaves wanting; stems fleshy. 6. Salicornia. Leaves semiterete, fleshy. 7. Dondia. Leaves spiny. 8. Salsola. 124 Chenopodiaceae 1. APHANISMA Nutt. Slender glabrous annuals, with alternate sessile entire Leaves, and axillary mostly solitary perfect bractless flowers. Calyx 3-cleft, with concave segments un- changed in fruit. Stamen 1: filament short. Ovary depressed : style shortly 2-3-cleft ; pericarp somewhat 5-angled, rather thick and indurate. Seed horizontal, with very thin crustaceous testa. Embryo annular sur- rounding the copious endosperm. 1. A. blitoides Nutt. Steins ascending, branched, 3-7.5 dm. high ; leaves thin, oblanceolate to ovate-oblong, the upper ones ovate, acute, 6-15 nun. long; calyx minute, its lobes ovate, obtuse, closely appressed to the base of the fruit; fruit 1 mm. broad; seed shining, punctulate-rugose. San Pedro, Davidson; Catalina Island. 2. CHENOPODIUM L. Goosefoot. Annual or rarely perennial herbs, mostly introduced weeds. Leaves often white-mealy, sometimes glandular, alternate, petioled. Flowers perfect, bractless, clustered in axillary or terminal often panicled spikes. Calyx herbaceous, 3-4-parted or mostly 5-parted ; the lobes usually connate or crested, more or less closely covering the fruit. Pericarp membranous, closely investing the Lenticular or subglobose, horizontal or vertical ^vfl. Embryo annular or curved around the copious endo- sperm. * Annuals; ours introduced. •*- Leaves white-mealy or (jlabrous. 1. C. album L. Stems erect, 0.5-2 m. high, branches ascend- ing; leaves rhombic-ovate or the upper lanceolate, narrowed at the base, acute or sometimes obtuse at the apex, white-mealy beneath, dentate or sinuate or the upper entire, 2-6 cm. Long; Goosefool Family L25 spikes densely flowered, often panicled; calyx about 1 nun. broad in fruit, its lobes strongly carinate. A common weed in waste tields. May-September. Nativeof theOld World, 2; C. album viride (L.) Moq. Closely resembling the type, but leaves bright green or very slightly mealy beneath. Vernon, Davidson. 3. C. murale L. Stout erect, 3-6 dm. high, the lower branches usually spreading or decumbent; leaves 3-8 cm. long, rhombic-ovate, broadly cuneate or subtruncate at the base, acute at the apex, glabrous or slightly mealy when young; spikes panicled, loosely flowered; calyx enclosing the fruit; seed acutely margined. Frequent in waste places. Often flowering the year round. Native of the Old World. 4. C. rubrum L. Annual, somewhat fleshy and glabrous or commonly somewhat mealy; stem erect, leafy, 3-7 dm. high, with strict or ascending branches; leaves thick, 3-5 cm. long, rhombic-ovate or rhombic-lanceolate, coarsely sinuate-dentate, or the upper entire, acute or obtuse at apex, narrowed at base to a rather short petiole; flowers in compound, leafy-bracted axil- lary and terminal spikes, often exceeding the leaves; calyx 3-5- parted, its segments slightly fleshy, reddish, not keeled, obtuse. about as long as the utricle; stamens 1-2; stigmas short; utricle horizontal, shining, rather sharp-edged. Occasional in saline flats and marshes along the coast. August-November. •*- Leaves more or Jess glandular-pubescent. 5. C. ambrosioides L. Stem ascending or erect, 0.5-1 m. high, much branched and leafy, more or less glandular-pubescent, strong-scented; leaves oblong to lanceolate, obtuse, subacute or acute at the apex, narrowed to a short petiole, repand-dentate, undulate or the upper entire, 3-9 cm. long; flower clusters dense, axillary upon the branches, forming a leafy spike; calyx-lobes appressed ; pericarp deciduous. Frequent in waste places. Native of Europe. ** Perennials. 6. C. Calif ornicum Wats. Stout, erect or decumbent at base, 5-8 dm. high, from a thick fusiform root; leaves broadly triangu- lar-hastate, truncate or cordate at base, 3-9 cm. long, sharply 126 Chenopodiaceae and unequally sinuate-dentate, dark green, glabrous or slightly mealy when young; flowers in dense clusters in terminal spikes; calyx deeply 5-toothed, loosely enveloping the fruit; pericarp persistent; seed subglobose, about 2 mm. broad. Frequent in the valleys and foothills. March-May. 3. ROUBIEVA Moq. A perennial herb, glandular-pubescent, strong scented, prostrate and diffusely branched, with narrow small short-petioled deeply pinnatifid leaves. Flowers small, green, perfect or pistillate, solitary or in small axillary • lusters. Calyx urn-shaped, 3-5-toothed, in fruit be- coming ovoid, strongly reticulated. Stamens 5. Styles 3, exserted. Wall of the pericarp thin, glandular. Em- bryo a complete ring. 1. R. multifida (L.) Moq. Prostrateor ascending, very leafy, 1-4 dm. long; leaves lanceolate to linear or linear-oblong, deeply pinnatifid into linear-oblong, acute, entire or toothed lobes; flowers l-(> in an axil, sessile, scarcely 1 mm. broad, some perfect, some pistillate; fruiting calyx 3-nerved and strongly reticulate- veined ; utricle compressed. Occasionally found in waste places. Pasadena; Compton. 4. MONOLEPIS Schrad. Low branching annual herbs, with small narrow alter- nate entire, toothed or lobed leaves and polygamous or perfect flowers in small axillary clusters. Calyx of a single persistent herbaceous sepal. Stamen 1. Styles 2, slender. Utricle flat, the pericarp adherent to the vertical seed. Embryo nearly a complete ring. 1. M. Nuttalliana (H. & S.) Greene. Slightly mealy. when young, becoming glabrous or nearly so; stem 8-24 cm. high, with many ascending branches; leaves lanceolate, short-petioled or the upper sessile, l-<> cm. long, narrowed at base, 3-lobed, the middle lobe linear or linear-oblong, acute or acuminate, 8-4 times as long as the ascending lateral ones; sepal oblanceolate or spatulate; utricle minutely pitted, l mm. broad. Cienega, Dm tdson. Goosefoot Family 127 5. ATRIPLEX L. Animal or perennial herbs or shrubby, often scurvy- canescent or silvery, with alternate petioled <>r sessile Leaves, or some of them opposite. Flowers dioecious or monoecious, small, green, in panicled spikes or in axil- lary clusters. Staminate flowers bractless, consisting of a 3— 5-parted calyx and an equal number of stamens. Pistillate flowers subtended by *2 or more united bract- Lets which enlarge in fruit, their margins entire or toothed, often crested or winged. Calyx none. Stigmas 2. Utricle completely or partially enclosed by the fruit- ing bractlets. Embryo annular. * Annuals', monoecious. 1. A. patula L. Stems stout and succulent, erect, 2-6 dm. high, with few ascending branches, herbage green, only the grow- ing parts somewhat mealy; leaves lanceolate or linear, entire or coarsely toothed, sometimes hastate at base ; inflorescence more or less leafy below, the clusters dense in spikes or panicles ; bracts rhombic-ovate, thick and subcoriaceous, 8-12 mm. long, entire or toothed, sometimes muricate. Frequent in saline places, especially toward the coast. 2. A. expansa Wats. Annual, erect, much branched, 5-10 dm. high, closely and finely mealy-scurvy ; leaves 2.5-7 cm. long, broadly ovate or deltoid-ovate, irregularly and sharply sinuate- toothed, the lower on stout petioles about 1 cm. long, and strong- ly 3-nerved from the base, the upper reduced to sessile more or less cordate floral bracts, as broad or broader than long ; flower clusters more or less unisexual, those of the lower clusters mostly staminate; fruiting bracts sessile, clustered in the axils of the leaves, orbicular, mostly 3-nerved, 4 mm. long, 5-6 mm. broad, usually emarginate at the apex, the wing sharply toothed and commonly bearing on one face a few irregular projections or crests. Occasional in the Ballona Marshes. 3. A. microcarpa Dietrich. Minutely and somewhat hoary puberulent, the numerous reddish branches nearly glabrous ; stems 128 Chenopodiaceae L5-30 cm. long, spreading and decumbent; leaves oblong or oblong-ovate, 6-10 nun. long, acute at each end, sessile; flowers in small axillary clusters, the terminal ones usually more .-lami- nate: fruiting bracts lound-obovate, usually less than 2 nun. broad, the roundish summit narrowly bordered with 3-7 small herbaceous teeth, sides frequently somewhat muricate or 1 -nerved ; seed 0.5 mm. broad. Rather common in saline places toward the coast. 4. A. Watsoni A. Nelson in lit. Branching from the base, somewhat woody below, slender, decumbent or sometimes pros- trate, densely hoary-scurvy; leaves mostly opposite, cuneate- rounded at base, acute or acutish, oblong-ovate, 12-25 mm. long; staminate flowers in dense clusters in short interrupted terminal spikes; calyx 5-cleft; fruiting bracts sessile, slightly cordate at hase, acute, 4 mm. long and broad, compressed, united to above the middle, entire or slightly denticulate; seed nearly 2 mm. long. (A. decumbena Wats.) Not known to occur within our limits, but found at San Diego. ** /'. rennials; monoecious, or ike last ,' dioecious. 5. A. Serenana A. Xelson in lit. Stems rather stout and more or less diffuse, 3 dm. or more long; branches smooth and shining, straw-colored ; foliage finely grayish-scurvy ; leaves oblong-ovate, acute, 8-18 mm. Ion-, thin, sharply toothed or the smaller entire; (lower-clusters unisexual, the staminate in terminal simple or Compound spikes, the pistillate axillary ; fruiting bracts 2 mm. long, the margins laciniately toothed or dentate, the central tooth lanceolate and conspicuous. (.1. bracteosa Wats.) Very common throughout our range in saline places. t>. A. semibaccata R. Br. Perennial; stems much branched from the l>ase, prostrate, woody below, branches 3-10 dm. long, branchlets slender, whitish, leafy throughout; leaves oblon-- lanceolate, tapering at base to a short petiole rounded at apex. 2-4 cm. long, 1 5— .'JO mm. wide, entire or commonly irregularly and remotely dentate, pale green above, silvery beneath ; staminate flowers in short capitate spikes terminating the branchlets ; fruit- in- braets about '■'< mm. Ion-, the mar-ins entire or minutely toothed on the lateral angles, becoming fleshy and reddish when mature. Becoming well established along roadsides and in waste places. Wise burn; Wilmington; Santa Ana. More common about San Diego and Bacon Goosefool Family L29 dido. Native of Australia and cultivated to some extent under the name of Australian salt-bush. 7. A. Californica Moq. Finely white-mealy; stems: slender, Leafy, mostly herbaceous, prostrate or scrambling anions low shrubs, usually much branched and forming a mat ; leaves ovate- lanceolate to oblong-lanceolate, 4-12 mm. long, sessile or narrow- ed to a short petiole; staminate Mowers in terminal spikes, the pistillate in axillary clusters ; fruiting bracts membranous, ovate, acute, entire, loosely closed over the utricle but not united,:; nun. l"ii'_r or less. Occasional in saline places along the coast and on sandy bluffs overhang- ing the sea. 8. A. leucophylla Dietrich. Densely whitish-scurvy, stems stout, 3 dm. long or more, mostly prostrate; leaves thickish, orbicular or elliptic, 8-lti mm. long, sessile, 3-nerved ; staminate clusters in a dense terminal spike, 1-2 cm. long ; pistillate flowers in axillary 2-3-flowered clusters; fruiting bracts completely united and with a short terminal wing, 'jl"bose*or nearly so, 3-4 mm. long. Rather common on the seabeach sands, often more or less buried. 9. A. orbicularis Wats. Subcanescent with very fine pubes- cence, woody at base, much branched and forming a compact growth, 9-14 dm. high; leaves oblong-obovate, 2 cm. long or more, retuse or obtuse and apiculate, narrowed to a very short, slender petiole; inflorescence paniculate, naked or leafy below, the small dense staminate clusters with the pistillate flowers in sessile clusters ; fruiting bracts orbicular, somewhat coherent toward the base, entire, not appendaged on the back, 4-(J nun. broad; seed 1 mm. broad. Common along the seashore from Santa Monica to Port Los Angeles. What seems to be the same is also common on bluffs near Capistrano. 10. A. Breweri Wats. Dioecious, stout, 1.5-2 m. high, woody below, grayish-puberulent ; the branches terete, somewhat flexu- ous ; leaves ovate-oblong, somewhat rhombic-cuneate at the base, obtuse or abruptly acute, 2.5-5 cm. long; calyx deeply 4-cleft; fruiting bracts spongy, ovate to rounded, convex, united at the margin to the middle, entire, 2-3 mm. broad. Bluffs along the seashore. Port Los Angeles : Santa Monica : Port Ballona . 1 :'»i i Chenopodiaceae 11. A. canescens (Pursh) James. Erect and shrubby, rather Btrict, about 8 dm. high ; leaves oblanceolate to narrowly oblong or linear, 15—15 mm. long, obtuse or acutish, narrowed to the base, entire: usually dioecious ; the ilowers in panicled spikes; calyx 5-cleft ; fruiting bracts connate and indurated, not scurvy <>r muricate, the wings distinct and broad, veined and entire or toothed, 4-6 mm. long. Occasional in the vicinity of San Bernardino and San Diego. A common species on the desert. 6. SALICORNIA L. Fleshy glabrous annual or perennial herbs, with op- posite terete branches, the leaves reduced to mere oppo- site scales at the nodes. The flowers sunken, 3-7 together in the axils of the upper leaves, forming narrow terminal spikes, perfect or the lateral staminate. Calyx fleshy, 3-4-toothed or truncate, becoming spongy in fruit, deciduous. Stamens 2 or sometimes solitary, exserted. Styles and stigmas 2. Utricles enclosed by the Bpongy fruiting calyx ; embryo conduplicate. 1. S. ambigua Michx. Perennial by a woody rootstock ; stem decumbent or trailing, 1-6 dm. long, the branches ascending or erect, nearly or quite simple, rather long-jointed, 7-15 cm. lon<_r, pale green ; scales broadly ovate, acute or obtuse; fruiting spikes 1.5-4 cm. long, broad as the branches; flowers about all equally high and about equaling the joints. Very common in salt marshes along the coast. May-August. 2. S. subterminalis Parish. Perennial from a tufted ligneous spreading-prostrate caudex ; the herbaceous stems widely spread- ing <>r suberect, crowded or fascicled, 1-3 dm. high, internodes short ; the numerous branchlets slender, both members of each pair often ascending on the same side of the main stem, giving it a unilateral appearance; spikes 1-3 cm. long, of few-several enlarged fertile bracts (joints broader than Long) and usually about :is many slender longer sterile ones; scales acute, becom- ing divaricate-alate ; middle flower united nearly or quite to the stigmas; fruit glabrous. Not common within our limits. Caplstrano; Meamer. Basil; disttn i from 8. ambigua by Its much greener Blender and numerous branoh- trts. Common about San Diego. Goosefoot Family i:;i 7. DONDIA Adans. Fleshy annual or perennial herbs, sometimes suffretes- cent, with alternate narrowly Linear thick or nearly terete entire leaves and perfect or polygamous bracteo- late flowers solitary or clustered in the upper axils. Calyx 5-parted or 5-cleft, the segments sometimes keeled or slightly winged in fruit, enclosing the utricle. Sta- mens"). Styles usually 2, short. Seed vertical or hori- zontal ; embryo coiled into a Hat spiral. 1. D. Moquini (Torr.) Nelson. Erect branched, rather bushy, usually about <> dm. high, somewhat woody at base, branches leafy, smooth or somewhat tomentose; leaves linear subterete, narrow at base, 12-18 mm. long, acute, the floral similar; clusters mostly 7-rlowered ; perianth deeply cleft, incurved or slightly cucullate; seed vertical, 1.5 mm. broad, dark brown, finely tuber- culate. (Suueda Torreyana Wats.) Common in saline places. July-September. 2. D. multiflora (Torr.) Heller. Somewhat shrubby, <;.-10 dm. high, with slender diffuse or divaricate leafy branches, more or less tomentose; leaves numerous, small, 1 cm. long or less, ob- long, narrow at base, obtuse or acute; flowers solitary or clus- tered, shortly lobed, small; seed mostly vertical, less than 1 mm. broad, obscurely tuberculate. (Suaeda suffrutescens Wats.) In saline places in the interior and occasional along the coast. 3. D. Californica (Wats.) Heller. Glabrous or pubescent; stems woody at base, about 2 dm. high; branches decumbent, 6-12 dm. long, woody below, bearing ascending or erect, very leafy brancblets 15-30 cm. long ; leaves broadly linear, acute, 10-14 mm. long ; flowers 4 mm. broad, 1-3 in the axils ; perianth deeply cleft; seed vertical, nearly 2 mm. broad, faintly reticulated. (S. Californica Wats.) Frequent in saline places along the coast. 4. D. depressa (Pursh) Britton. Annual, branched from the base and usually above, 2-5 dm. high; branches decumbent or ascending, usually very leafy; leaves narrowly linear, 2-3 cm. long, broadest at or near the base, the upper often narrowly 132 Amaranthaceae lanceolate; sepals acute, 1 or raore of them strongly keeled in fruit; seed about 1 mm. broad, dull, minutely reticulated. Frequent in low alkaline places toward the coast. Hyde Park; Mesmer. 8. SALSOLA L. Annual or perennial much-branched herbs, with prickly-pointed leaves and sessile perfect 2-bracteolate flowers, solitary in the axils or sometimes several l<>g-etlier. Calyx 5-parted, its segments appendaged by abroad membranous horizontal wingin fruit and enclos- ing the utricle. Stamens 5. Ovary depressed ; styles 2. Utricle flattened, its seed horizontal ; embryo coiled into a conic spiral. 1. S. Tragus L. Annual, more or less scabrous-pubescent, bushy-branched, the branches slender. 2-6 din. high : leaves and outer bracts usually red at maturity, the former not noticeably swollen at base, linear, somewhat fleshy; calyx membranous, conspicuously veiny, its wings longer than the ascending lobe. Occasional along roadsides. Commonly called the Russian thistle. Family 2:!. AMARANTHACEAE. Amaranth Family. Ours herbs with alternate or opposite, simple mostly entire Leaves. Flowers small usually green, perfect or unisexual, bracteolate, variously clustered, usually in terminal spikes or axillary heads. Calyx herbaceous or membranous, 2-5-parted, the segments distinct or more or less united. Corolla none. Stamens 1 5, mostly opposite the calyx-lobes, hypogynous; anthers L-2-celled. Ovary superior, L-celled, with *J •'! stigmas. Fruit a utricle, circumscissile or bursting irregularly. Embryo annular; endosperm mealy, usually copious. Leaves alternate; Bowers unisexual. I. Aramanthos. Leaves opposite ; Bowers perfect. - ai.tkknasthkha. Amaranth Family 133 1. AMARANTHUS L. Amaranth. Ours animal vreeds, with alternate petioled undulate or crisped leaves, and polygamous or monoecious small green or purplish flowers, in dense spikes or axillary clusters. Calyx of 2— 5distinct sepals. Anthers 2-celled, longitudinally dehiscent. Fruit indehiscent or circum- scissile. beaked by the persistent style. 1. A. retroflexus L. Stems stout erect, with a few erect or ascending branches from the base, 3-10 dm. high; herbage rather deep green often somewhat reddish, roughish-puberulent ; leaves rhombic-ovate, ovate or the upper lanceolate, on slender petioles, 2-6 cm. long or sometimes longer; flowers green, densely clus- tered in terminal and axillary spikes, which are sessile, stout, ovoid-cylindric, erect or ascending, 2-4 cm. long, 8-14 mm. broad; bracts lanceolate-subulate, scarious except the carinate midrib, 3-6 mm. long; sepals 5, scarious, oblong-lanceolate, cus- pidate, 2 mm. long or less; stamens 5; utricle black and shining, circumscissile, about 1 mm. broad. Frequent in uncultivated orchards and gardens. Native of Europe. 2. A. graecizans L. Stems erect, bushy-branched, glabrous, whitish, 2-6 dm. high; leaves oblong, spatulate or obovate, 2—4 cm. long, slender petioled; flowers polygamous, in small axillary clusters; bracts subulate, pungent-pointed, much longer than the 3 membranous sepals ; stamens 3 ; utricle slightly rugose, longer than the sepals; seeds about 0.7 mm. broad. (A. albus L.) Rather common summer weed in cultivated fields. Native of Europe. 3. A. blitoides Wats. Stems somewhat succulent, prostrate, 3-6 dm. long, whitish; leaves glabrous, deep green, shining; flowers in small axillary few-flowered spikelets; bracts ovate- oblong, shortly acuminate, 2-3 mm. long; sepals 4-5, 1.5-2 mm. long, oblong, obtuse and mucronulate or acute; stamens 3; utricle smooth, circumscissile; seed 1.5 mm. broad. Moist soil at Santa Monica, Davidson. Common about Rialto. 4. A. deflexus L. Glabrous, purplish-green, somewhat suc- culent; stem usually much branched, erect, stout or slender. 134 Batidaceae 3-9 dm. high ; leaves ovate to oval, obtuse to emarginate at apex, mostly narrowed at the base, 3-7 cm. long, 1-4 cm. wide; petioles slender, often as long as the blades or the lower longer; Mowers polygamous, in dense mostly short and thick terminal spikes and capitate in the axils ; bracts shorter than the 2-3 oblong or spat- ulate sepals; utricle fleshy, 3-5-nerved, smooth, indehiscent, rather shorter than the sepals. Redondo, Greata. A ballast plant introduced from tropical America. 2. ALTERNANTHERA Forsk. Annual or perennial branching herbs, with opposite (at least the lower) entire leaves and perfect ordioecious flowers, iii panicles or heads. 3-bracted. Sepals 5. Sta- mens 5, united into a short cup at base ; sterile fila- ments minute, tooth-like : anthers 1-celled. Style short ; stigma capitate or 2-lobed. Seed vertical, lenticular. 1. A. Achyrantha R. Br. Stem prostrate, pubescent; 1-3 dm. long; leaves smoothish oval or obovate, narrowed into a petiole; heads mostly axillary, solitary or clustered, dense, oval, white; sepals lanceolate, spine-pointed, woolly with barbed hairs on the back, the 2 inner ones much smaller; sterile filaments subulate, equaling the fertile ones. Streets of Los Angeles, Davidson. Native of tropical America. Family 24. BATIDACEAE. Batis Family. A low maritime shrub, with opposite entire exstip- ulate leaves and dioecious bracteate flowers, in axil- lary sessile aineiit-like spikes. Staminate flowers dis- tinct. Calyx campanulate, 2-lipped. Petals I. rhombic- ovate, clawed. Pistillate flowers 8-12, united into a fleshyspike, without perianth. Ovaries coherent, 4-celled, becoming a fleshy, ovoid-conical fruit ; stigma sessile, capitate. Seeds 1 in each cell, erect, oblong ; testa mem- branous : embryo slightly curved, caulicle inferior ; endo- sperm none. Represented by a single monotypic genus. Phytolaccaceae L35 1. BATIS L. Characters of the family. 1. B. maritima L. Glabrous, stems branched, prostrate, 9-14 <> Nyctaginaceae Family 26. NYCTAGINACEAE. Four-o'clock Family. Ours herbs with fragile stems and tumid joints, and entire petiolate exstipulate mostly opposite leaves. Flowers perfect, with a calyx-like involucre. Petals wanting. Calyx corolla-like, campanulate or salver- shaped, 4-5-lobed or 4-5-toothed. Stamens hypogynous : filaments filiform ; anthers 2-celled, dehiscent by lateral slits. Ovary superior, enclosed by the tube of the per- sistent calyx, 1-celled, 1-ovuled : style short or elongated ; stigma capitate. Fruit consisting of the hardened base of the calyx, often costate or winged, enclosing the free achene. Calyx funnelform or campanulate ; fruit slightly ribbed. 1. Mirabilis. Calyx salver-shaped; fruit winged. 2. Abkonia. l. MIRABILIS L. Four-o'clock. Perennial herbs, somewhat woody toward the base, with opposite leaves and axillary solitary or paniculate ped- uncles. Involucre calyx-like, 5-cleft or 5-parted, herba- ceous unchanged in fruit, bearing 1-12 flowers. Calyx tubular or narrowly campanulate, with somewhat spread- ing lobes. Stamens 5, equaling the calyx ; filaments united at the base. Fruit globose to ovate-oblong, smooth or slightly ribbed or angled. ]. M. multiflora pubescens Wats. Stems stout spreading, 0.5-1 in. long; herbage roughish pubescent throughout ; leaves rather thin, 3-7 cm. long, broadly ovate to ovate-lanceolate, acute or acuminate, sometimes slightly cordate, decurrentou the slender 2-4 cm. long petioles; involucre about 20-25 nun. long, 5-cleft to about the middle, the lobes acute; flowers usually 6, broadly funnelform, H-"> cm. Ion-, rose color to purple, the tube greenish, acutely 5-lobed ; stamens f>, equaling the calyx, shorter than the filiform style; fruit ovate-oblong, 6-8 mm. long, with in shallow furrows near the base and with as manv intermediate dark linen. Four-o'clock Family 137 •_'. M. Californica Gray. Stems ascending or spreading from a somewhat woody base, 3-6 dm. long; herbage viscid-pubescent ; leaves rather thick. 1-3 cm. long, broadly ovate to cordate, ob- tuse or acute; petioles slender, 1-2 cm. long; involucre about (i mm. lung, acutely 5-cleft to near the middle; calyx narrowly campanulate, 10 mm. long, the lobes spreading, emarginate; stamens equaling the calyx and nearly equaling the style; fruit ovate smooth, 3 mm. long. Common in the foothills throughout our range. March-June. 2. ABRONTA Juss. Sand-verbena. Ours perennial herbs, often prostrate and more or less viscid-pubescent, with thick opposite unequal leaves. Involucres of 5-^15 somewhat scarious leaflets, enclosing numerous sessile showy and fragrant flowers. Calyx salver-shaped, the lobes usually 5, obcordate or emarginate. Stamens usually 5, unequal, adnate to the calyx-tube and included. Style included ; stigma liriear-clavate. Fruit indurated, 3—5- win get 1 : achene smooth, cylindric. Em- bryo with only 1 cotyledon. 1. A. umbellata Lam. Stems slender, prostrate and widely branching, 3-10 dm. long, viscid-puberulent ; leaves nearly gla- brous, broadly obovate to oblong, the margin rarely sinuate, 2-4 cm. long, narrowed to a slender petiole of equal length or longer; peduncles 5-10 cm. long; involucral bracts narrowly lanceolate, 4-6 mm. long, enclosing 10-15 Mowers, forming an umbel-like head; calyx rose-purple, rarely whitish, 12-16 mm. long, lobes 5, emarginate; fruit oblong, attenuate at each end, 8-10 mm. long, glabrous; wings thin, broadest above and often truncate. Common on the sand-dunes along the seashore. 2. A. maritima Nutt. Stems stout, the lower portion usually buried in the drifting sand, prostrate, succulent and viscid ; leaves thick, broadly ovate to oblong, cuneate or rounded at base, 3-5 cm. long, vertical on stout petioles of about the same length ; ped- uncles slightly exceeding the leaves ; involucral bracts short, ovate- oblong, enclosing 10-15 flowers, forming a narrow head ; calyx 1 cm. long, deep red ; fruit viscid-pubescent ; wings rather thick. Common on the beach sands along the seashore. l-'is Aizoaceae Family 27. AIZOACEAE. Carpet-weed Family. Ours herbs very succulent, except Mollugo, with op- posite or verticillate leaves. Calyx 5-lobed, herbaceous or petaloid, the tube adnate or free from the ovary. Petals numerous or wanting. Stamens 3-many, with slender filaments inserted on the calyx-tube. Styles 3-20. Fruit a capsule, 3— 20-celled, dehiscence various. Seeds numerous, minute ; embryo annular : endosperm scanty or copious. Ovary free from the calyx; petals none. Sepals 5; capsule 3-valved; leaves not succulent. 1. Mollugo. Calyx-lobes 5, petaloid; capsule circumscissile; succulent. 2. Sesdvium. Calyx-tube adnate to the ovary; petals and stamens numerous. 3. MESEMBKIANTHEMC.M. 1. MOLLUGO L. Carpet-weed. Annuals, ours prostrate, glabrous, much-branched, with verticillate stipulate leaves. Stipules scarious, mem- branous, deciduous. Flowers axillary on long slender pedicels. Calyx 5-parted, persistent; sepals Bcarious- margined. Petals none. Stamens 3—5. Ovary ovoid or globose, 3-celled. Capsule 3-celled, 3-valved, loculici- dally dehiscent. 1. M. verticillata L. Stem much branched, prostrate, 10-20 cm. long, glabrous, not succulent ; leaves in whorls of 5's or (>'sT spatulate to linear-lanceolate, entire, obtuse, 10-L'"> nun. long, narrowed to a short petiole; flowers L.5-2 nun. broad; sepals oblong, slightly shorter than the ovoid capsule; capsule rough- ened by the projecting seed-; seeds minute, smooth and shining or slightly granular. Growing m damp places near borders of pools. < '•;iv\ an/a, Davidson; Laguna, Orange County. L\ SESUVIUM L. Ska PuRSLANB. Stems prostrate or decumbent, fleshy with opposite ex- stipulate leaves. Flowers solitary in the axils, sessile or Carpet-weed Family 139 on short stout pedicels. Calyx-tube turbinate, free from the ovary, the Lobes 5, often purplish within, oblong, obtuse. Petals none. Stamens 5-many ; filaments united at the hase into sets. Ovary 3-5-celled, with as many styles. Capsule membranous, ovate-oblong, cir- cumscissile at the middle. Seeds many, minute, smooth. 1. S. sessile Pers. Stems prostrate, much branched, 1-3 dm. long or more; leaves broadly spatulate or linear, 1-4 cm. long; Mowers sessile or nearly so, 6-10 mm. long; sepals ovate-lance- olate, scarious-margined, 6 mm. long; filaments united below the middle, red. Occasional in low saline places. June-September. 3. MESEMBRIANTHEMUM L. Ice-plant. Ours very fleshy maritime herbs, with opposite exstip- ulate leaves. Flowers large and showy, terminal and in the forks of the branches. Calyx-tube adnate to the ovary, the lobes 5, unequal, herbaceous. Petals numer- ous, linear. Stamens very numerous, with slender fila- ments, inserted with the petals on the tube of the calyx. Capsule 4-20-celled, with as many styles, dehiscing at the depressed summit by stellate valves. Seeds minute, many. 1 . M. aequilaterale Haw. Stems prostrate, often forming extensive mats; leaves 3-angled, 4-6 cm. long, smooth; flowers solitary, sessile or nearly so, about 3 cm. broad; calyx-tube tur- binate, 2-4 cm. long; the larger foliaceous lobes nearly as long; petals red ; styles 6-10. Common along the seashore. 2. M. crystallinum L. Annual or biennial, prostrate and widely branching, the herbage covered with white glistening pa- pilla;; leaves flat, fleshy, clasping, broadly ovate or spatulate, undulate; flowers axillary sessile or nearly so, white or pink; calyx-tube campanulate, 6-10 mm. long, lobes ovate, retuse or acute ; stigmas 5. Common in low saline places near the coast. May-June. 1 li» Portulacaceae 3. M. nodiflorum Haw. A prostrate branching annual with rather slender terete leaves; flowers white or whitish, small, about 1 cm. broad. Not known within our limits, but occurring on Catalina Island and along the shore of the mainland from near Capistrano south. Abundant about San Diego. Family 28. PORTULACACEAE. Purslane Family. Herbs generally fleshy <>r succulent, with alternate or opposite leaves and regular but unsymmetrical per- fect flowers. Sepals commonly 2. Petals 4 or ■">. rarely more, hypogynous, equal in number to the petals and opposite them or fewer ; anthers 2rcelled, Longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary 1-celled ; styles 2— 3-cleft or divided; ovules 2 many, amphitropous. Capsule membranous or crustaceous, circumscissile or 3-valved." Seed- 2-many, reniform-globose or compressed ; embryo curved ; endo- sperm farinaceous. Sepals 2, distinct, free from the ovary, persistent. Ovary 3-valved. Styles 2-cleft; sepals unequal, hyaline. 2. Calypthidiim. Styles 3-cleft; sepals equal, herbaceous. Stamens more than 5; seeds many, smooth. 1. Calanduinia Stamens usually 3; seeds few, tuberculate. 3. Montia. Sepals 2, united at the base, adnate to the ovary; ovary circumscissile. 4. POKTULACA. 1. CALANDRINTA II. B. K. Low succulent herbs with alternate or radical leaves, and purplish Mowers in bfacteolate racemes. Sepals 2, green and persistent. Petals mostly."). Stamen- 5-15 or sometimes only .",. Ovary free, many-ovuled, style 3-cleft, short. Capsule ovoid, membranous, 3-valved. Seeds smooth or minutely tuberculate. 1. C. caulescens Menziesii (Honk.) Gray. Steins decumbent or ascending, glabrous or sparsely pubescent, L0-30cm. long, leafy ; Purslane Family 141 leaves linear to oblanceolate, the 'lower petioled, 3-6 cm. long; flowers scattered along the branches ; sepals ovate, acute or acu- minate, carinate, the keel and margins entire or sparsely ciliolate ; petals broadly obovate, 5-15 mm. long, rose-red or rarely white; seeds black and shining. (C. Menziesii (Hook.) T. & G. ; C. ele- gant Spach.) Common on the mesas, especially in the coast region. February-May. 2. C. maritima Nutt. Stems glaucous, depressed, 6-10 cm. long; leaves mostly rosulate at the base, obovate to obovate- spatulate, the upper bract-like; flowers in a loose naked cyme; calyx ovate, acute, about 3 mm. long; petals 5-ti mm. long, rose- purple; capsule ovoid, 4 mm. long, aeutish ; seeds dull grayish. Along the seashore at Santa Monica; Davidson. 2. CALYPTRIDIUM Nutt. Glabrous and rather succulent herbs, branching from the base, the branches prostrate or ascending. Flowers small, ephemeral, solitary or clustered in scorpioid spikes Sepals 2, broadly ovate or cordate-orbicular, scarious, persistent. Petals 2-4. Stamens 1-3. Style bifid. Cap- sule membranaceous, 2-valved, 6-12-seeded. 1. C. raonandrum Nutt. Steins prostrate, much branched, 2-8 cm. long; leaves spatulate, about equaling the branches, mostly radical, the cauline similar but usually smaller; sepals 2, narrowly scarious margined, 1.5 mm. long; petals2~3, aboutequal- inur thesepals ; stamens 1, shorter than the petals ; filaments subu- late; style short, shortly 2-lobed or entire; capsule linear, be- coming much exserted, bearing the withered petals at the apex ; seeds 5-10. Frequent on sand-dunes along the seashore and occasional in the foot- hill region. March-May. 3. MONTIA L. Mixer's Lettuce. Low glabrous and succulent herbs with delicate pale rose-colored or white flowers in loose axillary or ter- minal, simple or compound racemes. Sepals 2. rarely 3, persistent. Petals usually 5, rarely :; or wanting, more 142 Portulacaceae or lessa united at base, usually Blightly unequal. Sta- mens 3-5, inserted on the corolla opposite the Lobes. Ovary :>-ovuled. Capsule .'i-valved, 8-seeded. 1. M. perfoliata (Donn) Howell. Scapose stems 10-:}0 cm. high; leaves long petioled, oblanceolate to ovate or deltoid; involucral bracts completely joined, forming a perfoliate disk ; flowers in short or rather long peduncled racemes; sepals ovate, 2-3 mm. long; petals 3-5 mm. long, white or rose color; seeds lenticular, black and shining, minutely granular. (Claytonia perfoliata Donn.) Common in moist shady places below 4000 feet altitude. February-May. 2. M. spathulata (Dougl.) Howell. Low and rather dense, 3-10 cm. high; radical leaves linear or spatulate-linear, little ex- ceeded by the flowering steins; cauline leaves from spatulate- ovate to lanceolate, almost distinct or connate upon one side into an obcordate or 2-lobed involucre; inflorescence 1-2 cm. long; flowers small; petals 2-4 mm. long; seeds black, shining, granu- lated. (Claytonia spathulata Dougl.) Kings Canyon, Dari'lxo/i. May. 4. PORTULACA L. Purslane. Low Bucculent prostrate or ascending herbs with alter- nate or opposite leaves and scariousor setaceous stipules. Flowers axillary or terminal, ephemeral, (ours) yellow. Sepals 2, coherent at the base into a tube and adnate to the base of the ovary, the free upper portion at Length deciduous. Petals 4-6. Stamens 1-20, perigynous with the petals. Style 1, deeply •"> 8-cleft. Capsule circum- BCissile ueai- the middle, many-seeded. 1. P. oleracea L. Stems prostrate, 1-5 dm. long; leaves fleshy, glabrous, obovate to spatulate, rounded at the apex ; flowers sessile, axillary; stipules minute; sepals acute, carinate ; petals yellow, 2-4 nun. long; stigmas 5; capsule 6-10 mm. long; seels dull black, finely tuberculate. Cultivated grounds and waste places. May-August. Caryophyllaceae L43 Family 29. CARYOPHYLLACEAE. Pink Family. Annual or perennial herbs, rarely lignescent at base, with nodose stems and opposite entire leaves. Flowers regular perfecl or rarely unisexual by abortion. Sepals 1 •"). united into a tube or distinct. Petals as many (or aone), often emarginate-toothed or deeply bifid. Sta- mens usually as many as petals and alternating with them ; filaments sometimes slightly cohering at the base, anthers introrse. Styles 2-5, free or united below ; ovary free, 1 -celled or imperfectly 2-5-celled at the base ; placenta axial; ovules usually numerous. Fruit a many-seeded capsule, opening by 2-5 entire or bifid valves, or 1-seeded and indehiscent. Embryo straight or curved : endosperm present. Ovary several-many-seeded, becoming a capsule. Sepals united. 1. Silene. Sepals distinct. Stipules none. Styles 3-4; petals divided nearly to the base. 3. Alsink. Styles 5. Petals retuse or bifld. 3. Cerastium. Petals entire or slightly emarginate. 4. Sagina. Styles 3; petals entire. 5. Akenabia. Stipules present. Leaves not cuspidate. Petals rather large or rarely none; styles distinct. Leaves whorled. 6. Spergcla. Leaves opposite. 7. Tissa. Petals minute; styles united below. 8. Polycarpon. Leaves cuspidate. 9. Loeflingia. Ovary 1-ovuled, becoming a utricle. 10. Pentacaena. 1. SILENE L. Catch-fly. Annual or perennial herbs with clustered or solitary stems and bright red or usually white flowers. Calyx more or less inflated, tubular, ovoid or campanulate, 5-toothed or 5-cleft, 10-many-nerved. Petals 5, narrow, clawed. Stamens 10. Styles 3, rarely 4-5 ; ovary 144 Caryophyllaceae L-celled or incompletely 2-4-celled. Capsule dehiscenl by 6 or rarely 3 apical teeth. Seeds usually spiny or tubercled. * Calyx 18-SO-ribbed. 1. S. multinervia Wats. Annual, erect, 25-35 cm. high, pubes- cent throughout and somewhat viscid-glandular above; leaves narrowly oblong or linear, acute ; inflorescence cymose with un- equal branches; calyx ovate in fruit, contracted above, 10 mm. long, 18-23-ribbed ; petals small not exceeding the subulate calyx- teeth, purplish, unappendaged; capsule narrowly ovate. Occasional about Santa Monica, 1/asxf. ** Calyx W-nerved. ■*- Annuals. 2. S. Anglica L. Stems erect, simple or sparingly branched, 25-40 cm. high, hirsute with spreading hairs, leaves spatulate- obovate, hirsute on both sides, 2-4 cm. long; racemes terminal, 1-sided; flowers on pedicels 2-4 cm. long; calyx villous-hirsute, slender, becoming ovoid in fruit; petals little exceeding the calyx, their blades obovate, somewhat bifid, toothed or entire. {S. Gal- lica L.) A common introduced plant of fields and roadsides. Native of Europe. March-May. 3. S. antirrhina L. Stems erect, slender, sparingly branched, the middle of the upper internodes with a viscid belt, otherwise glabrous ; leaves oblong-lanceolate or linear, 2-3 cm. long, usually acute; inflorescence paniculate; pedicels filiform, 1-3.5 cm. long; calyx glabrous, bright green, ovoid in fruit, 8 mm. long; petals small, pink, or white, emarginate or bifid ; ovary nearly sessile. Frequent in the foothills. April. +■ +■ Perennials. ■}. S. laciniataCav. Finely pubescent, glandular above ; stems usually much branched and widely spreading, erect or decum- bent, 3-10 dm. long ; leaves lanceolate-linear, scabrous, ciliolate, narrowed to a sessile base; calyx subcylindric or clavate, 15-20 mm. long; petals bright scarlet, 1-eleft, much exceeding the calyx: capsule oblong, usually exserted at maturity. Common in the chaparral belt. May August. I 'ink Family L45 5. S. verecunda Wats. Finely hoary pubescent, glandular- viscid above; stems several, usually erect, 20-40 cm. high, leafy below ; leaves narrowly lanceolate, oblanceolate or spatulate to linear, acute, 3-5 cm. long ; flowers terminal <>n the short branches or borne in 3-flowered lateral cymes ; calyx in fruit clavate or obovate; petals rose color, blades shorter than the pubescent claws, 2-cleft, appendages oblong or lanceolate, obtuse and often toothed at the apex ; capsule ovoid, stipitate. Common in the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains in the coniferous belt; also summit of Santiago Peak, Santa Ana Mountains. 2. ALSINE L. Tufted annuals, diffuse with cymose white flowers. Sepals usually 5. Petals 5, 2-cleft or 2-parted, rarely none. Stamens 10 or less, hypogynous. Ovary 1-celled, several-many-ovuled. Styles commonly 3, rarely 4-5, usually opposite the sepals. Capsule globose to oblong, dehiscent by twiee as many valves as styles. Seeds smooth or roughened. 1. A. media L. Weak and decumbent or ascending, 10-40 cm. long, glabrous except a line of hairs along the stem and branches ; leaves ovate or oval, 1-3 cm. long, the upper sessile, the lower petioied; flowers 4-8 mm. broad, in terminal leafy cymes or axil- lary; pedicels slender; sepals oblong, mostly acute, longer than the 2-parted petals; capsule ovoid, longer than the calyx; seeds rough. (Stellaria media Cyrill.) Common in shady places. February-April. 2. A. nitens (Nutt.) Greene. Very slender, erect annual; stems filiform, several times forked, pubescent below; leaves mostly basal, the lowest ovate, acute, about 4 mm. long, on slender petioles of about the same length, the upper sessile, lance-linear, acute, 6-10 mm. long; sepals very acute, scarious-margined, 1-3-nerved ; petals half as long as the sepals or wanting ; capsule oblong, about equaling the sepals. (Stellaria nitens Nutt.) Common in the foothills in somewhat shady places. March-May. 3. CERASTIUM L. Chickweed. Annual or perennial, pubescent or hirsute herbs, with terminal dichotomous cymes of white flowers. Sepals 5, 1 16 Caryophyllaceae rarely 1. Petals of the same number, emarginate or bifid, rarely wanting. Stamens 10, rarelyfewer. Styles equal in number to the sepals and opposite them, or fewer. Capsule cylindric, 1-celled, many-ovuled, often curved, dehiscent by 10, rarely 8 apical teeth. Seeds rough. 1. C. viscosum L. Annual, tufted; stems ascending or spreading, densely viscid-pubescent, 10-30 cm. long; leaves ovale or obovate, or tbe lower spatulate, 8-25 mm. long, obtuse; bracts small, herbaceous; flowers 4-6 mm. broad, in glomerate cymes, becoming paniculate in fruit; pedicels shorter than or equaling the acute sepals; petals shorter than the sepals, bifid. Frequent in waste places. 2. C. vulgatum L. Biennial or perennial, viscid-pubescent, tufted, erect or ascending, 15-45 cm. long; lower leaves spatulate- oblong, obtuse ; upper leaves oblong, 12-25 mm. long, acute or obtuse; bracts scarious-margined ; inflorescence cymose, loose, the pedicels at length much longer than the calyx; sepals obtuse or acute; petals exceeding the sepals, 4-6 mm. long, 2-cleft; cap- sule usually curved upward. (C. trivale Link.; Frequent in lawns. 4. SAGINA L. Low tufted annual or perennial herbs, with subulate leaves and small pedicelled whitish flowers. Sepal- 4-5. Petals of the same number, entire, emarginate or none. Stamens of the same number or twice as many or sometimes fewer. Styles as many as the sepals and alternate with them. Capsule 1 5-valved, at length de- biscenl to the base, the valves opposite the sepals. 1. S. occidentalis Wats. Very slender glabrous annual, with several decumbent or ascending steins, these 5-15 cm. long; leaves nearly filiform but flattened above; pedicels exceeding the leaves, 14-25 mm. long; flowers 5-mer0US, 4-5 nun. broad; capsule 3.5 mm. long. Occasional In the Santa Monica Mountains and the Veidugo H Tink Family 147 ARENARIA L. Annual <>r perennial herbs, with sessile Leaves and terminal cymose or capitate rarely axillary and solitary white flowers. Sepals 5. Petals 5, entire or scarcely emarginate, rarely none. Stamens 10. Styles usually .">. rarely 2-5. Ovary 1-celled, many-ovuled. Capsule globose or oblong, dehiscent at the apex by as many valves or teeth as there are styles, or twice as many. Seeds reniform-globose or compressed. * Valves of the capsule -'-cleft or S-toothed. 1 . A. Fendleri Gray. Stems numerous from a thick perennial root, glaucous, glandular-pubescent above, erect, leafy, 10-35 cm. high; basal leaves gramineous, setaceous, ciliolate or smooth, 5-10 cm. long, somewhat pungent; cauline becoming reduced, connate and sheathing at the base; inflorescence dichotomous, few-many-flowered; sepals lanceolate, alternate, glandular, 4-6 mm. long; petals white or pale yellow, obovate, slightly exceed- ing the sepals; capsule 3-4 mm. long. Los Angeles, Nevin. ** Valves of the capsule entire. 2. A Douglasii Fenzl. Annual, glabrous or sparsely glandu- lar-pubescent and somewhat viscid ; stems much branched, 5-30 cm. high; leaves filiform ; peduncles filiform ; flowers numerous, 8-10 mm. broad ; sepals ovate, thin-margined, obscurely or rather distinctly ribbed; petals obovate, slightly exceeding the calyx; capsule subglobose, somewhat exceeding the sepals; seeds about 1.5 mm. broad, reniform, broadly margined, smooth or with fine radiating stripe. Frequent in the foothill region, in open stony places. March-May. 3. A. paludicola Robinson. Perennial, glabrous and flaccid, stems several, subsimple, procumbent, rooting at the lower joints, leafy throughout; leaves linear-lanceolate, acute, 2-3 cm. long, somewhat connate, margins slightly scarious; peduncles solitary in the axils, 2-5 cm. long, spreading or recurved; sepals nerve- 148 Caryophyllaceae less, acutish, 3-4 mm. long; petals obovate, 6-8 mm. long. (A. palustris Wats.) Growing in marshy ground, near Los Angeles. Davidson, 6. SPERGULA L. Corn Spdbry. Annual branched herbs, with subulate stipulate leaves, much fascicled in the axils. Flowers white, in terminal cvnies. Sepals and petals 5. Stamens 5 or 10. Styles 3, alternate with the sepals. Capsule 5-valved, the valves opposite the sepals. Seeds compressed, acutely margined or winged. 1. S. arvensis L. Slender, glabrous or sparingly pubescent, brandling from tbe base, erect or ascending, 15-45 cm. high : leaves narrowly linear or subulate, 2.5-5 cm. long, clustered at the nodes, appearing verticillate; stipules minute, connate; flow- ers 4-6 mm. broad, numerous, in loose terminal cymes; pedicels slender divaricate; sepals ovate, 3-4 mm. long, slightly longer than the petals; stamens 10 or 5; capsule ovoid, longer than the calyx. Occasional about Los Angeles and Pasadena. Native of Europe. March-April. 7. TISSA Adans. Low annual or perennial herbs, with fleshy linear or setaceous leaves, and small pink or whitish flowers in terminal racemose, bracted or leafy cymes. Stipules seariotis, usually conspicuous. Sepals 5. Petals 5, fewer or none, entire. Stamens 2-10. Ovary 1-celled niany- ovuled ; styles 3. Capsule 3-valved to the base. Seeds reniform-globose or compressed, smooth, winged or tuber- cu late. (Huda Adans.; Spergularia Pursh.) * Ann ual, roots Jihrous. 1. T. marina (L.) Britton. Stout, erect or ascending, more or less glandular-pubescent, 3 dm. high or less; leaves Meshy, 2-4 cm. long, linear, clustered in the axils: petals rose color; stamens Pink Family 149 10; mature capsule 0-8 nun. long; seeds smooth or somewhat roughened, sometimes margined. Common in salt marshes toward the coast. 2. T. tenuis Greene. Slender, diffusely branching, forming depressed mats about 3 dm. broad, glahrous or nearly so; leaves narrowly linear, 2.r> cm. long; stipules inconspicuous; flowers minute, numerous, cymosely crowded on all but the lower parts of the branches, subsessile; sepals obtuse, less than 2 mm. long; petals wanting; stamens 2; styles 3; capsule 3-sided, 6-8 mm. long; seeds numerous, minute, reddish-brown, smooth, wingless. Santa Monica, Ni vin. 3. T. gracilis (Wats.) Britton. Much resembling the last, but the flowers on pedicels 2-4 mm. long; capsule 2 mm. long; seeds triangular-pyriform, strongly rough-tuberculate. Occasional on the mesas in low adobe soil ; Wilmington ; Inglewood. March-April. ** Perennial, roots fleshy. 4. T. macrotheca (Hornem.) Britton. Perennial, from a fleshy root; glandular-pubescent or nearly smooth ; stems stout, ascending, 4 dm. high or less, branching from the base; leaves broadly linear, 4 cm. long or less; flowers on pedicels usually about 15 mm. long; calyx-lobes 6-8 mm. long; petals rose color; stamens 10; capsule equaling the calyx-lobes; seeds winged, smooth. Common in salt marshes and alkaline flats. May-July. 8. POLYCARPON L. Low diffuse, dichotomously branched annuals with flat stipulate leaves and minute cymose flowers. Sepals 5, carinate-eoncave. Petals 5, minute, hyaline. Sta- mens 3-5. Ovary 1 -celled ; style short, 3-cleft. Capsule 3-valved, several-seeded. 1. P. depressum Xutt. Very slender, prostrate, the many branches 2.5-5 cm. long; leaves opposite, spatulate, glabrous; stipules small, narrow; flowers minute; the pedicels with small bracts; petals very narrow, shorter than the sepals, entire; cap- sule globose, 6-12-seeded. On seashore sand-dunes, and in sandy soil in the foothills. Not common. March-May. 150 Ceratophyllaceae 9. L.OEFLINGIA L. Low much branched rather rigid and pungent-leaved annuals. Leaves with adnate and connate setaceous stipules. Flowers small, sessile in the axils of the leaves and branches. Sepals 5, rigid, carinate. Petals minute or none. Capsule 2-valved, several-seeded. 1. L. squarrosa Nutt. Much branched, prostrate or ascend- ing, 5-15 cm. high; herbage glandular-pubescent; leaves and sepals subulate setaceous, rigid and recurved, the leaves 4-t> nun. long, the sepals somewhat shorter ; capsule elongated, triquetrous, exserted, many-seeded. Streets of Los Angeles and Pasadena, Davidson, McClatchii . 10. PENTACAENA Bartl. Tufted perennials with subulate pungeni leaves and silvery-hyaline stipules. Flowers sessile clustered in the axils. Sepals 5, unequal, hooded, the 3 outer larger and with a stout divergent terminal spine. Petals minute, scale-like. Stamens o-5, inserted at the base of the sepals. Style very short, 2-cleft. Utricle enclosed in the rigid persistent calyx. 1. P. ramosissima II. & A. Stems prostrate, forming dense mats 15-30 cm. broad, woolly-pubescent; leaves crowded on the stems, ti mm. long; sepals woolly, except the divergent apex; utricle apiculate. Common in sandy soil along the coast. Family 30. CERATOPHYLLACEAE. Hobnwort Family. Submerged aquatics with slender widely branching stems and verticillate leaves, the monoecious or dioecious flowers solitary and sessile in the axils. Perianth many- parted, the segments entire or toothed. Stamens numer- ous, crowded on a lint or convex receptacle ; anthers ses- sile or nearly so, linear oblong, extrorse, appendaged. Ovary superior, 1 -celled ; ovule 1. pendulous ; style tili- Ranunculaceae 151 form. Fruit an indehiscent nut or achene. Endosperm none ; cotyledons I. verticillate. 1. CERATOPHYLLUM L. HORNWOBT. Leaves crowded in verticils, Linear or filiform, spinu- lose-serrulate, forked. Staminate and pistillate flowers, generally at different nodes. Stamens 10-20; anthers about equaling the perianth. Ovary and fruit slightly exceeding the sepals, the fruit beaked with the long per- sistent style. 1. C. demersum L. Stems 2-9 dm. long, leaves 2-3-times forked, the end of the segments capillary anil rigid, 8-25 mm. long, fruit oval, 4-6 mm. long, smooth or tuberculate, sometimes winged or with 2 basal spurs on each side. In ponds and slow streams, frequent throughout our range. May-July. Family 31. RANUNCULACEAE. Crowfoot Family. Annual or perennial herbs or rarely climbing shrubs, with alternate or opposite, simple or compound, exstip- ulate leaves. Flowers regular or irregular. Sepals 3-15, generally caducous, often petal-like. Petals usu- ally of the same number, sometimes wanting. Stamens many, hypogynous, longitudinally dehiscent. Carpels many or rarely solitary, 1-celled, 1-many-ovuled. Ovules anatropous. Fruit achenes, follicles or berries. Endosperm present. Flowers perfect. Fruit a follicle. Sepals herbaceous, persistent. 1. Paeonia. Sepals petal-like, deciduous. Petals all spurred. 2. Aquilegia. Upper sepal spurred. 3. Delphinium. Fruit an achene. Woody climbers; petals wanting. 4. Clematis. Herbs. Achene longitudinally nerved. 5. Oxygraphts. Achene not longitudinally nerved. 6. Ranunculus. Flowers dioecious, greenish: petals none. 7. Thalictrum. lo2 Ranunculaceae 1. PAEONIA L. Peony. Perennial herbs with ternately or pinnately compound leaves and large showy flowers. Sepals 5 or 6, herbace- ous and persistent. Petals of the same number, borne with the numerous stamens on a fleshy disk. Style short or none. Follicles 2-5, thick and leathery, several- seeded. 1. P. Brownii Dougl. Glaucous and somewhat fleshy, 20-40 cm. high ; leaves mostly radical, ternately or hiternately divided, the lobes obovate to linear-spatulate; peduncles 2.5-5 cm. long; petals about equaling the sepals, brownish-red ; fol- licles usually 5, broadly oblong, smooth, 2-4 cm. long. Occasional in the foothills throughout our range. March-April. 2. AQUILEGIA L. Colimbine. Erect branching perennial herbs with ternately de- compound leaves and large showy flowers. Sepals 5, regular, petaloid, deciduous. Petals concave, spurred at base. Stamens numerous, the inner ones reduced to staminodia. Carpels 5, sessile, many-ovuled, forming heads of follicles in fruit. 1. A. truncata F. & M. Glabrous or somewhat viscid-pubes- cent,*)-^ dm. high ; leaves large, biternate, the leaflets roundish, cuneate at base, incised, the segments lobed or crenately toothed, long-petioled ; flowers scarlet, tinged with yellow, reflexed ; sepals truncate, widely spreading, shorter than the spurs; follicles 2-3 cm. long, veined, beaked by the long persistent Btyle. Occasional in moist shaily places, mostly above 25U0 feet altitude. May- July. 3. DELPHINIUM L. LARKSPUR Annual, or ours perennial, erect branching herbs with palmately divided leaves, and racemose or paniculate showy flower-. Sepals .">. the posterior one prolonged into a spur. Petals usually I. the 2 posterior spurred. Carpels few, becoming many-seeded follicles. Crowfoot Family 1 •">•'! * Flowers usually blue or purple, at least not red. 1. D. Parryi Gray. Glabrous or minutely and sparsely puber- ulent ; stems erect, 4-8 dm", high, from rather simple or few- fascicled elongated roots, neither fusiform nor tuberiform ; leaves 3-o-parted, the divisions and few lobes linear, obtuse; raceme virgate, at length rather loose; sepals mostly broadly oblong, about 10-15 mm. long, equaling the spur, deep blue, sparsely and minutely puberulent or glabrate; upper petals white-mar- gined, 7-8 mm. long; follicles about 15 mm. long, apparently glabrous and shining, but minutely puberulent under a leu-. Frequent in the footbills throughout our region. April-June. 2. D. variegatum T. & G. Usually hirsute-pubescent below ; stems erect and rather rigid, 3-6 dm. high, from rather short and closely fascicled, somewhat fusiform roots; leaves 3-5-parted, the divisions and lobes broadly linear, obtuse; raceme mostly few- flowered and rather close, sepals roundish-obovate or oval, 15-20 mm. long, equaling or exceeding the spur, violet-blue or purple, at least the spur grayish puberulent; upper petals entirely white or nearly so, about 10 mm. long; follicles about 15 mm. long, grayish puberulent. Port Ballona. March-May. 3. D. decorum F. & M. Glabrous throughout or pedicels slightly puberulent; stem lax, 2-5 dm. high; lowest leaves reni- form or orbicular in outline, 3-5-lobed or 3-5-parted, the divisions round-ovate to cuneate, entire or slightly 2-5-lobed ; upper leaves with narrow divisions ; raceme often paniculate, sparsely flowered ; pedicels slender, spreading; sepals oval, 10-15 mm. long, equal- ing the spur, blue; follicles 10-12 mm. long, erect or slightly spreading. Frequent in the San Gabriel Mountains, apparently less so in the Santa Monica Mountains and foothills about Los Angeles. 4. D. decorum patens (Benth.) Gray. More slender than the type, sometimes obscurely and sparsely pubescent; stems erect; raceme closer; pedicels ascending in fruit; sepals 8-10 mm. long. Frequent in the foothills of all our mountains. ** Flowers red. 5. D. cardinale Hook. Stems about 1 m. high, branching above; leaves deeply parted into narrow divisions, with long L54 Kanunculaceae linear or lanceolate lobes; inflorescence racemose or paniculate, many-flowered; sepals obovate, 10-15 mm. long, half as long as the narmw spur, deep red; petals usually somewhat yellowish. Frequent in the foothills, mostly below 3500 feet altitude. June-July. 4. CLEMATIS. Virgin's Bower. Ours woody climbers with opposite mostly pinnately divided leaves. Sepals usually 1. petaloid. Petals none. Stamens numerous. Pistils many, becoming achenes with long plumose styles. 1. C. lasiantha Nutt. Tomentose-pubescent ; leaves 3 foliate; leaflets 2.5-5 cm. long, mostly broadly ovate, somewhat 3-lobed and coarsely toothed, the teeth rounded; flowers polygamous, solitary or 3-5 on bibractiolate peduncles, 3-6 cm. broad; sepals broadly oblong, cream-colored; achenes pubescent. Common in the chaparral belt, clambering over shrubs. April-May. 2. C. ligusticifolia Nutt. Somewhat pubescent or nearly glabrous; leaves pinnately 5-7-foliate, or the lowest pair of leaf- lets again 3-foliate, ovate, cordate or obtuse at base, acute or acu- minate, mostly incised or rather sharply toothed ; inflorescence paniculate, many-flowered ; flowers 2-4 cm. broad, cream-colored ; achenes densely silky-pubescent. Common in canyons in all our mountains and occasionally extending into the valleys along streams. May-July. 5. OXYGRAPHIS P.unge. Perennial herbs with crenate, dentate or lobed, long petioled Leaves and small yellow flowers, solitary or 2— 7 together OH sea ] ies or scape-like peduncles. Sepals usu- ally 5, spreading, a1 length deciduous. Petals 5-15 with a nectar-pit near the base of each. Stamens and pistils numerous. Head of fruit oblong or oval or rarely suh- globose. A.chenes compressed, longitudinally striate, without a hard coat. 1. O. Cymbalaria (I'ursh) Prantl. Low, glabrous, spreading by runners; leaves mostly basal, slender petioled, cordate-oval or reniform crenate, 4-18 mm. long; scapes 3-12 cm. Long, some- Crowfoot Family L55 times bearing one or more leaves at the base; Mowers 1-7, 6-8 mm. broad; bead of fruit oblong, 6-16 mm. long; acbenes com- pressed, somewhat swollen, distinctly striate, minutely sharp- pointed. (Ranunculus Cymbalaria Pursh.) Frequent throughout our range in low moist places. March-July. 6. RANUNCULUS L. Bittercvp. Annua] or perennial herbs, with alternate or mostly basal simple entire, lobed, divided or dissected leaves, and yellow, white or sometimes red flowers. Sepals mostly 5, deciduous. Petals equal in number or more, conspicuous or minute, bearing a nectariferous pit and sometimes a scale at base of blade. Achenes capitate or rarely spicate. generally flattened, smooth, papillose or pectinate, sometimes transversely wrinkled, beaked with a minute or elongated style. * Terrestrial herbs; flowers mostly yellow. 1. R. Californicus Bentb. Mostly pubescent and hirsute; stems branching, 2-6 dm. high ; radical leaves usually pinnately ternate, the leaflets lanciniately cut into 3-7, usually linear lobes ; flowers 1-2 cm. broad; petals 7-15; achenes 3.5 mm. long, flat- tened, slightly margined, beaked with the short straight or slightly curved style. Frequent on the mesas and in open places in the foothills. February- April. 2. R. hebecarpus H. & A. Slender, 15-30 cm. high, branched, pilose-pubescent; leaves of rounded outline, deeply lobed or cleft, the segments 3-lobed; flowers minute, on filiform pedicels; achenes few in a globose head, rounded and flattened, papillose and pubescent; beak short, recurved. Growing in moist shady places, not common. Oak Knoll; Santa Monica Mountains. March-May. ** Aquatics with finely dissected leaves and while flowers. 3. R. trichophyllus Chaix. Submerged; stems branching, usually 3 dm. long or more; leaves petioled, 2.5-5 cm. long, flaccid and collapsing when withdrawn from the water, repeat- edly forked with capillary divisions; flowers white, 12-18 mm 156 Berberidaceae broad, on stout peduncles 2.5-5 cm. long; achenes transversely wrinkled. Occasional in ponds and slow-running streams. -May-August. 7. THALICTRUM L. Meadow-rue. Erecl perennial herbs with ternately decompound leaves and (ours) with small greenish dioecious panicled flowers. Sepals 4-5. Petals none. Stamens many. Achenes few-ribbed or nerved, stipitate or nearly sessile. 1. T. polycarpum Wats. Usually robust, 6-12 din. high, glabrous throughout; leaves of ratber thin texture; achenes numerous, forming a globular bead in fruit, 6 mm. high, vesic- ular, obovate or somewhat orbicular, usually only the midveina apparent. Common in the foothill region, mostly below 4000 feet altitude. April- June. Family 32. BERBERIDACEAE. Barberry Family. Shrubs or herbs with alternate or basal, simple or compound leaves, with or without stipules, and solitary or racemed, mostly terminal, perfect flowers. Sepals and petals generally imbricated in several series. Stamens as many as the petals and opposite them, hypogynous ; anthers extrorse. opening by valves. Pistil 1 : style short ; ovules 2— many, anatropous. Fruit a berry or capsule. 1. BERBERIS L. BABBEBRY. Shrubs with yellow wood and inner hark, hitter. Leaves mostly pinnately compound and spinulose-den- tate. Flowers racemose, yellow. Sepals 6 9, petaloid, bracted, each with '2 glands at base. Petals (i. imbricated in 2 series. Stamens c, irritable, closing around the stigma when touched on the inner face near the base. Pistil 1 : stigma peltate. Berry t-few-seeded. Lauraceae 157 1. B. dictyota Jepson. Shrub, 4-12 dm. high, rather sparsely leafy ; leaflets 5-7, glaucescent on the upper surface, somewhat paler beneath and prominently reticulate-veiny, strongly undu- late, the margins spinose-dentate, the teeth few and rather remote; racemes terminal, clustered, 2-5 cm. long; berries blue- Mack, with bloom. Occasional on dry ridges. Near Glendale, Davidson; Switzer's trail, San Gabriel Mountains. l\ B. Nevinii Gray. Shrub 2-3 m. high; leaflets pale, lanceo- late or oblong-lanceolate, often acuminate, teeth not remote, spinulose-serrate, 1-2.5 cm. long; racemes loosely 5-7 flowered, equaling or surpassing the leaves; pedicels slender. Fernando, where it was first collected by Nevin. Family 33. LAURACEAE. Laurel Family. Aromatic trees or shrubs with alternate entire minute- ly punctate exstipulate leaves and perfect or unisexual yellow or greenish flowers, in panicles or racemes. ('alvx 4-6-parted, segments imbricated in 2 series. Co- rolla none. Stamens in 3-4 series, some of them often imperfect; anthers 2— 1-celled, opening by valves. Ovary superior, free from the calyx, 1-celled ; ovule sol- itary, anatropous, pendulose ; style 1 ; stigma 1. Fruit a 1-seeded drupe. 1. UMBELLULARIA Xutt. California Laurel or Bay Tree. Trees with thick evergreen petioled leaves and perfect flowers, borne in terminal or axillary pedunculate umbels, which are included before expansion in an involucre consisting of 4 broad deciduous bracts. Calyx 6-parted, deciduous. Stamens 9, inserted on the throat in 3 rows, the 3 inner with a fleshy 2-lobed stipitate gland at the base, alternating with 3 ligulate staminodia ; anthers 4, 4-valved, the outer introrse, the inner extrorse. The stigma dilated, somewhat lobed. Drupe subglobose or ovoid, subtended by the thickened base of the calyx. 158 Papaveraceae 1. U. Californica (H. & Ai) Nutt. Tree 4-15 m. high, grow- ing parts and inflorescence somewhat puberulent; leaves shining, dark green, lanceolate-oblong, 5-10 cm. long; peduncles in 4 ter- minal panicles or solitary in the upper axils, 6-10-flowered ; sepals 3-5 nun. long, oblong-ovate; stamens included; drupes solitary or 2-3 in a cluster, 2 cm. long, becoming dark purple with thin pulp and stone. Throughout our range in canyons, or on mountain slopes where it is often reduced to an arborescent shrub. January-April. Fruit in November. Family 34. PAPAVERACEAE. Poppy Family. Herbs or rarely shrubs with white, yellow or color- less sap and alternate exstipnlate leaves or the upper rarely opposite. Flowers solitary or in clusters, perfect, regular or irregular. Sepals distinct" or united into a calyptra, caducous, 2, rarely -"> or 4. Petals 4-6 or rarely none, imbricated, deciduous. Stamens numerous or few, hypogynous, distinct, filaments filiform; anthers open- ing by a longitudinal slit. Ovary 1, many-ovuled, mostly 1-celled, the carpels rarely becoming distinct in fruit ; style short, stigma simple or divided ; ovules an- atropous. Fruit a capsule, generally dehiscent by pores or valves. Flowers regular. Uppermost leaves opposite. Filaments very broad; carpels distinct in fruit. 1. Pi.atystkmon. Filaments Aliform or nearly so; capsule 1-celled. 2. Platystigma. Leaves all alternate. Flowers large, white. Perennial; capsule many-celled. 3. ROMNBYA. Annual; capsule 1-celled. 7. ARGBMONB. Flowers yellow or orange. Shrub; Aowers yellow. -1. Uendromecon. Herbs; flowers usually orange. .'>. ESSCBSCHOLTZIA. Flowers reddish. Stigmas tufted at the end of the short Style. 6. MBCONOPSia Stigmas sessile, radiate. B. Papavbr, Flowers Irregular. 9. Bigdcolla. Poppy Family 1-V.t 1. PLATYSTEMON Benth. Ckeam Cup. Low villous annuals with entire mainly « >j >| •< >^i t < • leaves and cream-colored flowers. Sepals .">. Petals 6. Stamens many with flattened filaments and linear an- thers. Carpels 6-25, at tirst united; stigmas linear free. Fruit of as many distinct linear indehiscent torulose pods, 3-8-seeded, at length breaking transversly between the seeds. 1. P. Californicum Benth. Slender, branching from the base, more or less decumbent, 15-30 cm. high, pilose; leaves 5-8 cm. long, sessile or clasping, broadly linear ; peduncles erect, 8-20 cm. long; sepals villous; petals 6-12 mm. long, cream-yellow, sometimes shading to yellow toward the base; carpels 6-25, forming an oblong head, 10-20 mm. long, beaked by the persist- ent stigmas. Common in sandy soil throughout our range below 3000 feet altitude. March-May. 2. PLATYSTIGMA Benth. Low slender annuals with leaves, sepals and petals as in Platystemon. Stamens 6-12 ; filaments filiform or nearly so. Ovary 1-celled with 3 parietal placenta?, somewhat 3-lobed or nearly terete; stigmas ovate to subulate. Capsule 3-valved3 dehiscent through the placenta'. 1. P. denticulata Greene. Glabrous, branching, 8-25 cm. high ; lower leaves spatulate or the small blade rhombic-ovate and narrowed into a broad petiole, 1-3 cm. long; upper spatulate or linear-oblong, entire or denticulate; petals narrow, oblong, 2-4 mm. long; stamens 6-9; anthers linear, equaling or exceed- ing the filaments. Occasional in shady places in the foothills. March-May. 3. ROMNEYA Harv. Matilija Poppy. Smooth stout erect perennial herbs, with colorless juice, pinnately divided alternate leaves and very large 160 • Papaveraceae showy flowers. Sepals .">, with a broad membranaceous dorsal wing. Petals 6. Stamens numerous, with fili- form filaments somewhat thickened below, and oblong anthers. Ovary oblong, densely setose, more or less completely several-celled by the intrusion of the many- ovuled placenta ; valves 7-12, opening from the summit downward. Seeds finely tuberculate. 1. R. Coulteri Harv. Herbaceous stem 1-2.5 m. high, from a soft woody base, branching above, glabrous glaucescent ; leaves of firm texture, pinnately parted or divided, petioled, 6-12 cm. long ; divisions 3-9, cuneate-oblong or lanceolate, dentate, the ter- minal 3-cleft, margins and rachis often sparsely ciliolate-spinulose; flowers terminating the branches; sepals smooth, petals delicate, 4-6 cm. long. Occasional in canyons. Santa Ana Mountains; Puente Hills. It also occurs in Ventura County. 2. R. trichocalyx Eastwood. Closely resembling the last in habit, leaves thinner, divisions narrower; sepals setose. Occasional in the canyons of San Diego County, also in Santa Barbara and Ventura Counties. To be expected within our range. 4. DENDROMECON Benth. Bush Poppy. Smooth branching shrubs with alternate vertical thick rigid entire or ciliolate-denticulate leaves, and showy yellow flowers. Sepals 2. Petals 4. Stamens numer- ous, with short filiform filaments and linear anthers. Ovary linear, 1-celled and with '2 nerve-like placenta'. elastically 2-valved from the base upward ; valves striate- costate. Seeds oval or globose, finely pitted, carunculate at the h i 1 iu ii i. 1. D. rigidum Benth. Shrub 1-3 m. high, with many slender branches and light-colored bark; leaves pale or glaucescent, lanceolate and cuspidate-acuminate, varying to oblong and obtuse with rigid mucro, entire or rarely ciliolate-denticulate, reticulate- veiny with strong midrib, short-petinled, 2-ti cm. long; flowcr- brighl yellow, 2-4 cm. broad; capsule arcuate, 4-6 cm. long. Prequenl in the ohaparral belt. Flowering nearly throughout the year. Poppy Family I'll 5. ESCHSCHOLTZIA Cham. California Poppy. Smooth glaucous annual or perennial herbs, with colorless bitter juice, finely dissected leaves and brighl orange or yellow Mowers. Sepals coherent into a narrow pointed hood, deciduous at anthesis from a dilated torus. Petals 4, borne on the torus. Stamens numerous, with short filaments and Linear anthers. Ovary Linear, with ■ •J aerve-like placenta' ; styles short ; stigmas divided into 4-6 linear unequally divergent lobes. Capsule elongated. 10-nerved, 1-eelled, dehiscent by 2 valves separating from placental ribs. Seeds globose, reticulate or rough tuberculate. 1. E. Californica Cham. Root perennial, thick and branch- ing; stems branching decumbent or ascending, leafy; herbage glabrous ; calyx about 2 cm. long, conical ; petals flabelliform , 4 cm. long or less, usually orange, sometimes paler; rim of torus expanded, 2-4 mm. wide; seeds reticulated. Not common within our limits. Sierra Madre; San Fernando Mountains near Chatsworth Park. March-May. 2. E. peninsularis Greene. Annual, smooth and rather glau- cous; scapose or at length freely branching, 10-25 cm. high; petals golden yellow or orange, flabelliform or broadly cuneate, 4 cm. long or less; rim of torus expanded, 2-4 mm. broad ; seeds reticulated. Common in sandy soil throughout our range in the valleys. March-May. 3. E. hypecoides Benth. Scabrous or hirsute, pubescent below, glabrous above, glaucescent ; branches many and rather slender from an annual root, decumbent at base, about 30 cm. high or less, leafy; leaf segments few, linear-cuneiform; calyx oblong-conic, 1 cm. long; petals 2 cm. long or less, orange; torus short, tubular or turbinate, without expanded rim to the outer margin, the inner erect, hyaline; seeds faintly reticulated. Santa Monica Mountains, not common. 6. MECONOPSIS Vigner. Ours slender erect leafy annuals, with orange-colored juice and scarlet or orange-red flowers. Sepals '2. 162 Papaveraeeae Petals 4. Stamens numerous. Ovary and capsule tipped with a style and with a globose mass of stigmas, 1-celled and with 4-8 more or less intruded placentas, dehiscenl by only as many shorl teeth or valves at the summit. 1. M. heterophylla Benth. Glabrous or sparsely pilose- pubescent below, 3-r widely spreading, slender attenuate, 3-5 cm. long, on pedicels 2-3 mm. long. (Sisymbrium reflexum Nutt.) Common in dry ground both in the valleys and foothills. 2. T. lasiophyllum inalienum Robinson. Size and habit of the type; petals yellow or yellowish; siliques erect or slightly spreading. [Sisymbrium acutangulum Brew. & Wats.) Hills about Los Angeles. 3. CAULANTHUS Watson. Stout erect biennials, with pinnatifid, toothed or nearly entire leaves and purple or greenish-white flowers. Se- pals about equal, saccate at base. Petals slightly longer, undulate-crisped, claw broad, blade rhomboidal scarcely broader than claw. Anthers linear, sagittate at base. curved. Stigma somewhat 2-lobed, the lobes parallel with the valves. Pods terete, elongated, sessile upon the receptacle ; valves 1-nerved. Seeds in 1 row, oblong, somewhat flattened, scarcely or not at all margined. Cotyledons incumbent. 1. C. amplexicaulis Wats. Glaucous annual, rather slender and rlexuous, simple or more frequently with several spreading branches; leaves elliptic-oblong or the upper broadly cordate- clasping, subentire often ascending; pedicels 8-24 mm. long, widely spreading. Near San Fernando, Davidson. 4. STREPTANTHUS Nutt. Erect branching often glaucous annual or biennial herbs, with entire or toothed rarely pinnatifid leaves Mustard Family 167 ami purple <>r white flowers. Sepals ovate or oblong, equal at base or 1 or rarely both pair saccate at base, usually colored, their tips erect or spreading. Petals narrow or with a well developed blade and channeled claw, twisted or undulate. The longer filaments some- times connate: anthers elongated, sagittate at base. Pod linear, compressed ; valves 1-nerved. Seeds in 1 row. flattened and more or less winged. Cotyledons accumbent. 1. S. heterophyllus Xutt. More or less pubescent through- out with spreading simple hairs; stem usually simple, 1 m. high or less; leaves linear, at least the lowest pinnatirid with divaricate lobes or toothed, the upper usually entire; flowers purplish or white, 8-12 mm. long; calyx narrow; sepals slightly saccate; pods abruptly reflexed on slender pedicels 5-7 cm. long, about 1.5 mm. wide, beaked by a slender style; seeds small and crowded, narrowly winged. Occasional throughout our range; confined mostly to the chaparral belt. April-May. 5. LEPIDIUM L. Peppkrgrass. Erect or diffuse, glabrous or pubescent, annual or rarely biennial or perennial herbs, with pinnatirid, lobed or entire leaves and racemose white or whitish flowers. Petals small or rarely wanting. Stamens often fewer than 6. Stigmas, in ours, sessile or nearly so. Silicles oblong or obovate, flattened contrary to the partition, more or less emarginately winged at the apex ; valves keeled, dehiscent. Seeds 1 in each cell, flattened. Coty- ledons incumbent or rarely accumbent. * Capsule merely emaryinate. •*- Pedicels terete. 1. L. medium Greene. Glabrous or nearly so; stems simple below, branching above, erect, 2-9 cm. high; leaves lanceolate, dentate, rarely pinnatirid; stem leaves entire; pedicels slender, 168 Cruciferae terete, spreading or divaricate, longer than the capsule ; stamens 2-4; capsule orbicular retuse, glahrous. Common in the valleys and mountains throughout our range. ■*-•*- Pedicels flattened. 2. L«. lasiocarpum Nutt. Low, brandling from or near the base, decumbent or ascending, hirsute with spreading hairs or somewhat tomentulose; lower leaves pinnately parted, segments usually rather broad, obtuse or rounded, sparingly toothed or entire; racemes several ; pedicels distinctly flattened, horizontally spreading, 3 mm. long; capsule suborbicular, thin-margined near the apex, hispid pubescent upon both faces or at least upon the margins. Sand-dunes along the seashore. 3. L. nitidum Nutt. Erect or usually branched from the base and spreading, 1-3 dm. high, glabrate or somewhat pubescent; lower leaves deeply pinnatifid with narrow rachis and alternate segments; the upper leaves often entire; racemes 1 -several, loosely flowered ; petals considerably exceeding the sepals; pedi- cels strongly flattened, spreading ; capsule smooth, shining, often purplish, 4-5 mm. long. Very common on grassy plains and hills. February-March. ** Apex of capsule produced into £ distinct teeth or lobes. 4. L. acutidens (Gray) Howell. Branching from the base, decumbent or ascending, 10-20 cm. long, pubescent throughout with short spreading hairs; leaves linear tapering at both ends, entire or faintly and remotely denticulate, 2-5 cm. long, about 2 mm. wide; branches flowering about % their length ; racemes rather loose; pedicels strongly flattened, appressed to the stem to near the middle, then curving outward; pod strongly reticulated, sparsely pubescent, 4 mm. long including the acute teeth, about .''» nun. broad ; sinus about 1 mm. deep and 2 mm. broad at tip. (L. dictyotum acutidens r perennial branching herbs with angled stems, pinnatind leavesand racemose yellow flowers. Silique elongated, linear, 4-angled ; valveskeeled orribbed; style short: stigma 2-lobed or capitate. Seeds in 1 row in each cell, flat, oblong, marginless. Cotyle- dons accumbent. 1. B. Barbarea (L.) MacM. Tufted stems erect, 3-6 dm. high; lower leaves petioled, 5-12 cm. long, lyrately-pinnatifid, segments oval or obovate, repand-toothed or sometimes entire ; upper leaves sessile, rarely clasping; flowers yellow, 6-8 mm. broad; pods spreading or ascending, about 2 cm. long, obscurely 4-angled; pedicels about 4 mm. long. (B. vulgaris R. Br.) Moist places in the mountains, confined mostly to the pine belt. June- August. 11. RORIPA Scop. Branching herbs with simple or pinnate-lobed, dissected or rarelv entire leaves and yellow or white flowers. Sepals spreading. Stamens often less than 6. Pods short or elongated, terete or nearly so, sessile on the receptacle ; valves faintly 1-nerved or nerveless. Styles short or slender. Seeds turgid, minute, in 2 rows in each cell. Cotyledons accumbent. * Flowers white. 1. R. Nasturtium (L.) Rusby. (Watercress.) Aquatic, gla- brous; stems branching, floating or creeping, rooting from the nodes; leaves odd-pinnate; leaflets 3-11, roundish or oblong, 17'J Cruciferae nearly entire; racemes elongated in fruit; flowers white, 4-5 mm. broad; petals twice the length of the sepals; pods 1-3 cm. long, 2 nun. wide, spreading and slightly curved upward, on pedicels of about their own length. (Nasturtium officinale R. Br.) Common in streams. May-October. ** Flowers yellow. 2. R. curvisiliqua (Hook.) Bessey. Annual or biennial, spar- ingly pubescent or glabrous, with erect or ascending, usually much branched stems, 15-45 cm. high; leaves mostly oblanceolate in outline, pinnatifid, pinnately lobed or toothed, the lower 25-75 nun. long; racemes short; Mowers pale yellow, 4 mm. broad; petals slightly exceeding the sepals; style short; pods linear, 8-15 mm. long, about 1.5 mm. wide, strongly curved upward; pedicels spreading or ascending. Frequent in low ground, about ponds and on river bottoms. Variable in foliage characters. 12. CARD AMINE L. Erect or ascending herbs mostly growing in marshes or along watercourses, with running rootstocks or fibrous roots, entire, lobed or divided leaves and racemose or corymbose, white or purple flowers. Stamens usually (>. Siliques elongated, flat, generally erect ; valves nerveless, elastically dehiscent at maturity, sessile on the receptacle. Seeds in 1 row in each cell, compressed, marginless. Cotyledons accumbent, equal or unequal. 1. C. Gambellii Wats. Rather stout, 6-9 dm. high, branched, decumbent at base and rooting at the lower joints, glabrous or sparingly soft villous; leaves mostly basal, persisting in a rosu- late cluster, pinnately divided; leaflets -t-fi pairs, ovate to oblong-linear, usually cuneate at base and acute, mostly few- toothed, 6-24 mm. long; raceme nearly sessile, becoming elon- gated; flowers white, 6-8 mm. broad; pedicels slender, divaricate; pods about the same length, narrow, erect or ascending, often curved ; style slender, 2 mm. long. Frequent in marshes and wet places in the valleys. Mustard Family 17:; 13. DENT ARIA L. Perennial herbs growing in damp woods, with fleshy tuberous rootstocks, erect mostly unbranched stems and more < >r less divided leaves. Flowers large, white or often tinged with purple. Petal? much longer than the sepals with slender claw and ovate spreading blades. Siliques linear, flattened, their valves uerveless. Seeds in 1 row in each cell, wingless. Cotyledons thick often unequal, accumbent. 1. D. Californica Nutt. Kootstock slender, tubers small; stem 2-3 dm. high, rather stout, simple or branched above, gla- brous or nearly so; basal leaves entire or 3-foliate, the leaflets petiolulate, suborbicular, sinuate or coarsely toothed ; cauline 2-4, mostly shortly petioled and above the middle of the stem, deeply lobed or pinnately 3-5-foliate, rarely simple, the leaflets mostly petiolate, ovate to lanceolate-linear, entire or toothed, 2-7 cm. long; flowers white or rose-colored ; pods 2-6 cm. long; style 4-6 mm. long; seeds oblong. Frequent in damp shady places in the mountains and foothills. March- April. 14. TROPIDOCARPUM Hook. Slender erect branching annuals, more or less hirsute- pubescent with simple hairs or with a few forked ones intermingling. Leaves pinnatifid. Flowers yellow, borne in loose leafy-bracted racemes. Sepals concave, spreading, equal at base. Petals spatulate-obovate. Stamens tetradynamous ; anthers short, rounded. Stig- ma circular or slightly emarginate, on a slender style. Silique partially or completely 2-celled, ours obcom- pressed, sometimes twisted. 1. T. gracile Hook. Stems slender, erect or spreading, usu- ally 15-25 cm. long, more or less pubescent; leaves shallowly or deeply pinnatifid, the segments acutish, cleft or entire ; cauline leaves reduced; pedicels axillary, spreading, 6-20 mm. long; 174 Cruciferae pods lance-linear to linear, 1-2 cm. long, strongly obcom pressed throughout; seeds in 2 rows in each cell. Frequent in our interior valleys. March-May. 2. T. dubium Davidson. Much resembling the last in habit, foliage and pubescence; capsule linear, 2-celled and strongly obcompressed above the middle, by a twist becoming compressed below and only 1-celled. Frequent about Los Angeles. This species is very closely related to the lasl and may prove to be only a tortological form. March-May. 15. DITHYREA liar v. Low branching annuals, with stout stems and thickish ovate or orbicular subentire leaves, the whole herbage more or less cinerous-tomentose with stellate hairs. En- florescence racemose, dense, often branched. Flowers whitish or purple. Sepals ovate to oblong, erect or spreading, pubescent. Petals conspicuous with spreading blade and slender (daw. Stamens. 6 with linear sagittate anthers. Pods strongly obcompressed, 2-celled : the cells nearly orbicular, indehiscenl with a thickend mar- gin, separating at maturity from the persistent linear axis. 1-seeded; Seeds flat, marginless. Cotyledons accumbent. I. D. Californica maritima Davidson. Branching from the base, 15-30 cm. high; leaves thick, fleshy, densely pubescent, the basal narrowed to slender petioles, the upper sessile, coarsely t not lied or subentire; racemes short, very dense, elongated in fruit; flowers about 12-1") mm. broad; limb purplish; pedicels dark purple ; pods 8-10 mm. wide, half as long, emarginate above and below, pubescent on the margins. Occasional along the seashore between Redondo and Port Mallonn. L6. HUTCHINSIA R. Br. Low slender mostly diffuse herbs, more or less pubes- eent with forked hairs, ours animal with entire or pin- nately lobed leaves and minute white Mowers in terminal Mustard Family 1 i 5 racemes. Stamens 6. Style none or very short. Sili- cles ovalj obcompressed, the valves strongly 1-nerved. Seeds numerous in each cell. Cotyledons incumbent or accumbent. 1. H. procumbens (L.) Desv. Branching from the base, Blender, ascending or procumbent, 5-20 cm. long; lower leaven short-petioled, pinnatifid, lobed, dentate or sometimes entire. L— 2.5 cm. long ; uppear leaves sessile or nearly so, entire or lobed ; pedicels slender, ascending or spreading, 6-12 mm. Ion.; in fruit : pods elliptic or oval, obtuse, rarely emarginate, 3-4 mm. long. Capsella divaricata Walp. ; ('. elliptica Meyer.) In moist saline places throughout our range. March-April. 17. BURSA Weber. Shepard's Purse. Erect annual herbs, pubescent with forked hairs. Basal leaves tufted. Flowers racemose, small, white. Silicles cuneate-obcordate, obcompressed, the valves keeled. Style short. Seeds numerous in each cell, marginless. Cotyledons accumbent. 1. B. Bursa-pastoris (L.) Britton. Erect, branching, 15-40 cm. high, pubescent below, mostly glabrous above; basal leaves lobed or pinnatifid, forming a rosette, 5-12 cm. long; cauline leaves few, lanceolate, auricled, dentate or entire; flowers 2 mm. broad; pedicels slender, spreading or ascending, 10-14 mm. long in fruit; pods triangular, more or less deeply emarginate at the apex, rarely truncate, 4-fi mm. long. (Capsella Bursa-pastoris Medic.) Common weed in gardens and waste places. Flowering at all times of the year. 18. DEABA L. Low tufted mostly stellate-pubescent herbs, with sea- pose or leafy stems, simple leaves and racemose flowers. Silicles elliptic, oblong or rarely linear, compressed. Stigma entire or nearly so. Valves dehiscent nerveless. Cotvledons accumbent. 176 Cruciferae 1. D. cuneifolia Nutt. Annual, loosely stellate-pubescent throughout, branching from the base, the branches slender, 8-15 cm. long, leafy below ; leaves obovate to oblanceolate, acute or acutish, entire or few-toothed, 1-5 cm. long; raceme peduncu- late, at length elongated, loosely flowered; flowers small, white; pods linear-oblong, 6-10 mm. long, many-seeded, hispid with appressed simple hairs; fruiting pedicels divaricate, 2-6 mm. long; stigma sessile or nearly so. Occasional in dry sandy soil in the foothills and the interior valleys. The two varieties are more common. 2. D. cuneifolia integrifolia Wats. Smaller than the type, 2-5 cm. high; leaves smaller, mostly entire; capsule glabrous; pedicels 2 mm. long or less. Same range as the type and apparently more common. 3. D. cuneifolia Sonorae (Greene) Parish. Much resembling the type in size and habit; racemes often nearly sessile; capsules hispid with stellate hairs. Same range as the type and the most common form with us. 19. ATHYSANUS Greene. Slender diffuse annual, leafy only near the base. Leaves simple, toothed. Sepals equal. Petals without claws. Stamens 6, equal. Silieles orbicular not winged or margined, 1-eelled and 1-ovuled. 1. A. pusillus (Hook.) Greene. Hirsute-pubescent; stems filiform, branching from the base, the branches mostly ascend- ing, unilaterally racemose throughout ; leaves few, ovate, sparingly toothed, 1 cm. long; flowers minute, often apetalous; pods lentic- ular, more or less uncinate hispid, 2 mm. long or less. Frequent in the chaparral belt throughout our range. March-May. I'm. THYSANOCARPUS Hook. Lace Pod. Krccl and slender, sparingly branched annuals with minute white or rose-colored flowers in slender elongated racemes. Stamens 6j tetradynamous or rarely only 1. Capsule compressed, orbicular, L-celled, t-ovuled, inde- biscent, winged ; the wings entire crenate or perforated. Mustard Family 177 1. T. curvipes Hook. More or less hirsute, 2 dm. high or more, branching above; basal leaves rosulate, oblong, pinnatirid with short blunt lobes or dentate; upper leaves lanceolate, sag- ittate-auriculate, clasping at base, 1-2 cm. long; pedicels very slender, 3-6 mm. long, strongly recurved ; capsule usually pubes- cent; wings entire or crenate. Frequent on grassy slopes. March-April. 2. T. laciniatus Nutt. Smooth or nearly so, and somewhat glaucous, 2-4 dm. high; leaves rather thin, the basal ones not form- ing a rosette, linear, entire to deeply pinnatirid into narrow linear >t"_rtnents, upper leaves entire, 20-25 mm. long, 2-4 mm. wide, narrowed at base, racemes 10-20 cm. long; pods elliptic to orbic- ular, 3-3.5 mm. in diameter, including the entire or slightly crenate wing, reticulate, glabrous or sometimes somewhat pubes- cent ; pedicels slender, spreading and becoming more or less derlexed. Occasional on shaded slopes in the canyons of the Santa Monica, San Gabriel and Santa Ana Mountains, mostly below 3000 feet altitude. 21. SOPHIA Adans. Annual or perennial herbs, canescent or pubescent with short forked hairs, with slender branching' stems, 2-pinnatifid or finely dissected leaves and small yellow flowers in terminal racemes, these becoming elongated in fruit. Calyx early deciduous. Style very short. Siliques linear or linear-oblong, slender-pedicelled, the valves 1 -nerved. Seeds minute, oblong, wingless, in 1 or 2 rows in each cell. Cotyledons incumbent. 1. S. pinnata (Walt.) Howell. Densely canescent through- out, pale; stem erect, branched, 2-7 dm. high, slender, the branches ascending; leaves 5-10 cm. long, oblong, 2-pinnatifid into very numerous small, toothed or entire, obtuse segments; pedicels very slender, widely spreading, 10-15 mm. long; pods horizontal or ascending, oblong or linear-oblong, somewhat com- pressed, 6-8 mm. long, 2 mm. wide, canescent or glabrous; seeds in 2 rows in each cell. (Sisymbrium canescens Nutt.) Common in sandy soil in the foothills and valleys. April-June. 2. S. incisa (Engelm.) Greene. Glabrous or somewhat glandu- lar-hairy, 3-6 dm. high, freely branching; leaves pinnately 1 , 8 Cruciferae divided, the segments lanceolate or linear-lanceolate, incisely serrate; petals lanceolate-spatulate, surpassing the petals; pedi- cels 4-6 mm. long, spreading, exceeded by the spreading or curved-ascending, nearly or quite glabrous capsule; seeds in 1 row in each cell. Frequent in the pine belt of the San Bernardino Mountains and to be ex- pected within our range. 22. ARABIS L. Annual or perennial, glabrous or pubescenl herbs with entire, lobed or pinnatifid leaves and white or purple flowers. Siliques Linear, elongated, compressed, with smooth or keeled mostly L-nerved valves, not elastic, dehiscent at maturity. Stigma nearly entire or 2-lobed. Seeds in 1 or 2 rows in each cell, flattened, winged or wingless. Cotyledons accumbent. * Seeds in 1 row in each cell. 1. A. Virginica (L.) Trelease. Annual or rarely biennial, glahrate; steins ascending or decumbent, 1.5-3 dm. high ; leaves oblong, narrow, deeply pinnatifid, 2.5-7 cm. long, the lower petioled, the upper nearly sessile; pedicels spreading or ascend- ing, 4 mm. long in fruit; flowers very small, white; pods linear, ascending, KJ-24 mm. long, about 2 mm. broad; seeds in 1 row in each cell, nearly as broad as the pod, orbicular, wing-margined. (A. Ludoviciana C. A. Meyer.) Inglewood in low ground. Our plants have the leaves often merely dentate. March. 2. A. repanda Wats. Biennial; stem stout, branching, 3 dm. high or more, pubescent throughout with mostly stellate hairs, usually longer and simple at base ; leaves narrowly obovate to oblanceolate, 3-10 cm. long, sparingly toothed or nearly entire, those of the stem narrowed to a winged petiole, acute or obtuse ; flowers white, small ; petals narrow, 4 mm. long, slightly exceed- ing the calyx; pods recurved-spreadin_', faintly l-nerved at the base, seeds elliptic, broadly winged. Occasional in tin- upper portions of the pine belt in the San Gabrltl and San Bernardino Mount alns Mustard Family 179 ** Seeds in t rows in each cell. 3. A. glabra (L.) Bernli. Biennial; erect, pubescent below, glabrous and glaucous above, simple or somewhat branched, 5-10 dm. high; basal leaves petioled, 5-15 cm. long, oblanceolate or oblong, dentate or sometimes lyrate, pubescent with simple hairs, those of the stem with sagittate base, glabrous, entire or the Lower dentate, 5-10 cm. long, lanceolate or oblong, acutish ; flowers yellowish white, 4 mm. broad; pedicels 4-10 mm. long, erf ft : pods narrowly linear, 5-7 cm. long, 1 mm. wide, erect and appressed; seeds in 2 rows in each cell, marginless ; style none. (A. perfoliata Lam.) Frequent in the foothills throughout our range. 23. CHEIRANTHUS L. Wallflower. Ours biennial or perennial more or less pubescent herbs, with simple entire or toothed leaves. Flowers mostly yellow. Siliques elongated, linear, 4-angled; valves strongly keeled. Stigma lobed. Seeds oblong, in 1 row in each cell, marginless or narrowly margined at apex. Cotyledons incumbent. ( Erysimum. ) 1. C. angustatus Greene. Perennial; rather stout, erect, 5 dm. high or more; leaves narrowly linear-lanceolate, entire or few-toothed, few and scattered above, densely clothing the basal part of the herbaceous stem and short sterile branches of the short subligneous caudex, the whole plant subcinerous with appressed 2-forked hairs; calyx-lobes 10-12 mm. long; petals yellow, the lower pair parallel to each other, the upper divergent from each other; pods in a long lax raceme, 4-sided, ascending. Occasional in the foothills of the Santa Monica and Santa Ana Moun- tains. 2. C. suffrutescens Abrams. Perennial ; often much branch- ed, the branches woody, 1 m. long or less, usually straggling among low shrubs, rough from the persistent bases of the old leaves, usually about 5 mm. thick; floral branches clustered at the ends of the main branches, slender, 3-4 dm. long; leaves scattered along the floral branches, densely clothing their bases, very narrowly linear-oblanceolate, 2-3 mm. broad, entire or remotely and obscurely denticulate, these as well as the branches lso Capparidaceae cinerous with appressed 2-forked hairs; calyx-lobes ii-7 nun. long; petals yellow, cruciform; pods in rather short hut lax racemes, on pedicels about 8 mm. long, widely spreading, straight or slightly curved upwards, 4-sided, 1. o-l. 75 nun. broad, 5-6 cm. long; beak slender, scarcely 1 mm. broad and but little longer; seeds brownish, about 1.5 mm. long. Common on the sand-dunes along the seashore. Flowering nearly the year round. 24. KONIG Adans. Sweet Ai.yssi m. Perennial herbs, pubescent or canescent with forked hairs, with entire leaves and small white flowers in ter- minal racemes. Petals obovate, entire. Filaments slen- der, with 'J small -lands at the base. Capsule compressed, oval or orbicular. Seeds l in each cell. Cotyledons accumbent. 1. K. maritima (L.) R. Br. Ascending or sometimes pro- cumbent, freely branching, 1-3 dm. high, minutely pubescent with appressed hairs ; basal leaves oblanceolate, narrowed into a petiole ; flowers white, fragrant, about 4 mm. broad; fruiting pedicels ascending, 6-8 mm. long; capsules glabrous, pointed, oval or nearly orbicular, 2-3 mm. long. (Alyssum maritimum L.) An escape from gardens, along streets and in waste places. Flowering nearly throughout the year. Family 36. CAPPARIDACEAE. Capeb Family. Herbs or rarely shrubs or trees with pungent or acrid watery juiee, simple or palmately compound alternate leaves and axillary or terminal, solitary or racemose, mostly regular and perfect flowers. Sepals 4. Petals 1. Bessile or clawed. Stamens usually 6, equal, inserted on the receptacle ; anthers oblong, longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary sessile or stipitate, L-celled ; ovules many, borne on parietal placenta'. Fruit a capsule or berry. Seeds mostly reniform ; endosperm none; cotyledons some- what coiled. 1. Cl.EOMK. Shrill. s. 8. [BOHBBIB. Caper Family 181 1. CLEOME L. Ours branching herbs with digitately 3-5-foliate Leaves and yellow flowers in bracteolate racemes. Sepals 1. often persistent. Petals 4, cruciate, entire, equal. Sta- mens 6. Ovary stipitate with gland at the l>ase. Cap- sule elongated, long-st ipitate, many-seeded. 1. C. lutea Hook. Erect, glabrous, branching, 4-12 dm. high ; leaves 5-foliate, slender-petioled or the upper 3-foliate and sub- sessile ; leaflets oblong or oblong-oblaneeolate, entire, short-stalked or sessile, narrowed at the base, obtuse or acute and mucronulate at the apex, 1-5 cm. long; bracts linear-oblong, mucronulate; flowers densely racemose; pedicels slender, 10-12 mm. long; pod linear, acute, 3-6 cm. long, borne on a stipe nearly as long. Field near Downey, Daridion. 2. ISOMERIS Nutt. Ill-scented shrubs with puberulent branches, 3-foliate petioled leaves and large yellow flowers axillary or in bracteate racemes. Sepals 4, persistent. Petals 4, oblong, equal. Receptacle dilated with a hemispherical torus. Stamens 6, inserted on the receptacle, enlarged and glan- dular on the upper surface. Ovary long-stipitate, many- ovuled on the placentae ; style short ; stigma minute. Capsule oval or nearly globose, inflated, tardily 2-valved. Seeds smooth. 1. I. arborea Nutt. Widely branching shrub, 1-3 m. high, with hard yellow wood and puberulent branches ; leaves 3-foliate ; leaflets oblong to lanceolate, equaling the petioles, entire, mucro- nate; flowers in terminal bracteate racemes; bracts simple; petals yellow, 10-16 cm. long, twice longer than the sepals; cap- sule oblong, 2.5-3.5 cm. long, attenuate into the stipe and abruptly tapering at the apex. Frequent on bluffs and hills along the coast, Ballona Harbor; San Pedro; San Joaquin Hills. February-July. I. arborea globosa Coville. This subspecies, which differs from the type in having globose capsules, has been reported from Oceanside and may occur within our limits. 1S2 Resedaceae Family 37. RESEDACEAE. Mignonette Family. Annual or perennial herbs with alternate leaves, gland- Like stipules and racemose or spicate bracted unsymmetri- cal flowers. Calyx 4-7-parted, more or less irregular. Petals 2-6, usually laciniate or dentate. Stamens hypog- ynous, 3-40, borne on the base of the calyx or on a dilat- ed nectariferous and oblique disk, declined or unilateral. Ovary 1, composed of 3-6 carpels, at leasl the tips dis- tinct : ovules many. Fruit capsular. Seeds reniform ; endosperm none ; cotyledons incumbent. Petals 4: disk present. 1. RESEDA. Petals 2; disk wanting. 2. OMGOMERIS. 1. RESEDA L. Erect or decumbent herbs with entire, lobed or pinnat- itid leaves and small spicate or narrowly racemose (lowers. Petals 4-7, toothed or cleft. Disk cup-shaped, glandular. Stamen- 8-30, inserted on the inner surface of the disk and on one side of the flower. Capsule 3-6- lobed, horned at the top before maturity. 1. R. lutea L. Ascending or decumbent, somewhat pubes- cent with short stiff hairs or nearly glabrous; leaves 5-10 cm. long, broadly ovate or oblong, deeply lobed or divided, some- times pinnatifid; segments linear-oblong with undulate margins; flowers in narrow racemes, 1-6 mm. broad, greenish yellow; pedicels ascending, about 4 mm. long in fruit; petals t> or 5, all but the lowest irregularly cleft; sepals of the same number; cap- sule oblong, about 8 mm. long, with 3 or rarely 4 short teeth. An occasional escape from gardens. 2. OLIGOMERIS. Low glaucous chiefly annuals with linear and entire leaves, and -mall greenish flowers in terminal spikes. Stamen- usually I. Petals '1. posterior, free or united at the base, entire or 2-3-lobed, persistent. Disk none. Crassulaceae 183 Stamens .".-lit. Ovary 4-angled, 4-beaked. Capsule 4-sulcate, many-seeded, opening at the summit. 1. O. glaucescens Camb. Annual or biennial; 15-30 cm. bigb, branching at base, the branches ascending; leaves often fascicled and somewhat fleshy, 1-2 cm. long; spikes elongated terminal, the stem-like branches bracteate, densely flowered; petals oblong, obscurely lobed, posterior; stamens 3, posterior; capsule depressed globose, 3 mm. in diameter, -blobed, 4-cuspi- date : seeds smooth. In low saline places. Portugese Bend : Elsinore; also at San Diego anil Tia Juana. April-May. Family 38. CRASSULACEAE. Stone-crop Family. Mostly succulent or fleshy herbs with cymose or rarely solitary, regular or symmetrical flowers. Stipules none. Calyx persistent, free from the ovary or ovaries, 4-5-cleft or 4-5-parted. Petals equal in number to the calyx- lobes, distinct or somewhat united below, persistent. Stamens of the same number or twice as many with fili- form or subulate filaments and longitudinally dehiscent anthers. Receptacle with a scale at the base of each carpel. Carpels equal to the calyx-lobes in number, distinct or united below, with subulate or filiform styles and numerous ovules. Follicles membranous or coria- ceous, 1-celled, dehiscent along the ventral suture. Seeds minute ; embryo terete, imbedded in fleshy endosperm. The descriptions of most of the species and genera are adopted from Britton and Rose's recent article, "New or Noteworthy North American Crassulaceae," Bui. X. Y. Bot. Gard. 3:1-45. 1903. Plants not minute. Petals spreading, distinct at base; leaves not linear. 1. Sedcm. Petals spreading, yellow, slightly united at base; leaves linear; peren- nials by corms. 2. Hasseanthcs. Petals spreading, united at base; leaves narrow; perennials by root- stocks. 3. Stylophyllcm. Petals erect, united at base; carpels erect. 4. Dcdleya. Plants minute, succulent. 5. Tillaea. 184 Crassulaceae 1. SEDUM 1.. Fleshy mostly glabrous erect or decumbent herbs with mostly alternate entire or dentate leaves and per- fect flowers in terminal often L-sided cymes, Calyx 1 5-lobed. Petals 4-."). distinct. Stamens 8-10, perigy- QOUS, the alternate ones usually attached to the petals, their filaments filiform or subulate. Scales of the recep- tacle entire or emarginate. Carpels distinct or united at the base : styles short. 1. S. obtusaturn Gray, (ilaucous and often mealy, from a branched rooting caudex, 10-15 cm. high, simple; leaves very thick, obovate or spatulate, flat, 16-20 mm. long; cymes of rather numerous scattered branches; pedicels 2-4 mm. long; petals oblong-lanceolate or obovate, acute, pale yellow, 6-8 mm. long, little exceeding the stamens and style; calyx broadly campanu- late, sepals 3-4 mm. long, broad, obtuseish. Mount Disappointment, Davidson. 2. S. spathulifolium Hook. Similar in habit to the last, but the cyme approximate; pedicels shorter or the flowers sessile; sepals 3 mm. long, ovate, acute; petals yellow, lanceolate, acute, 6-8 mm. long, scarcely exceeding the stamens and style. Lytle Creek Canyon near the falls. 2. HASSEANTHUS Rose. Stems several, arising from small globose or oblong corms. Basal h-aves linear, terete, narrowed below into flattened petioles; stem-leaves narrowly ovate, turgid but somewhat flattened. Calyx 5-lobed. Corolla-seg- ments united at base into a short tube, yellow or white changing to purple. Carpels 5, united at base, widely spreading. 1. H. elongatus Rose. Stems slender, 10-15 dm. high ; leaves linear, elongated, not at all variegated; cyme branches simple, widely spreading, 2-4 cm. long; calyx-lobes oblong; corolla bright yellow. Described from specimens collected In the San Joaquin mils by tho author What seems t" i>>- tin- samr has also been collected in the Santa Ana Mountains by Helen D. Geis. Stone-crop Family 185 2. H. multicaulis Rose. Perennial by an oblong conn, 2-3 cm. long : stems 2-5, rather stout, 1-1.5 cm. high, variegated, glabrous, not at all glaucous; basal leaves 3-4 cm. long, terete, acute; stem leaves 1-2.5 cm. long, ovate-oblong, acute or acumi- nate, turgid or somewhat flattened; inflorescence of several secund, many-flowered racemes; flowers subsessile; calyx-lobes ovate, obtuse; flower-buds pinkish, obtuse; corolla-lobes widely spreading above the middle, pale yellow, tinged with red, 7-8 mm. long, slightly united at base. Described from specimens collected by Dr. Hasse on sterile clay bluffs near Santa Monica. 3. STYLOPHYLLUM Britton & Rose. Perennials with more or less branched rootstocks ; basal leaves linear elongated or flattened but always nar- row, sometimes abruptly widened below into a broad clasp- ing base ; flowering stems with long sessile leaves not clasping at base. Calyx 5-lobed, the lobes ovate, equal and small. Corolla campanulate, not angled, white, red or yellowish, its lobes broad, thin and spreading, united below into a tube. Stamens 10, borne on the corolla-tube. Car- pels 5, united below, generally spreading. 1. S. insulare Rose. Stems very thick and woody, 6-8 cm. in diameter, crowned by a rosette of spreading leaves, the old leaves somewhat persistent; leaves 10-15 cm. long, 1-1.5 cm. broad above the base, 2 cm. broad at base, fleshy, much flattened except toward the apex, acute, more or less glaucous, especially when young; flowering branch stout, purplish, 3-4 dm. long; inflorescence paniculately branched ; primary branches short, nearly equal, 2-3-dichotomous, the ultimate branches short and few-flowered; calyx 3 mm. long, its lobes twice as long as the tube, ovate, acute; corolla 7 mm. long, reddish, somewhat cam- panulate, its tube about the length of the carpels ; carpels united at base, widely spreading. Described from specimens collected on Catalina Island by Blanche Trask. 2. S. Hassei Rose. Caudex elongated, sometimes about 3 dm. long, 2-3 cm. in diameter, somewhat branching, covered with the old persistent leaves, crowned with a dense erect rosette; 1st; Crassulaceae leaves very glaucous, linear, not tapering, except toward the apex, 10 cm. long <>r less, 1 cm. wide or less, somewhat flattened below, terete above, (lowering stems weak, their primary branches L-2-dichotomous, the ultimate branches Blender and many- flowered; calyx widely spreading in age. Described from specimens collected bed or 4— 5-parted, free or adnate to the ovary, usually per- sistent. Petals !— ">. perigynous. Stamens equaling the petals in number or twice as many. perigynous. Car- pels 1— several, more or less united into a compound super- ior or inferior ovary : styles distinct or united. Fruit a capsule, follicle or berry. Seeds usually numerous ; en- dosperm generally copious, fleshy ; embryo small, terete. Herbs. Ovary with 2, rarely more, cells. StamensS. I.Tiierofon. Stamens 10. 2. Saxifkaga. Ovary 1-celled. Stamens 5. 3. Heuchera. Stamens 10. 4. Lithophragma. Shrubs. 5. RlBES. 1. THEROFON Raf. Perennial herbs with creeping rootstocks and leafy stems. Leaves alternate, round-reniform, palmately lolied and incised or toothed with callous glandular tips ; petiole mostly with a stipular dilation at base. Flowers white, paniculate or in corymbose-cymes. Calyx 5-lobed, the tube adherent to the ovary, at length globular or ovate. Petals 5, entire. Stamens short, alternating with the petals ; anthers 2-celled. Ovary 2-celled. Fruit a capsule, dehiscent down the styliferous beaks. Seeds ovoid, minutely papillose. 1. T. elatum (Nutt.) Greene. Slender, 3-6 dm. high, glabrous or somewhat glandular-pubescent, the dilated bases of the peti- oles with brown bristly hairs, otherwise smooth or nearly so; leaves thin membranous, 5-7 cm. broad, deeply 5-7-lobed; calyx- lobes lanceolate-triangular, often slightly toothed above; tube oval, urceolate in fruit; petals cuneate-elliptic, obtuse, 3.5 mm. long, much exceeding the calyx-lobes ; claw very short. {Boy- kinia occidentals T. & G.) Topango Canyon, Davidson. 2. T. rotundifolium (Parry) Wheelock. Stem villous-pubes- cent and glandular, 4-8 dm. high, leafy; leaves 5-10 cm. broad, 190 Saxifragaceae crenately incised and toothed, thin, nearly glabrous above, peti- oles densely villous, the slightly dilated base with brown bristly hairs; peduncles axillary and terminal ; flowers short-pedicelled, secund on the few elongated branches; calyx campanulate, be- coming broadly urceolate in fruit, its lobes entire, acute; petals 2-2.5 mm. long, scarcely exceeding the calyx-lobes, spatulate; the claw twice as long as the rounded blade. (Boykinia rotundi- folia Parry.) Frequent in canyons in the San Gabriel Mountains, 8500-4500 feet altitude. May-July. 2. SAXIFRAGA L. Saxifrage. Stemless or short-stemmed herbs with alternate or mostly basal Leaves and corymbose, paniculate or rarely solitary small flowers. Calyx 5-lobed or 5-parted, Lts tube free or adnate to the base of the ovary. Petals 5, equal, entire. Stamens 10, inserted with the petals; fila- ments filiform ; anthers 2-celled. Carpels 2 <>r rarely .">. distinct or more or less united into a 2-celled ovary; styles distinct, persistent, at length divergent. Fruit of 2 follicles or a 2-lobed or 2-beaked capsule, dehiscent down the beaks or the ventral suture. Seeds smooth. 1. S. Californica (ireene. Scape 15-45 cm. high ; leaves few, rather thick, reddish veined, sparsely glandular-villous, oval, oblong or elliptic, 25-50 mm. long, coarsely crenate to repand- denticulate; petioles rather broad, 12-25 mm. long; inflores- cence cymose-paniculate ; calyx nearly free from the ovary, its segments reflexed ; petals oblong, 3 times as long as the calyx, white or rose-tinted ; filaments subulate, inserted under the edge of an elevated perigynouB disk. Arroyo Seco, McClatchie; near Glendalu. Davidson. 3. HEUCHERA L. Perennial herbs with stout rootstocks, mostly basal Long-petioled rounded usually cordate leaves, and slen- der scapes, [nflorescence in ours paniculate, bracteate, bearing small mostly purple flowers. Calyx campanu- Saxifrage Family L91 late <>r in fruit somewhal urceolate, 5-lobedj the Lobes obtuse and sometimes unequal, the tube coherent with lower halt of the»ovary. Petals unguiculate, small, en- tire, inserted on the throat of the calyx. Stamens 5, ex- serted or included; anthers 2-celled. Ovary and cap- sule L-celled, with 2 parietal placentae, more or less 2-beaked, the beaks tapering into the slender styles, dehiscenl between the beaks. Seeds numerous, minute. papillose. 1. H. elegans A.brams. Scape 25-35 cm. high, villous-hirsute; leaves thickish, round -cordate, 1-2 cm. broad, crenately lobed and toothed, the margins ciliate, otherwise glabrous; petioles 2-2.5 cm. long, villous; stipules scarious, the free portion nar- rowly lanceolate, 2-3 mm. long, ciliate with long slender hairs; panicles 14-18 cm. long, villous-pubescent throughout and some- what glandular, its branches cymose, 3 cm. long, usually 9-flow- ered, the uppermost becoming reduced; bracts subtending the branches about 4 mm. long, lacerate, those subtending the pedicels similar but somewhat reduced; calyx pink, villous, 8-10 mm. long, narrowly campanulate, its lobes narrowly oblong, about 3 mm. long; petals white, lanceolate-spatulate, 5-6 mm. long, narrowed below to a slender claw ; stamens included. Frequent in rocky places in the higher altitudes of the chapparal belt. Mount Gleason; Mount Lowe; Mount Wilson. 4. LITHOPHRAGMA T. & G. Slender perennial herbs from mostly grumous roots, with chiefly basal round-cordate toothed or lobed leaves, their petioles stipuliform at base, cauline few on the simple stems. Flowers few in a simple terminal raceme. Calyx campanulate or turbinate, 5-lobed, free from the ovary or more or less adnate to it. Petals 5, exserted, 3— 7-lobed or sometimes entire. Stamens 10, included ; anthers cordate. Ovary l-celled. with 3 parietal placen- tae; style- :;. short. Fruit a 3-valved, many-seeded cap- sule. L92 Saxifragaceae 1. L. affinis dray. Steins 1 or several, 15-40 cm. high, sca- brous-hirsute; basal leaves few, round-reniform, slightly lobed, 2-3 cm. broad; cauline 3-lobed to tbe middle, tbe lobes coarsely toothed; calyx 5 mm. long, turbinate, the tube more or less ad- herent to the ovary ; pedicels about equaling or slightly exceed- ing the calyx; lower petals 8-10 mm. long, 3-toothed, the upper slightly smaller, entire; seeds faintly striate-pitted or almost smooth. Occasional on shady banks in the foothills, below 4000 feet altitude. March-May. 5. RIBES L. Erect branching shrubs with alternate palmately lobed. often resinous-glandular or viscid leaves. Stipules when present adnate to the petiole. Flowers racemose, rarely solitary on 1-2-leaved axillary shoots ; pedicels subtended by a bract and usually bearing 2 bractlets at about the middle. Calyx-tube adnate to the globose ovary and more or less produced above it. Petals 5 or rarely 4, erect, mostly smaller than the calyx-lobes. Stamens equaling the petals in number and alternate with them. Ovary 1-celled with 2 parietal placentae ; styles 2, more or less united ; stigmas terminal. Fruit a berry, crowned with the withered remains of the flower. * Thornlea. Ccrrant. +■ Flowers yellow; leaves convolute in bud. 1. R. tenuiflorum Lindl. Shrub, 1-3 m. high, nearly gla- brous, glandless; leaves light green, 3-5-lobed at apex, not cor- date ; racemes many-rlowered ; bracts green, conspicuous ; flowers bright yellow; calyx salver-shaped, tube 1 cm. long or more; lobes oval, h, as long as the tube; berry glabrous, amber color. Eaton's Wash, near Sierra Madre. February-March. ■«-■*- Flowers not yellow; leaves plaited in the bud. 2. R. malvaceum viridifolium Abrams. Shrub 1-2 in. high, the young brandies short-pubescent and more or less densely glandular with stalked glands; leaves rather thick, 3-7 cm. Saxifrage Family 193 broad, Blightly or not at all rugose, minutely scabrous and some- what glandular with sessile glands above, pale and glandular- pubescent beneath;, petioles beset with stalked glands and more or less puberulent; inflorescence glandular-pubescent, racemes rather long-peduncled, drooping, many-flowered; bracts ovate, 1 cm. long,ciliate-toothed above; pedicels 3-4 mm. long ; calyx rose- colored below, becoming nearly white above, its tube cylindric, pubescent within, 12 nun. long; its lobes broadly ovate, rounded at apex, 4-5 mm. long; petals rounded, 2 nun. broad; anthers marly sessile, 2 mm. long; style pubescent; berries becoming rerlexed at maturity, on short pedicels, pubescent and rather sparsely beset with coarse gland-tipped hairs, purplish. 1 cm. long. Occasional in the Santa Monica and San Gabriel Mountains, below 4000 feet altitude. March-April. 3. R. Nevadense Kell. Rather slender, loosely branching shrub, 1-2 m. high, older bark flaky deciduous ; leaves 5-10 cm. broad, thin, not rugose, bright green and glabrous above, paler beneath and sparsely pubescent ; stipular base of petiole ciliate- margined with long coarse plumose hairs ; racemes rather short and dense, on rather long pendulous peduncles ; flowers rose- colored ; calyx-tube urceolate, 3 mm. long, lobes spreading, about equaling the tube; berry small, globose, glabrous, black. Strain's Camp, Mount Wilson. Frequent along streams in the San An- tonio and San Bernardino Mountains, in the pine belt. May. ** Thorny. Gooseberry. *- Flowers 5-merous. 4. R. divaricatum Dougl. Shrub, 1-2.5 m. high, spreading, glabrous or nearly so, thorns single or sometimes triple; leaves roundish, 3-5-lobed, the lobes incisely toothed; peduncles slender, elongated, drooping, 3-9-flowered ; pedicels with broad bract at base; calyx green without, purplish within, 5-7 mm. long; tube short, campanulate, much exceeded by the oblong lobes; petals white, fan-shaped, margins convolute; filiform filaments and style much exserted ; berry small, glabrous, black. Oak Knoll, near Pasadena, McUlatchie. March. 5. R. amarum McClatchie. Shrub, 1-3 m. high, the rigid stems and branches beset with yellow-brown commonly triple spines, often hispid ; leaves inflorescence and young branches L94 Platanaceae glandular-hirsute; leaves- thin, 1-4 cm. broad, 3-5-lobed and incised; peduncles 1-2-flowered ; bracts round-ovate, usually 3-lobed, 6 mm. long; calyx-tube oblong-campanulati', »', mm. long; lobes reflexed, 6 mm. long, purplish red; petals pinkish white, rounded, erose-toothed at summit; stamens equaling or slightly exceeding the petals; anthers sagittate, mucronate, purplish ; berry 12-20 mm. broad, densely covered with glandu- lar bristles. Frequent on shaded slopes in the San Gabriel Mountains below 4000 feet altitude. February-March. 6. R. hesperium McClatchie. Shrub, 1.5-3 m. high, with spreading branches; stems smooth, beset with dark-colored com- monly single spines; inflorescence and young branches puberu- lent ; leaves thin, 12-20 mm. broad, 3-5-lobed, the lobes incised; peduncles 1-2-flowered : bracts broad, fan-shaped with ciliated membranous pink margins; calyx-tube campanulate, slightly inflated, about 2 mm. long, lobes greenish-red, (i-8 mm. long, petals cuneate-oblong, 3-4 mm. long, 2-3-toothed at summit or entire; filaments 4-6 mm. long; anthers mucronate, greenish ; berry 12-20 mm. in diameter, densely beset with rather long spines. Common in the Santa Monica and San Gabriel Mountains below 3000 feet altitude. January-February. ■*- -•- Flowers 4-merous. 7. R. speciosum Pursh. Evergreen shrub, 1.5-3 m. high, with leafy red bristly branches ; subaxillary spines 3, united at base ; leaves subcoriaceous, dark green, smooth and shining above, rounded, 3-lobed, lobes short, crenately toothed; peduncles pen- dulous, 2-5-flowered; flowers bright red, drooping; calyx 12-18 mm. long, its tube short, somewhat inflated, lobes oblong, not spreading ; petals about ~3 the length of the calyx-lobes ; filaments filiform, much exceeding the calyx; anthers small, oval; berry small, densely prickly. Frequent in the foothills. March-April. Family la PLATANACEAE. Plane-tree Family. Large trees with thin exfoliating bark, alternate petioled palmately lobed leaves ami small green monoe- Rosaceae L95 cious flowers in druse globular heads. Receptacle some- what fleshy. Calyx of 3-8 externally minute sepals. Corollas of as many thin glabrous petals. Staminate flowers with stamens as many as sepals and opposite them : filaments short ; anthers Longitudinally dehis- cent. Pistillate flowers with 2-8 distinct pistils; ovary linear, 1-celled : style elongated ; stigma lateral. Fruit a dense head, composed of numerous narrowly obpyra- midal nutlets which are densely pubescenl below with long hairs ; seed pendulous ; endosperm thin : cotyle- dons lineal'. 1. PLATANUS L. Plane-tree or Sycamore. Characters of the family. 1. P. racemosa Nutt. A large widely branching tree, 10-25 m. high; leaves .stellate-pubescent when young, becoming gla- brate, 10-15 cm. broad and scarcely as long, mostly 5-lobed, trun- cate or somewhat cordate at base; lobes acute, the lower smaller, bluntly cuspidate at the ends of the veins ; petioles shorter than the leaves; stipules larger on young twigs; staminate heads several ; pistillate heads 3-5. Common along all the streams, mostly below 3000 feet altitude. March. Family 41. ROSACEAE. Rose Family. Herbs, shrubs or trees with alternate mostly stipulate leaves and regular flowers. Calyx free from or adnate to the ovary, usually 5-lobed, sometimes bracteolate. Pet- als distinct, equal in number to the calyx-lobes or none. Stamens usually numerous, inserted on the calyx ; an- thers 2-celled, longitudinally dehiscent or rarely by pores. Carpels 1— many, distinct or united. Ovary 1— several-celled. Seeds 1 or few in each cell, anatropous ; endosperm present or wanting. 196 Etosaceae Herbs. Petals present. Styles terminal; ovules pendulous. P< t uls yellow. Petals white. Styles lateral: ovules ascending. Styles nearly basal. Petals none: pistil 1. Shrubs. Stems unarmed. Fruit a pome. Fruit an achene or follicle. Flowers solitary or somewhat fascicled. Flowers in terminal racemes. Leaves alternate, toothed or lobed. Leaves fascicled, entire, minute. Fruit a cluster of drupelets, berry-like. Fruit a drupe. Stems prickly. Calyx not fleshy: fruit a cluster of drupelets. Calyx fleshy; enclosing the achenes. 1. HOLODISCUS Maxim. ■4. POTKNTII.I.A. 7. HORKKI.IA. 5. ARGENTINA. 6. DRYMOCAI.I.ls 1U. ALCHEMILI.A. ■2. Heteromeles. 8. Cercocarpus. 1. holodiscus. 9. Adenostoma. 3. RtJBUS. 12. Proncb. 3. RUBUS. 11. Rosa. Unarmed shrubs with simple toothed »>r lobed exstipu- Late deciduous leaves and terminal panicles of numerous white flowers. Calyx deeply 5-cleft, nearly rotate. Petals 5, rounded. Stamens 20. inserted on an annular perigynous disk. Pistils 5, distinct, becoming 1-seeded hairy carpels, tardily dehiscent by the dorsal suture or indehiscent. 1. H. discolor (Pursh) Maxim. Shrub, 1-2 m. high; the branches short, rigid ; bark grayish brown, more or less shreddy : leaves ovate, cuneately narrowed to a short winged petiole, pin- nately lobed or toothed above the middle, green and nearly gla- brous above, whitish tomentose beneath ; panicles erect, branch- ing; carpels hirsute. {Spirea discolor Pursh.) Occasional in the San Gabriel Mountains in the chaparral belt. i'. H. discolor dumosus (Nutt.) Wats. Lower and more compact : panicle smaller, unbranched. Mount San Antonio near the summit. 2. HETEROMELES Roem. CHRISTMAS BbbBT. A small evergreen tree or sometimes shrubby, with simple coriaceous toothed Leaves and terminal corymbose Rose Family L97 panicles of small white flowers. Calyx turbinate, 5-parted, the lobes at Length inflexed over the carpels and becom- ing fleshy. Petals rounded, concave. Stamens 10 ; fila- ments dilated at base and somewhat connate Ovary ■2 3-celled, 4 6-ovuled ; styles 2 3. Fruit a red ovoid berry-like pome; carpels tree from the fleshy calyx-tube above the middle. 1. H. arbutifolia (Poir.) Roem. Usually 3-6 m. high, nascent parts tomentulose; leaves narrowly oblong or oblong-lanceolate, 5-10 cm. long, remotely serrate or dentate, dark green and shin- ing; fruit about 6 mm. long. Common in the chaparral belt. May-June. 3. RUBUS L. how shrubs or trailing vines, usually prickly, with alternate leaves, the stipules adnate to the petioles. Flowers terminal or axillary, solitary, racemose or pani- (ded. white or purplish, mostly perfect. Calyx persist- ent, bractless, deeply 5-parted. Petals 5. Stamens many, inserted on the calyx, distinct. Carpels many, inserted on a convex or elongated receptacle, ripening into drupelets and forming an aggregate fruit. Ovules 2, 1 abortive ; style terminal, slender. Seed pendulous. * Leaves simple, palmately lobed; stems unarmed. 1. R. parviflorus Nutt. (Salmon Berry.) Stems erect, 1-2.5 m. high, without prickles ; bark smooth or somewhat glandular- pubescent, becoming brown and shreddy ; leaves palmately 5-lobed, cordate at base, unequally serrate, 10-15 cm. broad, gla- brous, or somewhat tomentose on the veins beneath ; petioles and peduncles hirsute-glandular; flowers few, corymbose, white, 2—1 cm. broad; calyx-lobes tipped with a long slender appendage; fruit separating from the receptacle when ripe, hemispheric, red. (R. Nutkanus Mocino.) In moist shady places in the San Antonio and San Bernardino Mountains in the pine belt. April-June. ids Rosaceae ** Leaves 3-5-/oliate; stems prickly. 2. R. leucodermis Dougl. (Raspberry.) Steins erect, 4-8 dm. high, glaucous, armed with stout, straight or recurved prickles; leaves 3-foliate <>r rarely 5-foliate; leaflets ovate to lanceolate-acuminate, doubly serrate, white tomentose beneath ; the veins, petioles and peduncles prickly; stipules setaceous; flowers few, corymbose, 1 cm. broad; sepals lanceolate, long acu- minate, exceeding the petals ; ovaries tomentose ; fruit separat- ing from the receptacle when ripe, yellowish red with a white bloom and agreeable flavor. Occasional in all our mountains in the pine belt. May-June. 3. R. vitifolius C. & S. (Bramble or Blackberry.) Stems woody, weak and trailing or suberect, somewhat glaucous, armed with straight, slender prickles, 1-6 m. long; leaves pin- nately 3— 5-foliate or those of the flowering brandies only deeply lobed; leaflets ovate to oblong, coarsely toothed, glabrous or more or less pubescent; flowers imperfect, staminate large with elongated petals ; pistillate small with broad petals ; fruit per- sistent on the receptacle, oblong, black and sweet. Frequent in the foothills and valleys, mostly along streams. January- April. 4. POTENTILLA L. Ours perennial or rarely annual herbs with digitately or pinnately compound leaves and cymose yellow perfect flowers. Calyx persistent, its tube concave or hemi- spheric, 5-bracteolate, 5-lobed. Petals 5, mostly obovate and emarginate. Stamens commonly '20, inserted on an annular disk very near the base of the receptacle ; filaments filiform or Bpatulate but not flattened. Pis- tils many, becoming dry achenes in fruit, inserted on a hemispheric or conic receptacle ; Btyle terminal or nearly so, deciduous ; ovules pendulous, anatropous. 1. P. multijuga Lehm. Perennial; Btems erect, 3-7 dm. high, Blightly silky-strigose, more or less leafy; stipules large, l--_' cm. long, ovate, entire; basal leaves numerous, often 2-8 dm. long, slightly hairy or glabrate, pinnate with 6-18 pairs of leaflets ; Leaflets obovate, cuneate, 1-4 cm. long, coarsely toothed above Rose Family 199 the middle ; cauline leaves smaller and with fewer leaflets ; flowers about 1") mm. broad, in rather narrow cymes; pedicels slender; bractlets oblong, about % as long as the ovate calyx-lobes ; petals broadly obcordate, about '3 longer than the calyx-lobes; style filiform. Ballona, Hasse. Apparently a rare plant not otherwise known. 5. ARGENTINA Lam. Perennial herbs growing in damp ground and spread- ing by slender runners, with thick and fascicled roots and pinnate haves. Flowers borne on simple pedicels from the axils of the leaves formed on the runners, 5-merous and with 5 bractlets. Calyx nearly wheel- shaped. Petals yellow, broadly elliptic to nearly orbicu- lar, obtuse. Stamens 20-25, inserted closely around the base of the receptacle ; filaments filiform, rather short. Receptacle hemispheric, hearing numerous pistils, these becoming dry achenes in fruit. Style filiform, lateral, attached at the middle of the ovary, somewhat persist- ent. Seeds ascending and amphitropous. 1. A. Anserina (L.) Rydb. Main stem inconspicuous, pro- ducing many long runners; leaves 1-2 dm. long, abruptly pinnate with 9-31 larger leaflets and with smaller ones interposed, usually prostrate, slightly silky and green above, white-silky and tomen- to.se beneath; larger leaflets oblanceolate, 1-3 cm. long, deeply and sharply serrate; flowers 1-2 cm. broad, on pedicels 3-20 cm. long; petals much exceeding the calyx. Rather common in damp ground in the valleys. Flowering through the summer. (Potentilla Anserina L.) 6. DRYMOCALLIS Tourr. Erect more or less glandular or viscid herbs from perennial rootstocks, with pinnate leaves and cymose yellow 5-merous bracteolate flowers. Calyx saucer- shaped or hemispheric. Petals obovate, elliptic or nearly orbicular, obtuse. Stamens 20-30 on a persistent disk 200 Rosaceae at base of receptacle. Receptacle hemispheric with numerous pistils which become dry achenes. Style basal, slightly thickened and glandular below, tapering at both ends or nearly filiform, rather persistent. Seed attached near the base, ascending, orthotropous. 1. D. glandulosa (Lindl.) Rydb. Stem erect, 3-6 din. high, rather slender, slightly striate, viscid and glandular hairy at least above, nearly simple below, branched above; lower stipules lanceolate, the upper ovate and usually deeply toothed; basal leaves petioled, pinnate; leaflets 3-4 pairs, sparingly hairy, nearly glabrous above, obovate, mostly obtuse, simply or doubly serrate with broad teeth, 1-3 cm. long, the upper generally somewhat larger; cauline leaves short petioled, with 1-3 pairs of leaflets; flowers in an open many-flowered cyme, 10-15 mm. broad ; bract- lets linear-lanceolate, much shorter than the oblong or obovate- lanceolate acute sepals ; petals obovate, about equaling the sepals, stamens 25. (Putentilla glandulosa Lindl.) Frequent in the chaparral belt in all our mountains. Ours not typical, having usually smaller flowers and less acute sepals. March-July. 2. D. glandulosa monticola Rydb. A more slender and smaller mountain form with smaller leaflets, more open but smaller cymes, shorter sepals, pale yellow petals, and often only 20 stamens. {Putentilla glandulosa Nevadensis Wats.) Frequent in the pine belt of all our mountains. May-August. 7. HORKELIA Cham. & Sch. Perennial herbs with a thick woody caudex or root- stock covered with brown scales, pinnate leaves and cymose flowers. Calyx deeply campanulate to saucer- shaped, deeply 5-lobed, with 5 bractlets alternating with the lobes. Petals variable, unguiculate, white or rarely pale yellow. Stamens 5-20, inserted in the throat of the Calyx-tube and remote from the base of receptacle ; fila- ments dilated, petaloid. Receptacle hemispheric or conic with numerous pistils. Styles long and slender, generally thickened and somewhal glandular at base, deciduous. Ovules and seeds pendulous, anatropous. Rose Family 201 1. H. sericea i (iray) Rydb. Stem rather stout, 3-6 dm. high, Bilky-pubescent, scarcely glandular; stipules ovate or lanceolate, 1-2 cm. long, often toothed ; basal leaves numerous, rather short- petioled ; leaflets 4-7 pairs, rather thick, densely and finely silky-canescent, obovate, 1-2.5 cm. long, rather coarsely some- what crenately toothed, the upper confluent; cauline leaves simi- lar but smaller with 2-5 pairs of leaflets; cyme rather dense; calyx cupulate ; bractlets entire, ovate or ovate-lanceolate ; lobes similar, slightly exceeding the bractlets; petals white, spatulate, 5-6 mm. long. (//. Californica sericea Gray.) Near Port Ballona, not otherwise known south of Santa Barbara. March- May. 2. H. platycalyx Rydb. Stem rather stout, 3-10 dm. high, glandular-pubescent, often tinged with red; stipules ovate, 1-2 cm. long, often toothed; basal leaves several, more or less glandu- lar-puberulent ; leaflets 5-7 pairs, obovate, crenate, 1-2 cm. long ; cauline leaves similar but with fewer leaflets; cyme open and branched ; pedicels often 2.5 cm. long; flowers 15-20 mm. broad; calyx-tube saucer-shaped ; bractlets ovate, slightly exceeded by the ovate-triangular calyx-lobes; petals oblong or spatulate, exceeding the calyx-lobes by about %. Occasional in the dry interior valleys; Claremont. 3. H. puberula (Greene) Rydb. Stems mostly several, 3-6 dm. high, branched, finely :! the base of the ovary : ovule 1, ascending. Achene ovate, compressed, enclosed in the persistent calyx. 1. A. arvense (L.) Scop. Slender simple or much branched from the base, 4-10 cm. high; fioriferous and hirsute through- out; leaves 3-parted, the segments '2-?, -cleft ; calyx-tube much contracted under the 4-parted limb. Occasional in shady places or along streams in the foothills. 11. ROSA L. Rose. Prickly shrubs with odd-pinnate leaves, adnate stipules and large solitary or corymbose flowers. Calyx-tube globose or urceolate ; its limb 5-parted ; bractlets none. Petals 5, rounded, spreading. Stamens many on the silky disk, which lines the calyx-tube. Pistils many, included in the calyx-tube, hut free and distinct ; styles subterminal : ovules solitary pendulous. Achene bony, enclosed in the fleshy enlarged red berry-like calyx-tube. 1. R. Californica C. & S. Erect, branching, 1-3 m. high; prickles few, stout, usually recurved; foliage of firm texture, more or less glandular and tomentose; stipules entire; leaflets 5-7, ovate or oblong ; serratures mostly simple, spreading ; corymb mostly few-flowered; pedicels pubescent and glandular; calyx- lobes foliaceous-tipped ; fruit globose, 8-12 mm. in diameter; persistent lobes erect. Frequent throughout our range both in the valleys and mountains. Flowering often nearly the year round 12. PRUNUS L. Cherry. Trees or shrubs with alternate deciduous or evergreen usually serrate leaves and white or rose-colored flowers in terminal or axillary racemes or corymbs. Calyx eampanulate or turbinate, 5-cleft, deciduous. Petals 5, spreading. Stamens 15-25, inserted with the petals. Ovary solitary, free ; style terminal ; ovules 2, pendu- lous. Fruit a more or less fleshy drupe with a bony stone ; seeds 1 or rarely 2. 204 Leguminosae 1. P. demissa (Nutt.) AYalp. Shrub, 1-4 in. high; leaves ovate or oblong-ovate, acute or acuminate, rounded or cordate at base, sharply serrate, more or less pubescent beneath, 5-10 cm. lon;_', with 1 or 2 glands at the base of the blade; racemes 5, terminal, 7-10 cm. long, many-flowered; drupe globose, red or purple, astringent; stone globose. Occasional in the San Bernardino and San Antonio Mountains in the upper portions of the chaparral belt and in the pine belt. 2. P. ilicifolia (Nutt.) Walp. Shrubby or arborescent, 3-6 m. high, bark grayish brown; leaves coriaceous, glossy above, gla- brous throughout, ovate to ovate-lanceolate, coarsely spinose- toothed, 2.5-5 cm. long, on short petioles; racemes axillary, 2.5-5 cm. long, leafless; flowers small ; drupe 1 cm. long or more, thick, slightly obcompressed, sweetish, scarcely astringent. Common in the chaparral belt. May-June. Family 42. LEGUMINOSAE. Pulse Family. Herbs, shrubs or trees with alternate stipulate com- pound or rarely entire leaves and Irregular or regular flowers. Leaflets mostly entire, the upper somtimes converted into tendrils. Calyx 4— 5-lobed <>r 4— 5-cleft, its tube exceeding the perigynons disk, which hears the petals and stamens. Petals 4-5. regular, with numerous stamens or more commonly 5 and irregular ; the stand- ard superior larger and external, covering in the hud the 2 lateral ones (wings), these covering the 2 infer- ior pair which are more or less united above, forming the keel. Stamens and pistils enclosed in the keel. Fila- ments 10, 9 commonly united below into a sheath about the pistil and 1 distinct (diadelphous), or all united (monadelphous), or distinct ; anthers 2-celled, dehiscent Longitudinally. Pistil simple, free, becoming a legume in fruit : ovules few or many on the single parietal placenta ; style usually incurved. Legume l-celled, 2-valved, sometimes falsely 2-celled by the intrusion of the placenta. Endosperm usually wanting. Pulse Family •2i LI Flowers regular, stamens distinct. Flowers irregular. Stamens distinct; shrub; flowers solitary, purple. Stamens diadelphous or monodelphous. Leaves palmately 5-11-foliate. Leaves 3-foliate. Herbage not glandular-dotted. Herbs. Flowers in axillary racemes or spikes. Pods spirally coiled. Pods small, wrinkled. Flowers capitate. Shrub. Herbage glandular dotted. Leaves unequally pinnate; tendrils wanting. Herbage glandular-dotted. Shrub; pods not prickly. Perennial herb; pods prickly. Herbage not glandular-dotted. Flowers in spikes or racemes. Flowers solitary or umbellate. Leaves pinnate; tendrils present. Style villous all around at apex. Style villous on 1 side. 1. Pkosopis. •.'. Xvi.ni HBRMIA. 3. LUPlNl's. 5. Me dig AGO. 6. Meljlotus. 7. Trifolium. 4. Cytisus 9. psoralea. 10. AMORPHA. 12. Glycyrrhiza. ii. Astragalus. 8. Lotus. 13. VlCIA. 14. Lathyrus. 1. PROSOPIS L. Trees or shrubs often armed with axillary spines or spinescent stipules. Leaves bipinnate with 1 or 2 pairs of pinnae and usually numerous small entire leaflets. Flowers greenish, regular, in cylindricor globose axillary pedunculate spikes. Calyx campanulate, the teeth very short and valvate. ■ Petals 5, valvate. united below the middle or at length free, woolly on the inner side. Stamens 10, free and exserted ; anthers tipped with a deciduous gland. Ovary villous ; style filiform. Pod linear compressed or nearly terete, straight, falcate or twisted, coriaceous and indehiscent, usually pulpy with- in. Seeds numerous, ovate, compressed. 1. P. juliflora (Swartz) DC. (Algaroba or Mesquit.) A shrub or small tree, much branched, the branches widely spreading; spines axillary ; petioles glabrous or sparsely puberulent ; leaflets 8-12 pairs, the pairs about 1 cm. distant, linear, 12-15 mm. long, 206 Legnminosae 2.5-1.5 mm. wide, sparsely puberulent at least on the margins; spikes nearly sessile, 5-8 cm. long, usually dense; Mowers very short-pedicelled, '2 mm. long; pods straight or slightly falcate, only 1-3 developing, 10-15 cm. long, 10-12 mm. wide, longitudi- nally veiny, on stipes about 5 mm. long, straw-colored and sweet - \>}\ when mature. River bottoms about San Bernardino. Common on the Colorado Deserl 2. P. pubescens Benth. (Tornilla or Screw-bean.) A shrub i f scattered. Calyx deeply bilabiate ; upper lip notched; lower entire or sometimes 3-toothed or 3-cleft. Standard broad, the sides reflexed : wings united above, enclosing the incurved beaked keel. Sta- mens monadelphous, dimorphous : 5 anthers oblong, basifixed, the other 5 rounded, versatile. Stigma bearded. Pod 2-valved, compressed, straight. * Ovules several in each pod. ■*- Annuals. ** Flowers not verticillate. 1. L. truncatus Nutt. Usually rather stout, sparingly branched, 3-6 dm. high, finely and sparsely pubescent, becoming nearly glabrous; leaflets 5-7, linear-cuneiform, apex truncate, entire or 3-toothed, 2-4 cm. long, scarcely equaling the petiole; upper calyx-lip 2-cleft; petals deep purple, 8-10 mm. long; the standard shorter; keel 2-3 mm. long. Common in the open foothills and valleys. March-May. 2. L. sparsiflorus Benth. Slender, sparingly branched, 3-6 dm. high, villous with spreading hairs; leaflets 5-9, linear, obtuse at apex, 1-2.5 cm. long; petioles 2-4 times longer; upper calyx- lip 2-parted; petals violet, 10 mm. long; standard shorter; keel ciliate on the claws and on the lower lA of the blade; pod 1-2.5 cm. long. Frequent in the foothills. March-May. 3. L. hirsutissimus Benth. Rather stout, 2-3 dm. high, very hispid with viscid stinging hairs; leaflets 5-7, broadly cuneate- obovate, refuse, obtuse, or rarely acute, mucronulate, 1.5-3 cm. long; petioles twice as long; racemes loose; upper calyx-lip deeply cleft; petals reddish purple, nearly equal, 12 mm. long; keel ciliate on the claw only ; pod hirsute, 2.5 cm. long. Frequent in the foothills and interior valleys, mostly in sandy soil. March-May. 4. Li. concinnus Agardh. Low 10-15 cm. high, spreading, densely villous or hirsute; leaflets 5-8, oblanceolate, 10-20 mm. long, obtuse ; petioles slender, 2-4 times longer ; racemes short, dense, subsessile ; bracts linear-setaceous persistent ; upper calyx-lip 2-parted, lower deeply trifid ; petals 8 mm. long, violet ; 208 Leguminosae standard shorter with a yellow spot in the center; keel scarcely falcate, naked, slightly exceeding the wings; pod 4-seeded. Occasional in dry washes in the interior valleys. 5. Li. gracilis Agardb. Low, slender, 6-15 cm. high, spread- ing, rather densely pilose; leaflets 5-7, cuneate-obovate, 6-12 mm. long; racemes short lax; bracts short; upper calyx-lip bifid, lower 3- toothed; petals 6 mm. long, blue and white; stand- aril shorter; keel slightly exceeding the wings, nearly straight, naked ; pod 1 cm. long. San Fernando Mountains, near Chatswortb Park. April. +•■++ Flovn ra verticillaU . 6. L. micranthus Dougl. Rather slender and weak, branched from the base, 12-20 cm. high, pilose-pubescent, not at all suc- culent ; leaflets 5-7, narrowly linear to linear-spatulate, 1-3 cm. long; petioles twice as long; racemes pedunculate; verticils 3-5, often indistinct; pedicels 3 mm. long or in fruit (> mm. long; upper calyx-lip 2-cleft, the lobes divergent, lower longer entire ; petals 4 nun. long, blue except the white and dotted middle of the erect mucronulate standard; keel woolly-ciliate above the middle; pod 8 5- seeded. Common in all our valleys. March-May. 7. L. affinis Agardb. Stout and succulent, branching above, 3-6 dm. high, nearly glabrous or somewhat short pubescent; leaflets 7, cuneate-obovate, obtuse or emarginate, 2.5-4 cm. long; petioles 2 or 3 times as long; racemes with 3-7 whorls; bracts equaling the calyx; upper calyx-lip bifid, lower entire or 3-toothed ; petals 10-12 mm. long, bluish-purple; keel broad, naked. Frequent in the valleys and foothills, mostly in heavy soils. +■ ■*- Perennials. ** Herbaceous. 8. L. latifolius Agardb. Rather stout, erect, branching, 6-12 dm. high, minutely appressed-pubescent ; stem not striate, shin- ing, leafy : basal leaves long-stalked; stipules linear-lanceolate ; Leaflets 5-7, broadly oblanceolate, 2.6-6 cm. long; racemes slender- peduncled, loose ; verticils often distinct ; pedicels slender ; calyx- teeth elongated, the upper slightly notched at the narrow apex; Pulse Family 209 petals blue, 12-14 mm. long; keel ciliate below the middle. (L. rirularis lati/olius Wats.) Santa Monica Mountains, Hasse. 9. I*, cytisoides Agardh. Taller than the last, 1-2 m. high; stems striate; pubescence minute, appressed ; stipules lanceolate- subulate; leaflets 7-9, oblanceolate, 5 cm. long or more; raceme much elongated, dense ; flowers not verticillate ; calyx as in the last; petals usually rose-purple, 12-14 mm. long; keel strongly falcate, densely ciliate below the middle. Frequent in the canyons of the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Moun- tains. April-August. ■«--•- Suffrutescent or shrubby. 10. L. longifolius (Wats.). Shrubby, 8-15 dm. high, often from a trunk-like base and much branched above; petioles 5-10 cm. long ; leaflets 7-9, oblanceolate, 5 cm. long or less, somewhat canescent with appressed pubescence on both sides ; racemes rather loosely flowered, 15-25 dm. long; flowers verticillate, 12-15 mm. long, deep blue or nearly white; upper calyx-lip deeply cleft, the lower entire ; standard with a whitish spot near the middle, changing to rose-purple ; keel ciliate above the middle to near the tip, the claw naked; seeds oval, 4 mm. long, brownish. (L. Chamissonis longifolius Wats.) Frequent in the foothills and on bluffs along the seashore, but not on the dunes. It is impossible from the meagre description of this in Bot. Cal. to be sure what plant Dr. Watson had in mind. But the plant above de- scribed seems to be the only one in southern California that could belong here, so we feel justified in using his name. 11. L. Grayi Wats. Stems decumbent or ascending from a woody branching caudex, 3-6 dm. high, densely silky pubescent throughout; leaflets 5-9, cuneate-oblong, 1.5-3.5 cm. long; flow- ers verticillate, 12-15 mm. long, deep blue; standard with a per- manent yellow spot in center ; keel ciliate from near the apex to the base and on the claw. Frequent in open pine forests in the San Gabriel, San Bernardino and Cuyamaca Mountains. 12. L. Chamissonis Esch. Shrubby, 4-8 dm. high, forming rather dense tufts, leafy throughout ; leaflets usually 9, cuneate- obovate, obtuse and mucronulate or acute, 1-3 cm. long, very silky on both sides ; racemes rather dense, mostly on short ped- uncles; flowers subverticillate, 10-12 mm. long; upper calyx- 210 Leguminosae lip cleft, lower entire; petals blue or lavender; standard with permanent yellow spot; keel naked. Common on the sand-dunes along the seashore. Flowering nearly the year round. 4. CYTISUS L. Broom. Shrubs with green, leafy or sometimes nearly leafless, more or less angular branches. Leaves palmately or pinnately 3-foliate ; leaflets entire. Flowers solitary or racemose, usually yellow. Calyx bilabiate. Petals broad ; keel obtuse. Stamens monadelphous. l'< >< 1 ei n 1 1 pressed, several-seedei 1 . 1. C. Canariensis (L.) Link. Much branched, 1-2 m. high, soft pubescent, leafy; leaflets 6-12 mm. long; flowers yellow, 15-20 nun. long:, fragrant, in terminal racemes; upper calyx-lip deeply 3-toothed, the lower slightly so. An occasional escape from cultivation. A native of the Old World. 5. MEDICAGO L. Annual or perennial herbs with pinnately 3-foliate Leaves and 2-3 or many flowers in axillary peduncles. Stipules adnate, often Laciniate. Petals free from the diadelphoUS stamens, deciduous. Pod 1- several-seeded, coiled into a spiral. 1. M. sativa L. (Alfalfa.) Stems erect from a deep perennial tap-root, glabrous, 5-10 dm. high; leaflets cuneate-oblong to ob- lanceolate, toothed above ; flowers many in a short raceme, violet : pod spirally coiled, unarmed. An occasional escape. Native of Europe. 2. M. denticulata Willd. (Bi k-clovkr.) Slender, much branched, decumbent, glabrous annual; leaflets obovate to obcor- date, toothed above; flowers small, yellow, 2-3 <>r rarely more on axillary peduncles; pods coiled, their margins armed with hooked prickles. Everywhere common. Native of Europe. 3. M. apiculata Willd. stems branched from the base, spreading, 3-6 dm. long; Leaflets deltoid, 10-12 n\n\. long, den- Puis.' Family 211 ticulate except near the base; pod spirally coiled; 3-5 mm. broad, unarmed, strongly reticulated, the reticulations extending to the edge and appearing as a row of tubercles on either side of tin- margin. Occasional in lawns, Los Angeles; Pasadena. Native of Europe. 4. M. orbicularis All. .Much branched and spreading; leaves obcordate, denticulate above; stipules laciniate ; peduncles 1-2- flowered; pods coiled, unarmed, veiny, about 1 cm. broad. This species, a native of southern Europe, was collected in a field near Santa Ana by Helen D. Geis in 1902. We are not aware that it has here- tofore been reported from North America. 5. M. lupulina L. More or less pilose-pubescent; stems procumbent or ascending, 2-4 dm. long; leaflets broadly obovate, denticulate above ; flowers in short spikes on slender peduncles, yellow, scarcely 2 mm. long; legume 1-seeded, smooth, reniform, the acuminate tip coiled. Glenn Ranch, Lytle Creek. Native of Europe. 6. MELILOTUS L. Sweet Clover. Erect annual or biennial herbs with pinnately 3-foli- ate leaves, the leaflets serrulate. Stipules adnate. Flowers small in slender pedunculate racemes. Petals free from the diadelphous stamens, deciduous. Pod ovoid, small, scarcely dehiscent, 1— 2-seeded. 1. M. Indica (L.) All. Annual; glabrous, erect, 3-20 dm. high, branching; leaflets mostly cuneate-oblong, obtuse, dentic- ulate, 2.5 cm. long or less; racemes many, bearing small, nearly sessile, yellow flowers. Common in damp ground. Native of Europe. 2. M. alba Lam. Annual; glabrous, erect, 6-20 dm. high, branching ; leaflets truncate ; racemes many, elongated ; flowers white, the standard exceeding the other petals. Habitat of the last and as generally distributed but much less common. Native of Europe. 7. TRIFOLIUM L. Clover. Annual or perennial herbs with palmately 3-foliate leaves. Leaflets usually denticulate. Stipules adnate. 212 Leguminosae Flowers in capitate racemes, spikes or umbels, rarely few or solitary, on more or less elongated axillary or terminal peduncles. Calyx 5-cleft with nearly equal teeth, persistent. Petals persistent, all more or less adnate to the stamina! tube by their claws, or the stand- ard sometimes free : wings narrow ; keel mostly obtuse. Stamens diadelphous. Pods membranous, shorter or slightly exceeding the calyx, l-(>-seeded, dehiscent or indehiscent. * Heads not involucrale. ■*- Calyx-teeth not plumose; flowers ■pedicellate, rejlexed in age. 1. T. gracilentum T. & G. Erect, slender, 2-5 dm. high, gla- brous or peduncles and calyx sparsely villous; stipules lanceo- late; leaflets cuneate-obcordate, serrulate, 1 cm. long; heads 15-25-flowered ; calyx-teeth lanceolate-subulate, setaceously acu- minate, 3 times the length of the tube; petals slightly exceed- ing the calyx-teeth, purple or rose color; pods exserted, 2-seeded. Common throughout our range on the plains and grassy hills. March- April. 2. T. bifidum Gray. Erect, very slender, pale green or glau- cous ; peduncles and calyx more or less villous ; stipules ovate- lanceolate, entire; leaflets linear-cuneate, the sides remotely toothed, apex bifid and mucronulate; heads f> — 1 5- flowered ; calyx- teeth subulate-setaceous, about equaling the minute pale rose- colored corolla; pod included, 1-seeded. Morgans Station, Davidson. 3. T. ciliolatum Bentli. Erect, 2-6 dm. high, glabrous ; stip- ules narrow, acuminate; leaflets cuneate-oblong or obovate, 1-2 cm. long, obtuse or refuse, serrulate; calyx-teeth lanceolate, very acute, rigidly ciliolate; corolla slightly exceeding the calyx, purple. (T. ciliatum Nutt.) Common on grassy hillsides and in the valleys. 4. T. repens L. Perennial, diffuse, creeping, with erect long-stalked leaves and heads; leaflets obcordate, denticulate; calyx-teeth unequal, lanceolate-subulate, shorter than the tube; corolla white; pods usually 1-s led. The white clover of our lawns, occasionally appearing as an BBOape. Pulse Family 213 ■*■ Calyx-teeth plumose; Jiowers subsesxile, not reflexed in age. 5. T. pratense L. Rather stout, erect perennial, 2-3 dm. high, pubescent; leaflets oval or obovate, often retuse, 2-3 cm. long; corolla elongated-tubular, rose-purple. Sparingly cultivated and occasionally appearing as an escape. 6. T. Macraei albopurpureum (T. & G.) Greene. Much branched, ascending or erect, 1-4 dm. high; stipules ovate to lanceolate ; leaflets cuneate-oblong, obtuse, denticulate above the middle, 12-20 mm. long; heads long-peduncled, ovate; calyx- teeth longer than the tube, slender, plumose, equaling the small white-tipped purple corolla. ( T. albopurpureum T. & G.) Frequent on the plains and grassy hills. March-April. ** Heads involucrate. •*- Floivers not inflated. ** Involucre flat. 7. T. Wormskjoldii Lehm. Perennial, spreading under- ground by slender rootstocks ; stems decumbent, often 3 dm. iong or more ; herbage flaccid, glabrous ; stipules lanceolate-acum- inate, laciniately toothed ; leaflets obovate-oblong, obtuse, pecti- nate-denticulate, 2 cm. long or more; involucre 1-2 cm. broad, laciniate-aristate; calyx-tube scarious, 10-striate ; teeth linear- subulate, much longer than the tube, all entire or 1 or more se- taceously 2-3-parted ; standard deeply emarginate, pale purple, the other petals darker. (T. involucratum of Bot. Cal. in part.) Frequent in low ground in the valleys. March-July. 8. T. spinulosum Dougl. Perennial with rather slender de- cumbent or ascending stems, 2 dm. long or more; leaflets nar- rowly oblong, acute at both ends, spinulose denticulate, ending in a stiff spinulose cusp; stipules ovate-acuminate, spinulose- serrate; involucre deeply cleft or divided, smaller than in the last ; calyx-teeth narrowly subulate, stiff and pungent, about ermalingthe corolla. Frequent in the meadows of the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Moun- tains. Closely related to the last, and intermediate forms may be found. 9. T. variegatum Xutt. Annual ; glabrous, decumbent or pros- trate with many slender branches; stipules lanciniately cleft; peduncles slender, longer than the leaves ; leaflets of the lower leaves obcordate, those of the upper obovate-oblong, minutely 214 Leguminosae spinulose-serrate ; involucre laciniate, shorter than the 3-15-flow- ered heads; calyx-tube 15-nerved ; teeth broadly subulate, taper- ing to a setaceous point, longer than the tube; corolla exceed- ing the calyx, purple and whitish-tipped. Frequent in grassy openings in the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains, confined mostly to the pine belt. 10. T. tridentatum Lindl. Annual; erect, 2-4 dm. high, gla- brous; stipules setaceously laciniate; leaflets linear or lanceolate, sharply serrate, 2-6 cm. long; head 2-3 cm. broad; involucre laciniate, much shorter than the Mowers ; flowers about 1 cm. long, bright purple with darker center; tip of standard sometimes whitish; calyx-tube 10-nerved ; the teeth rigid, broad at base, abruptly narrowed to a subulates pinulose-tipped apex which is usually subtended by a short stout tooth on each side. Frequent on the plains and grassy hillsides. Very variable as to foliage. March-April. 11. T. obtusiflorum Hook. Annual; stems stout, erect, flex- uose. purple, with ascending branches; leaves dull green, soft pubescent throughout and very clammy, acidulous; stipules spreading or reflexed; leaflets 2-3 cm. long, linear-lanceolate, pectinately setulose; heads 2-3 cm. broad on long peduncles; calyx-tube with 10 prominent and as many lesser nerves ; corolla whitish with a dark purple center. (T. roscidum Greene.) Occasional on moist shady slopes and along streams in all our mountains, confined mostly to the chaparral belt. *+■*+ Involucre cup-shaped. 12. T. microcephalum Pursh. Annual; slender, much branch- ed, decumbent, soft pubescent; stipules ovate-acuminate, nearly entire ; leaflets obovate-cuneiform or obcordate, denticulate ; heads small, subglobose, many-flowered, on slender peduncles; involu- cre many-cleft, the segments entire; calyx-teeth subulate, broad, scarious and sometimes toothed at base; corolla minute, pinkish ; pod globose, 1-seeded. Common in the foothills and mountains in open places. April-August . ■*-+■ Flowers becoming inflated. 13. T. furcatum Lindl. Usually stout and listulose, branch- ing from near the base, decumbent, 3-6 dm. long: herbage light green, glabrous and somewhat succulent; stipules large, mem- Pulse Family 215 branous, nearly or quite entire; leaflets 1-3 cm. long, broadly obovate, obtuse or retuse, dentate or spinulose-denticulate ; ped- uncles stout, much exceeding the leaves ; involucral bracts con- nate at base, ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, scarious-margined , heads hemispheric, 2-4 cm. broad; calyx-teeth short, entire and unequal ; corolla 1-2 cm. long, ochroleucous or somewhat reddish tinged; pod stipitate, 3-8-seeded; seed rounded, minutely granu- late. Occasional on grassy hillsides in rather heavy soil. Elysian Park, David- ton; Chats worth Park. 14. T. stenophyllum Nutt. Diffuse annual with slender stems and branches, often purplish, decumbent or ascending, 1-3 dm. long ; leaflets linear, remotely serrate-toothed ; peduncles filiform, much longer than the leaves; segments of the involucre oblong, cuneate at the base; head small, hemispheric ; corolla purple or white, inflated from a narrow base to a broad, almost truncate apex; pod 2-seeded ; seeds obliquely heart-shaped, strongly rugose. Frequent on grassy slopes. March. 15. T. depauperatum Desv. Low, diffuse, glabrous, annual, branching from the base, decumbent, flaccid, 6-15 cm. long, few- leafed ; leaflets 1 cm. long, cuneate-oblong, obtuse or emarginate, denticulate; head long-peduncled, few-flowered; involucre much reduced, with truncate short lobes; corolla less inflated, not at all truncate at apex; pod 1-2-seeded ; seeds somewhat angular, tuberculate-rugose. Same range as the last and much resembling depauperate forms of it, but easily distinguished by floral characters. 8. LOTUS L. Annual or perennial herbs or rarely suffrutescent plants, with pinnately 3-many foliate leaves, and minute gland-like or rarely foliaceous or scarious stipules. Flowers solitary or umbellate, naked or subtended by 1— 5-foliate bracts, sessile or on axillary peduncles. Calyx about equally 5-toothed or 5-cleft. Petals free from the stamens, nearly equal ; standard ovate or rounded, the claw often remote from the others ; wings 216 Leguminosae obovate or oblong ; keel slightly incurved, obtuse or acutely beaked ; stamens diadelphous. Style incurved. Pod linear, compressed or nearly terete, straight or arcuate, dehiscent or indehiscent, 1 -many-seeded. (Ho- sackia.) * Stipule 8 not gland-like; perennials. 1. L. oblongifolius (Benth.) Greene. Erect, slender, 3— 4 dm. high, somewhat appressed-pubescent; leaflets 7-11, narrowly oblong or oblanceolate, 2.5-3 cm. long, acute; stipules small, acute; peduncles exceeding the leaves, 5-7-flowered ; bract sub- sessile, 1-3-foliate; flowers 15 mm. long; calyx-teeth subulate, nearly equaling the tube; corolla yellow, turning purplish or brownish ; pod slender, 5 cm. long. Occasional along mountain streams. 2. Li. lathyroides (D. & H.) Greene. Slender, brandling and somewhat flexuose, 2.5-4 dm. high, minutely pubescent; leaflets 5-7, linear-lanceolate, acute at both ends; stipules triangular, 2 mm. long, scarious, ovate-acuminate; umbels 1-3-flowered, with or without a linear-lanceolate bract; flowers 10 mm. long; calyx-teeth linear, acute; pod as in the last. Along streams near Los Angeles and in San Gabriel Canyon. ** Stipules gland-like. •*- Pod straight or nearly so, dehiscent. ** Leaflets 1-3, on a linear rachis. 3. li. Americanus (Nutt.) Bisch. Annual; erect or decum- bent, 2-6 dm. high, more or less villous; leaflets 1-3 or rarely 5, ovate to obloiiir, acutish, 12-15 mm. long; peduncles slender, exceeding the leaves; bracts ii-12 mm. long; flowers solitary, salmon-colored or often whitish; calyx-tube short; the teeth linear, equaling the corolla; pod 2-3 cm. long; seeds oblong, smooth, dark-colored. (H. Purshiana Benth.) Frequent in the foothills and mountains. June-September. -"• +* Leaflets more than S, <-12 mm. long, obtuse or Pulse Family 219 acute; umbels numerous, sessile; flowers 6-8 mm. long, yellow . turning reddish; calyx 3-5 mm. long ; the teeth subulate, erect, slightly less than hall" as long as the tube. (//. glabra Torr.) Common throughout our range in dry places below 3000 feet. Flowering nearly the year round. 1.",. L. junceus (Benth.) Greene. Much resembling the last, erect, shrubby ; leaflets obovate to oblong, 4-8 mm. long ; umbels short-pedunculate to sessile; flowers 6 mm. long; calyx 4 mm. long or less; teeth short and blunt. Said to occur along the seacoast of Los Angeles County, but we have been unable to detect it. 14. L. leucophyllus Greene. Slender, 3-6 dm. high, much branched and ascending, having the habit of L. glaber, hut sil- very canescent with a close short silky pubescence; leaflets :i, cuneate-oblong to linear, 12-15 mm. long; umbels few-flowered, sessile or short-peduncled ; flowers 6 mm. long; calyx half as long, with short slender teeth. (H. sericea Benth.) San Gabriel Mountains, Davidson. 15. L. argophyllus (Gray) Greene. Densely silvery-silky throughout; stems herbaceous, decumbent or ascending, 3-6 dm. long ; leaflets 3-7, obovate and rounded, or oblong and acute, 5-12 mm. long; umbels dense, capitate, on short simple bracted ped- uncles; flowers 8-10 mm. long; calyx half as long; the teeth filiform, nearly as long as the tube, silky. In the pine belt of the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains. 16. L. Davidsoni Greene. Suffrutescent at the very base, the slender branches 3-6 dm. long, prostrate or decumbent, only sparsely leafy, floriferous chiefly near the ends; herbage canes- cent with an appressed silky pubescence ; leaflets 3-5, cuneate- obovate, obtuse or acutish, 4-8 mm. long; umbel unifoliate- bracted, many-flowered, on a slender peduncle, 2.5 cm. long or less, usually exceeding the leaves; calyx-tube 2 mm. long; the teeth slender, 1 mm. long; corolla about 6 mm. long, sulphur- yellow, becoming deep red in age ; pod strongly arcuate. Wilson's Peak, where it was first collected by Davidson. This species is very close to L. argophyllus and will no doubt prove to be only a form of it. May-July. 17. L. Nevadensis (Wats.) Greene. Branches mostly prostrate, wiry at base and more or less woody, 3-6 dm. long; sparingly 220 Leguminosae villous or somewhat tomentose; leaflets 3-5, cuneate-obovate, acute, ti-10 mm. long; umbel many-flowered, short-ped uncled; bract 1-foliate ; calyx-tube 2 mm. long; tbe teeth slender, half as long; pod strongly arcuate. Frequent in the San Bernardino and San Antonio Mountains in open pine woods. ***♦ Amiuals. 18. L. Heermanni (D. & H.) Greene. Branches numerous, flexuose, weak and prostrate, 3-10 dm. long; pubescence spread- ing and slightly tomentose ; leaflets 5-7, obovate or cuneate- oblong, 4-8 mm. long; umbels on short peduncles or sessile; flowers 4-5 mm. long; calyx half as long, somewhat villous; the teeth filiform, about equaling the tube. Canyons of the San Gabriel and Santa Ana Mountains, below 4000 feet. 9. PSORAL.EA L. Punctate with dots and heavy-scented perennial herbs or rarely shrubby. Stipules free from the petiole. Leaves pinnately 3-foliate or rarely palmately 3-5-foli- ate. Calyx-lobes nearly equal, the upper often connate. Keel united with the wings, broad and obtuse above. Stamens diadelphous or monadelphous ; anthers all alike. Pod ovate, indehiscent, 1-seeded. * Leaves pinnately 3-foliate. *■ Stems erect. 1. P. macro8tachya DC. Simple or more or less branched, 1-4 m. high, nearly glabrous, puberulent or often somewhat tomentose; stipules small, lanceolate; leaflets ovate-lanceolate, 3-5 cm. long; peduncles much exceeding the leaves; spikes cylindric, silky-villous ; bracts broad, acuminate, equaling the flowers; lower calyx-tooth longest, about equaling the corolla; tenth stamen nearly free; pod villous, ovate-oblong, acute, com- pressed, (>-8 mm. long. Along si reams in the foothills and in the valleyR. June-August. 2. P. physode-s Dougl. Slender, erect, 3-6 dm. high, nearly glabrous; stipules linear-lanceolate; leaflets ovate, acute, 2-3 cm. long; peduncles about equaling the leaves; racemes short, Pulse Family 221 dense ; bracts small ; calyx with sessile glands and somewhat villous with black hairs, becoming enlarged and inflated in fruit ; teeth short, nearly equal ; corolla 1 cm. long, twice as long as the calyx, ochroleucous, often with a deep purple tinge; stamens monadelphous ; pod rounded, compressed, t> mm. long. Frequent in the upper chaparral belt throughout our range. *■ *■ Stems prostrate. 3. P. orbicularis Lindl. Stem prostrate, creeping, the leaves and racemes erect, long stalked ; leaflets 2.5-4 cm. long, the termi- nal one nearly orbicular, the lateral pair obovate ; raceme often 2 dm. long ; bracts large, deciduous ; calyx villous and pedicellate- glandular, cleft nearly to the base, the lower tooth equaling the purplish corolla ; stamens diadelphous; pod ovate, acute, 6 mm. long. Occasional in the valleys throughout our range; rare in the coast region. ** Leaves pahnately 5-foliate. 4. P. Californica Wats. Low, tufted ; pubescence short, silky, appre8sed ; stipules scarious, lanceolate, deciduous ; leaflets broadly lanceolate, acutish, 2-4 cm. long; peduncles short; ra- cemes rather loose, shorter than the leaves; pedicels slender; calyx silky-villous, 1 cm. long; the lobes linear, acuminate, slightly surpassing the corolla; pod thin, villous, oblong, with a lanceolate beak. San Bernardino Mountains in the chaparral belt. 10. AMOBFHA L. Glandular-punctate and heavy-scented shrubs with unequally pinnate leaves, caducous stipules, and small purple flowers in terminal spikes. Calyx obconic-cam- panulate, 5-toothed, persistent. Standard erect, concave, unguiculate ; wings and keel wanting. Stamens mona- delphous at the base. Pod short, exceeding the calyx, sessile, indehiscent, 1-2-seeded. 1. A. Californica Nutt. 1-3 m. high, puberulent, the nascent parts villous-pubescent; leaflets 11-15, elliptic-oblong, obtuse, 2 222 Leguminosae cm. long; spikes slender, 5-15 cm. long; calyx-teeth acute, broadly triangular. Occasional in the upper chaparral belt in all our mountains. 11. ASTRAGALUS L. Rattle-weed or Loco-weed. Annual or perennial herbs or Bometimes woody at base, with unequally pinnate leaves, persistent stipules, ami rather small flowers arranged in axillary spikes or racemes. Calyx 5-toothed. Petals with narrow blade and slender (daw ; keel obtuse. Stamens diadelphous. Stigma terminal, minute. Pod various, coriaceous and turgid, or thin and bladdery-inflated, L-celled or becom- ing 2-celled by intrusion of one or both sutures. Seeds few to many, small, on slender funiculi. * Annuals. 1. A. didymocarpus H. & A. Slender, 3dm. high, pubescent with fine, somewhat scattered hairs ; leaflets 9-15, cuneate-oblong to linear, emarginate, 6-10 mm. long; spikes long-peduncled, dense, ovate or oblong, 2-3 cm. long; flowers 3-5 nun. long, dull purplish; pods erect, 4 mm. long, and about as broad, scarcely exserted from the calyx, strongly wrinkled, 2-celled, 2-seeded. Frequent on the plains and on grassy slopes of the foothills, mostly in the interior region. 2. A. nigrescens Nutt. Stems very slender, 1-2 dm. high, slightly pubescent ; leaflets as in the last ; spikes less dense, cylindric, 2 cm. long; pods deflexed, well exserted from the calyx, slightly wrinkled, strongly obcompressed ; closely related to the last, but easily distinguished by fruit. Not known within our limits, but it has been reported from Newhall and Catalina Island. March-May. 3. A. strigosus (Kell.) Sheldon. Slender, sparsely and mi- nutely pubescent, 15-20 cm. high ; leaflets 9-15, linear or cuneate, acute or retnse; flowers many, capitate, on a slender peduncle, purple and white; pod 15 mm. long, slender, incurved, 2-celled, 6-10 seeded. In low ground near the coast. March-M.iv Pulse Family 223 ** Perennials. ■*-Pods bladdery-inflated. ■"■Pods stipitate. 4. A. leucopsis Torr. (Rattle-weed.) Stems erect, 3-5 dm. high, tomentulose-eanescent ; leaflets 10-15 pairs, oval or oblong, obtuse, lcm. long or more; spike-like racemes, 3-t> cm. long or some- times more; flowers 12 mm. long; calyx-tube campanulate, the teeth subulate, more than half as long as the tube; pod thin, bladdery, oval, unequally sided, 2-3 cm. long, tapering to a stipe L2 mm. long or less. Frequent on the plains. March-May. +*** Puds sessile. 5. A. Parishii Gray. Nascent parts sparsely pubescent, becoming glabrous or nearly so ; stems somewhat fistulose, much branched from the base and decumbent; leaves about 1 dm. long, bearing about 32 leaflets ; leaflets 10-25 mm. long; racemes 2-4 cm. long; flowers greenish-white, 1 cm. long; pods sessile, 2-3 cm. long and nearly as thick. Chatsworth Park. ** Pods not bladder y-injiated. 6. A. Antiselli Gray. Stems slender, erect, 3-5 dm. high, cinereous-pubescent, leaflets 21-29, linear-oblong, crowded, 4-8 mm. long, glabrous above, pubescent beneath ; raceme loosely few-flowered ; flowers small, greenish- white ; calyx-teeth half the length of the campanulate tube; pod thin, linear-oblong, com- pressed, glabrous, 1-celled, 15 mm. long, 4 mm. wide, tapering to a stipe of about half its length. On grassy hillsides in our interior valleys. April. 7. A. pycnostachys Gray. Stout, erect, 6 dm. high, more or less villous-hoary ; leaflets about 21, oblong, 12 mm. long; flowers yellowish, in dense cylindric short-peduncled spikes; pods crowded, retrorsely imbricated, ovate, acute, laterally flat- tened, thin-coriaceous, glabrous, coarsely reticulate, 1-celled. In moist subsaline soil near the sea. July-September. 8. A. Brauntonii Parish. Stems lignescent at base, 1-1.5 m. long, erect or reclining ; herbage canescent throughout with a short soft pubescence; leaflets 15-20 pairs, oblong, 2-5 cm. long; 224 Leguminosae flowers and fruit reflexed in compact many-flowered spikes; calyx-teeth slender, equaling the tube; corolla light purple; pod sessile, coriaceous, oblong, 1 cm. long, 2-celled by the nearly com- plete infolding of the dorsal suture to near the apex; seeds 2-3. Occasional in dry places in the Santa Monica Mountains, Hasee, Braun- ton. 12. GL.YCYRRHIZA L. Licomce. Glandular-viscid erect perennial herbs with unequal- ly pinnate leaves more or less persistent, and flowers in dense axillary peduncled spikes. Calyx 5-cleft. Petals narrow. Stamens monadelphous or diadelphous ; the alternate anthers smaller ; anther-cells continent at the apex. Pod short, compressed, often curved, prickly, in- dehiscent, few- seeded. 1. G. glutinosa Nutt. Erect or decumbent, 6-9 dm. high, nearly glabrous and viscid with minute sessile resinous dots, or glutinous by a villous or hirsute glandular pubescence ; leaflets 13-19, oblong-lanceolate, 2.5-5 cm. long ; stipules ovate-acuminate to lanceolate, persistent; spikes oblong, 2.5-4 cm. long, on ped- uncles a little shorter; pod bur-like. Occasional in canyons below 4000 feet, in our interior region. 13. VICIA L. Vetch. Herbs with angular stems, more or less climbing by the tendrils at the ends of the pinnate leaves, (alvx 5-cleft or 5-toothed, the upper teeth often shorter. \\" inns of the corolla adhering to the middle of the keel. Sta- mens diadelphous or nearly so ; anthers uniform. Style filiform, inflexed, the apex surrounded by hairs. Pod flat, 2-valved. Seeds globular, usually many. * Perennials. 1. V. Americana Muhl. Glabrous or nearly so, weak, 6-16 dm. high, climbing by branched tendrils; leaflets 8—12, thin- membranous, vivid green above, pale beneath, mostly broadly oblong and obtuse, mucronulate, 1-2 cm. long; peduncles shorter Pulse Family 225 than the leaves, 4-8-flowered ; flowers purplish or bluish, about is mm. long; calyx-tube 4 mm. long; the lower teeth about 2 mm. long, the upper shorter, approximate, incurved. Our forms all seem to belong to the two varieties. V. Americana trincata (Xutt.) Brew. Leaflets oblong-elliptic or the lower broadly linear, 15-30 cm. long, truncate or broadly retuse at summit, otherwise like the type. Occasional on shaded slopes in the chaparral belt. V. Americana linearis (Nutt.) Wats. Leaflets narrowly linear, acute, strongly veined beneath, 12-25 cm. long. Frequent in the chaparral belt, usually in more open places than the last. 2. V. Californica Greene. Erect or decumbent, rather strict and seldom climbing, 1.5-4 dm. high, villous-pubescent ; tendrils short, stiflish, seldom branched ; leaflets 8-12, subcoriaceous, deli- cately feather-veined, cuneate-obovate, truncate or retuse, 10-15 mm. long, more or less dentate toward the mucronulate apex; racemes exceeding the leaves, 3-5-flowered; calyx-teeth all broad and short; corolla 12-18 mm. long, deep purple. Summit of Mount Santiago, Orange County, and in the pine belt of the Cuyamaca Mountains. ** Annuals. 3. V. sativa L. Stoutish, erect or nearly so, 6-9 dm. high, somewhat pubescent; leaflets 8-12, obovate-oblong, truncate or retuse, mucronate; flowers 1 or 2, subsessile, 15 mm. long, red- purple. Rarely seen as an escape. Native of Europe. 4. V. exigua Nutt. Slender, 3-6 dm. high, slightly pubescent ; leaflets 4-6, oblong-linear, obtuse; peduncles filiform, shorter than the leaves, 1-2-flowered ; calyx-teeth lanceolate from a broad base; corolla white or purplish, 4-6 mm. long; pod glabrous, 4-5-seeded. Occasional on grassy hills, mostly in sandy soil. 5. V. Hassei Wats. Taller and less delicate than the last ; leaves longer and more numerous, deeply notched at apex ; flowers 6 mm. long; pod shortly stipitate, 5-8-seeded. Same range as the last and probably only a robust form of it. 226 Leguminosae 14. LATHYRUS L. Wild Pea. Much resembling Vicia, but usually larger with broader leaves and flowers. Style-branches dilated and flattish above, hairy along the inner side. 1. L. violaceus Greene. Sparsely and minutely pubescent throughout ; stems slender, shrubby below, 1-2.5 m. high, acutely angled ; stipules entire, narrow, less than half as long as adjacent leaflet; leaflets about 12, elliptic, obtuse, with a deflexed mucro; peduncles surpassing the leaves, many-flowered and rather dense ; flowers 16 mm. long; lateral calyx-teeth much longer than the tube ; the lowest equaling these and half as broad ; the upper pair short, slightly connivent ; petals purple; standard strongly obcor- date; wings slightly shorter than keel. Common in the foothills, especially in the chaparral belt. 2. L. laetiflorus Greene. Sparsely and minutely appressed pubescent; stems slender, herbaceous or somewhat shrubby below, 1-2.5 m. high; leaves of rather firm texture, elliptic- lanceolate; peduncles surpassing the leaves, loosely many- flowered ; flowers about 22 mm. long ; lateral pair of calyx-teeth broadly subulate, about equaling the tube, the lowest subulate, longer than the tube, the upper pair very short, connivent at tip ; petals nearly white, faintly flesh color; standard obcordate, the sides abruptly reflexed, purple-veined ; wings meeting and con- cealing the keel from above. Less common than the last, but having about the same range. 3. L. Alfeldi White. Glabrous or sparingly pubescent through- out; stem rather stout, flexuose, wingless; stipules semicordate, acuminate, thick, strongly reticulated, %~% as l°nK ae the leaf- lets and often nearly as broad, the lower coarsely lobed, acu- minately toothed; leaflets 6-10, oblong to obovate, thick and stiff, prominently reticulated, glabrous ; peduncles (i-10-flowered, much exceeding the leaf ; flowers 2-3 cm. long, purple ; pedicels longer than the calyx-tube ; calyx pubescent, upper teeth short, broadly triangular, acute, lateral pair oblong-lanceolate, equaling the tube, the lowest of equal length, subulate. Frequent In the foothills of our Interior region. L. 8PLENDKN8 Torr. Flowers very showy, deep rose-purple. A very handsome species of Riverside and San Diego County, said to have been first collected at Cucamonga. Geraniaceae -27 Family 43. GERANIACEAE. Geranium Family. Herbs with alternate or opposite, palmately lobed or pinnate leaves, and axillary solitary or clustered perfed regular flowers. Stipules commonly present. Sepals 5, rarely fewer, usually persistent. Petals of the same number, hypogynous. Stamens as many or '2-8 times as many ; anthers 2-celled, versatile. Carpels 5, united aboul a central axis, each 1-2-ovuled, Lndehiscent, at Length elastically splitting away from below, and beaked by the long style. A ii i hers 10: carpel tails not hairy on the inside. 1. Geranium. Anthers 5; carpel tails hairy on the inside. 2. Erodiu.m. 1. GERANIUM L. Geranium. Herbs with stipulate, palmately Lobed, cleft or divided leaves and axillary 1— 2-flowered peduncles. Flowers regular, 5-merous. Sepals imbricated. Petals hypog- ynous, imbricated. Stamens 10, generally 5 longer and 5 shorter. Style persistent, naked on the inner surface, becoming recurved. Carpel opening along the inner face. 1. G. Carolinianum L. More or less spreading, 15-30 cm. high, loosely gray pubescent and glandular; leaves incisely 3-5-parted, 3-5 cm. broad; segments cuneate, more or less deeply toothed or dissected; peduncles 2-rlowered, about 2 cm. long; petals rose color, 4-5 mm. broad; beak of fruit villous or glandular; carpels villous-hispid, usually black; seed reticulate. Frequent on grassy hillsides of the valleys and foothills. March-April. G. Richardsoni F. & M. Stems 3-6 dm. high; leaves thin, 5-12 cm. broad, incisely 3-5-parted; flower 18-20 mm. broad, white or lavender with rose-colored veins. Frequent in open pine woods and meadows in the San Bernardino and San Jacinto Mountains. June-August. 2. ERODIUM L'Her. Alfilerilla. Herbs with mostly jointed nodes, opposite or alternate stipulate leaves, and axillary umbellate nearly regular 228 Oxalidaceae flowers. Sepals •">. imbricated. Petals 5, hypogynous, imbricated, the 2 upper slightly smaller. Glands 5. Anther-bearing stamens 5, with slightly dilated filaments alternating with as many sterile filaments. Styles be- coming spirally coiled after splitting away, pubescenl on the inner face. Carpels closed. * Leaves rounded, crenately toothed or lobed. 1. E. macrophyllum H. & A. Mostly nearly or quite acau- lescent, tomentose with copious interspersed long glandular hairs at least on the pedicels; leaves triangular-ovate or reniform, crenate-serrate, sometimes crenately-lobed; peduncles exceeding the leaves, accrescent, at length 1 cm. long; petals equaling the sepals, dull white; carpel clavate, densely velvety-pubescent; seeds smooth. Occasional in dry grassy places in the valleys or low foothills. ** Leaves pinnate or bipinnate. 2. E. moschatum AVilld. Acaulescent and prostrate or with ascending branches, mostly rather stout and glandular ; leaves rather ample; stipules large, obtuse; leaflets unequally and doubly serrate ; peduncle several-flowered ; flowers rose color or purple, on rather short, stout pedicels ; sepals not terminated by long bristles; antheriferous filaments 2-toothed. The more prevailing species in the coast valleys. Native of southern Europe. 3. E. cicutarium (L.) L'Her. Much resembling the last, but more slender and less glandular, often coarsely canescent; leaf- lets laciniately pinnatifid with narrow, acute lobes; pedicels slen- der; petals rose color or purple; sepals with 1-2 terminal bristle- like hairs; filaments not toothed. The prevailing species of the interior valleys and foothills. Family 44. OXALIDACEAE. Wood-sorrel Family. Annual or perennial, leafy stemmed or acaulescent herbs, often with rootstocks or scaly bulbs, with sour saj) (oxalic-acid), and mostly palmately 3-foliate leaves. Linaceae 229 Stipules commonly present as scarious margins to the bases of the petioles ; Leaflets mostly obcordate. Flowers perfect, in umbel-like or forking cymes <»r rarely solitary, on mostly rather long peduncles. Sepals 5, often un- equal. Petals 5, white, purple or yellow. Stamens 10-15. Ovary 5-lobed, 5-celled ; styles united or dis- tinct ; ovules 2-many in each cell. Fruit a loculicidal, globose or columnar capsule. Embryo straight ; endo- sperm fleshy. 1. OXALIS L. Wood-sorrel. Sepals imbricated, regular. Petals hypogynous. Sta- mens 10, monadelphous at base, 5 longer and 5 shorter, all anther-bearing. Ovules several in each cell ; styles 5, distinct, persistent ; stigmas terminal. Seeds with a loose aril-like dehiscent outer coat. 1. O. Wrightii Gray. Ctespitose perennial, the prostrate and rooting or ascending stems suffrutescent and more or less branched below, 15-20 cm. long or more, from a short, erect, woody caudex ; leaves 3-foliate ; leaflets 4-10 mm. long, often broader; petiole somewhat stipular-dilated at base; flowers 6-10 mm. broad, yellow, 1-3 on elongated, axillary peduncles which are short-bracteate at summit; petals obovate, twice as long as the calyx, usually emarginate ; capsules oblong, 1-1.5 cm. long. Common in the chaparral belt throughout our range. 2. O. corniculata L. Annual, Cfespitose, prostrate and root- ing at the nodes, somewhat rough-villous ; leaflets 6-10 mm. long, mostly broader ; stipules evident, rounded or truncate at summit, adnate; flowers 6 mm. long, solitary or umbelled, otherwise as in the last. Occasional about lawns and greenhouses. Family 45. LINACEAE. Flax Family. Herbs or shrubs with alternate or opposite leaves and perfect regular flowers. Stipules mostly small or none. Sepals 5, rarely 4, imbricated, persistent. Petals of the 2.'!») Polygalaceae same number and alternate with them ; filaments mona- delphous at the base ; anthers versatile, 2-celled. Ovary L, 2 5-celled or falsely 4-10-celled. Styles 2-5. Fruit capsular. Seeds 1 - in each cell, oily ; endosperm little or none ; embryo straight. 1. LINUM L. Flax or Linseed. Annual or perennial herbs, sometimes woody at the base, wit 1 1 alternate or opposite, rarely whorled, sessile leaves, and perfect flowers. Lnflpr-escence axillary or paniculate. Stipules a pair of glands or wanting. Sepals 5. Petals 5, fugaceous. Stamens 5, sometimes with interspersed staminodia. Ovary I ^-celled or falsely 8-10-celled ; ovules 2 to each cell. Capsule 5-10-valved. 1. L.. usitatissmum L. Annual; often tufted, erect, branching above, 3-5 dm. high, glabrous and somewhat glaucous; leaves alternate, 3-nerved, lanceolate, 1-4 cm. long, 2-6 mm. wide; stipules none ; inflorescence a terminal cymose leafy panicle ; flowers blue, 12-10 mm. broad, on slender pedicels; sepals ovate, acuminate, tbe inner ones ciliateand 3-ribbed ; petals obcuneate, crenulate, twice the length of the sepals; capsule ovoid-conic, 0-8 mm. long, indehiscent; seeds compressed. Occasional along streets about Los Angeles. Family 46. POLYGALACEAE. Milkwort Family. Herbs' or shrubs with alternate, opposite or whorled, exstipulate leaves and racemdse, spicate or solitary and axillary flowers. Pedicels generally 2-bracted at base. Flowers perfect, irregular. Sepals 5. Petals ."> or 5, hypogynous, more or Less united into a tnbe. the Lower one- often crested. Stamens generally 8, united in 1 or 2 sets, ovary 2-celled ; styles simple; Btigma curved, dilated or Lobed : ovules 1 in eaeli cell, anatrojuuis. Euphorbiaceae 231 Fruit mainly capsular. Seeds generally earuncled, often hairy ; embryo straight. 1. POL YG ALA L. Eerbs or shrubs with alternate, opposite or whorled leaves and racemose, spicate or rarely solitary flowers. Petals 3. united into a tube, which is split on the back and more or less adnate to the stamens. Stamens 8 or 6, nioiiadelphous below or diadelphous. Capsule membran- ous, compressed, dehiscent along the margin ; seeds usually hairy. 1. P. Californica Nutt. Stems many, slender, 5-20 cm. high, from a woody base, mostly simple ; leaves oblong-lanceolate or ovate-elliptic, 1-2.5 cm. long; flowers rose-purple, on bracteate pedicels, 2-6 mm. long; wings 5 mm. long, rounded, saccate at base, inner sepals broadly spatulate, 1 cm. long or less; lateral petals linear-lanceolate, somewhat ciliate, equaling the broad obtuse somewhat curved !>eak of the rounded hood ; fruit mostly from cleistogamous flowers ; capsule glabrous, broadly ovate, 3 mm. long, retuse, narrowly margined ; seed pubescent ; caruncle calyp- triform, wrinkled and bladdery. A more northern plant growing in shady places; rare within our limits, being known only from the Mount Wilson trail at about 3000 feet altitude, McClatchie. Family 47. EUPHORBIACEAE. Spurge Family. Monoecious or dioecious herbs, shrubs or trees with acrid, often milky juice. Leaves opposite, alternate or whorled, entire or toothed, sessile or petioled, sometimes with glands at the base ; stipules present or wanting. Inflorescence various. Flowers sometimes apetalous, often reduced and subtended by an involucre, which resembles a calyx. Stamens few or numerous, in 1 or many series ; filaments distinct or united. Ovary usu- ally 3-celled ; ovules 1-2 in each cell, pendulous ; styles equaling the cells in number, simple, divided or many- 232 Euphorbiaceae cleft. Fruit mostly a 3-lobed capsule separating often elastically into 3 2-valved carpels from a persistent axis. Seeds anatropous ; embryo straight or slightly curved ; endosperm fleshy or oily ; cotyledons broad. Flowers with true calyx, not involucrate. Stellate-pubescent. Perennial; capsule 3-celled; dioecious. I, Croton. Annual; capsule 1-celled; monoecious. 2. Eremocarpus. Glabrous or nearly so. Leaves small, entire. 3. Stillingia. Leaves large, palmately lobed. 4. Ricinus. Flowers subtended by an involucre; calyx represented by a minute scale at the base of the filament-like pedicel. 5. Euphorbia. 1. CROTON L. Crotox. Stellate-pubescent, more or less glandular and strong- scented herbs or shrubs, with mostly alternate, entire, toothed or lobed leaves, and monoecious or dioecious flowers in terminal or axillary clusters. Staminate flowers uppermost ; calyx usually 5-parted ; petals usu- ally present, small or rudimentary, alternating with the glands ; stamens 5 or more, inflexed. Pistillate flowers clustered below the staminate ; calyx 5-10-parted ; petals usually wanting ; ovary 3-celled ; ovules 1 in each cell ; styles once, twice or many times 2-cleft. Capsule splitting into usually 2-valved carpels ; seeds smooth or minutely pitted. 1. C. Californicus Muell. Arg. Suffrutescent, procumbent or ascending, 4-12 dm. high, dichotomously branched ; the branches slender, cinereous throughout with a dense appressed scurf; peti- oles slender, 2-3.5 cm. long; stipules obsolete; leaves generally oblong, 2.5-5 cm. long, 8-18 mm. wide, entire, 3-5-nerved ; dioe- cious; staminate plants more slender and short-branched; ra- cemes simple; flowers about 3 mm. broad, on pedicels 4-6 mm. long; sepals 5, ovate ; stamens 12-15 ; filaments ciliate ; pistillate raceme mostly 2-3-flowered ; styles 3, palmately 3-5-cleft or twice 2-cleft. Capsule usually 5-6 mm. high; seeds oval or globose, 4.5-5 mm. long, black. Common in dry ground throughout our range. Spurge Family 233 2. C. Californicus tenuis (Wats.) Ferguson. Stems erect, 3-7 dm. high, with very slender branches, densely scaly-stellate; leaves narrowly oblong to lanceolate, 2-4.5 cm. long, 0.5-1 cm. wide, entire; petioles 5-10 mm. long, less than half the length of the leaves; staminate Mowers about 2 mm. broad ; stamens 10-12; seeds 3-4 mm. long. Same range as the type, and perhaps best considered only a form of it. 2. EREMOCARPUS Benth. Stellate-pubescent glandular and heavy-scented an- nual herbs, with alternate entire 3-nerved petiolate exstipulate leaves, and monoecious apetalous flowers in axillary cymes. Calyx 5-6-parted, slightly imbricate in the staminate flowers, wanting in the pistillate. Sta- mens 6-7, central on the hairy receptacle ; filaments exserted. Ovary with 4-5 small glands at the base, 1-celled, 1-ovuled ; style simple, filiform, stigmatic at the apex. Capsule obovate-oblong, 2-valved. Seed smooth and shining ; endosperm fleshy. 1. E. setigerus Benth. Low spreading heavy-scented annual, hoary pubescent with a dense stellate and spreading hispid pubescence; leaves ovoid or rhomboid, 2-5 cm. long, on slender petioles, the upper crowded and appearing opposite or verticil- late; staminate flowers few, long-pedicelled ; calyx with oblong, obtuse segments, 2 mm. long; pistillate 1-3 in the axils; ovary and style densely pubescent; capsule and seed 4 mm. long. A common autumnal weed in all our valleys. Known as turkey weed. 3. RICINUS L. Castor-beax. A tall monoecious herb, often persisting for several years and becoming a small tree. Leaves alternate, large peltate, palmately lobed and toothed. Flowers numerous, small, apetalous, greenish, in terminal racemes, the pistillate above the staminate. Staminate flowers with a 3-5-parted calyx and numerous crowded stamens : filaments branched. Pistillate flowers with a caducous 234 Euphorbiaeeae calyx- Ovary 3-celled, 3-ovufled^ styles 3, united at the base, 2-cleft. Capsule subglobose or oval, smooth or spiny, separating into 3 2-valved carpels. Seeds ovoid or oblong, mottled. 1. R. communis L. An introduced plant which is becoming well established. In protected places it often becomes woody and tree-like. 4. STILL.INGIA L. Glabrous herbs or shrubs with alternate or rarely opposite, entire or toothed leaves, often with 2 glands at the base, and monoecious bracteolate apetalous flowers in terminal spikes,; bractlets 2-glandular. Staminate flowers several together in the axils of the bractlets : calyx slightly 2-3-lobed : stamens 2-3, exserted. Pistil- Late flowers solitary in the axils of the Lower bractlets : calyx 3-lobed ; ovary 2-3-celled ; ovules 1 in each cell ; styles short, somewhat united at the base. Capsule 2-3-lobed, separating into 2-3 2-valved carpels. Seeds ovoid or subglobose. 1. S. linearifolia Wats Herbaceous, branching from the somewhat woody base; the stems and branches slender, terete, ascending, '■> dm. high or more; leaves linear, entire or rarely ob- scurely glandular-toothed, acute, 1.5-2.5 cm. long; spikes slender, open, 2.5-4 mm. long, with 2-7 scattered pistillate flowers below; bracts very small, ovate, acute, minutely glandular on both sides, 1-flowered; staminate flowers minute; calyx turbinate ; stamens 2; pistillate calyx none; capsule 3 mm. broad; seed round-ovate, acute, 2 mm. long, smooth, somewhat viscid. Occasional about San Bernardino and eastward in dry barren places, and in similar places about San Diego. 5. EUPHORBIA L. Monoecious herbs or shrubs with alternate, opposite or yerticillate Leaves, and cymose flowers borne in Bessileor peduncled, turbinate or campanulate involucres, sub- Spurge Family "-!■">•"> tended bybractswhich areoften brightly colored. Sinuses of the involucre usually bearing .irlainls. naked or append- aged. Staminate Blowers scattered over the inner surface of the involucre, consisting of a stamen, jointed od a fila- ment-like pedicel which is subtended by a minute bractlet, supposed to represent a calyx. Pistillate flowers solitary, consist in-' of a .".-celled ovary usually exserted on a stalk ; styles ■">. 2-cleft. Capsules often nodding, 3-lobed, separat- ing into 3 2-valved carpels. Seeds sometimes caruncled, variously pitted, ridged or wrinkled. * Ola ads of the involucre mostly with white or colored membranous margins. ■*- Leaves entire ; margins of glands conspicuous. 1. E. albomarginata T. A: G. Glabrous; stems numerous from a woody perennial base, prostrate or decumbent, 5-30 cm. long; leaves nearly orbicular, 4-8 mm. broad, often retuse above and si tmewhat cordate at base, with a thin whitish edge ; stipules united into a conspicuous membranous white triangular scale, entire or somewhat lacerate; involucres mostly solitary, cam- panulate or turbinate, about 1.5 mm. long; glands maroon color with a conspicuous entire white or rose-colored dilated append- age; capsule about 2 mm. long, the lobes angled on the back; seeds oblong, 4-angled. Common and general. Flowering all summer. 2. E. polycarpa Benth. Glabrous or somewhat finely pubes- cent; stems numerous from a perennial woody base, prostrate or decumbent, 5-30 cm. long; leaves round-ovate, obtuse, usually slightly cordate, 2-6 mm. long; stipules minute, short-triangular to lanceolate, ciliate, distinct; involucres mostly solitary, about 1 mm. long; glands mostly dark purple, the white or rose-colored somewhat crenate margins often very narrow; capsule small with angled lobes; seeds oblong, 4-angled, about 1 mm. long. Occasional in the foothills, especially in the Santa Ana Mountains. 3. E. melandenia Torr. Cinereous with a dense soft pubes- cence, much branched from the base, the branches ascending forming tufts; root simple, somewhat lignescent, but apparently annual ; leaves mostly ovate, short-petioled, usually oblique at 236 Euphorbiaeeae base, one side being somewhat cordate; stipules minute, ciliate, distinct; involucres solitary; gland purple, its appendages with a white or rose-colored margin; capsule densely hirsute. (E. polycarpa vestitus Wats.) Common in the chaparral belt of the San Gabriel and Santa Ana Moun- tains. •*-■*- Leaves serrulate ; margins of glands smaller, greenish-white. 4. E. serpyllifolia Pers. Glabrous, annual ; stems prostrate or ascending, 1-3 dm. long; leaves mostly oblong, often narrowed toward the oblique base, serrulate at the rounded or retuse sum- mit, 4-12 mm. long; stipules distinct, setaceous or lacerate; in- volucres solitary or in loose leafy clusters, campanulate, about 1 mm. long; glands small, greenish, the margin narrow, crenate or entire; capsule angled, 2 mm. long; seeds sharply 4-angled, the sides somewhat rugose. Rather frequent throughout our range in moist places, especially on borders of ponds. ** Gland destitute of colored margin; stipules none. 5. E. dictyosperma F. & M. Glabrous, annual; stem simple or sometimes branching below, dichotomously branched above, 15-45 cm. high ; stem leaves scattered, oblong-spatulate to obo- vate-spatulate, obtuse, obtusely serrate, often retuse, 1-3 cm. long; on the branches opposite, broadly ovate to oblong, the floral ones roundish-ovate, subcordate, mucronate, 4-12 mm. long; rays usually 3 times forked; involucres and glands small ; styles bifid or parted; capsule with rounded and warty lobes, 2-3 mm. long; seeds subglobose, delicately netted-veined, dark colored. Occasional in rather moist places in all our foothills and mountains, con- fined mostly to the chaparral belt. (I. E. nutans Lag. Annual, glabrous or sparingly pubescent; stems branched, ascending or erect, 2-6 dm. long, branches often recurved at the ends; leaves opposite; leaves obl<>ng-ovate to linear-oblong, oblique, 3-nerved, unequally serrate, short- petioled; stipules triangular, slightly lacerate; involucres nar- rowly obovoid, 1 mm. long; glands subtended by small rounded reddish appendages; capsule glabrous ; seeds oblong-ovoid, 1.5 mm. long, 4-angled, transversely rugose. This Bpeoles, heretofore not known west of the Rocky Mountains, has been recent ly collected near Santa Ana by Helen I), d is. Callitrichaceae 237 Family 48. CALLITRICHACEAE. Water Star- wort Family. Herbaceous aquatic or rarely terrestrial plants, with Blender or capillary stems, opposite exstipulate entire leaves, and minute perfect monoecious axillary flowers. Perianth none. Bracts 2, sac-like or none Stamens 1 ; filaments elongated, filiform ; anthers cordate. 2-celled, opening by lateral slits. Pistil 1 ; ovary 4-celled ; ovules 1 in each cell : styles 2, filiform. Fruit com- pressed, lobed, the lobes more or less winged or keeled on the margins, separating at maturity into 4 flattish L-seeded carpels. Seed anatropous, pendulous : endo- sperm fleshy : embryo straight or slightly curved. 1. CALLITRICHE L. Characters of the family, this being the only genus. 1. C. marginata Torr. Usually rooting in the mud, small, with linear-oblanceolate leaves, 4-6 mm. long or less, sometimes floating with slender stems and the upper leaves spatulate ; styles elongated, reflexed, deciduous; fruit on slender spreading pedi- cels, 2-8 mm. long, deeply emarginate above and below, the margins of the thick carpels widely divergent, narrowly winged. Soldiers Home, Hasse. Near San Diego in shallow pools on the mesa. Family 49. LIMNANTHACEAE. False Mermaid Family. Annual herbs with alternate petioled exstipulate pin- nately divided leaves and perfect regular axillary long- peduncled flowers. Sepals 2-5, valvate, persistent. Petals the same number as the sepals, alternating with as many small glands ; the nearly perigynous stamens twice as many, distinct. Carpels as many as sepals and opposite them, 1-ovuled, nearly distinct ; the single style slender. _'.'.-■ Anacardaceae arising from the center as in the Geraniaeeae, cleft above into as many stigmas as there are carpels. Fruit very deeply 2-5-lobed, the carpels indehiscent, rough ortuber- cled. 1. LIMNANTHUS R. Br. Low diffuse annuals, growing near water, with showy white or rose-colored flowers solitary on axillary ped- uncles. Carpels subglobose, at first fleshy, becoming hard and rugose. 1. L. Douglasii R.Br. Glabrous throughout, diffusely branch- ed from the base, the weak and succulent stems 15-45 cm. long; leaflets incisely lobed or parted with linear acute lobes ; ped- uncles 5-10 cm. long; sepals lanceolate, 6-8 mm. long; petals oblong or obovate, emarginate or truncate, 12-16 mm. long, yel- low ; style very slender, 6-8 mm. long. Growing in wet places. Reported from Los Angeles and San Bernardino. Family 50. ANACARDACEAE. Sumac Family. Shrubs or trees with a resinous and usually acrid juice, alternate simpleor compound exstipulatc leaves. Flowers small, regular, mostly 5-merous, often polygamous or dioe- cious, variously clustered. Stamens as many or twice as many as the petals. ( (vary free. 1 -eel led and 1-ovuled : styles sometimes 3. Fruit drupaceous. 1. RHUS L. Shrubs or small trees with simple or pinnate decidu- ous or evergreen leaves, and small (lowers in axillary and terminal panicles or sometimes in racemes or spikes. Sepals and petals usually 5. Stamens as many or twice as many, with subulate filaments inserted under the t-(\^c of a disk lining the base of the calyx. Fruit a small dry drupe. Seed pendulous upon a Blender funic- ulus rising from the base of the cell. Sumac Family 239 * Inflorescence paniculate; fruit glabrous. 1. R. diversiloba T. & G. (Poison Oak.) Erect, 1-3 m. high, or ascending trees by aerial roots to a considerable height ; leaves 3-foliate, deciduous ; leaflets ovate, obovate or elliptic, very obtuse or roundish at apex, variously lobed or toothed, or rarely entire; flowers greenish, in small axillary open spreading or drooping panicles; drupes 4-6 mm. in diameter, with a thin glabrous deciduous epicarp and granular waxy persistent mesocarp; stone rugose or undulate. Frequent in the chaparral belt throughout our range. April-May. 2. R. laurina Nutt. Erect evergreen shrub, 2-4 m. high, exhaling the odor of bitter almonds; leaves thin, coriaceous, oblong-lanceolate, entire, acute or obtuse, mucronate, 7-10 cm. long, rounded at base on rather long petioles ; flowers polygamous, very small, white, numerous in ample terminal panicles; drupes whitish, 2-3 mm. in diameter, smooth; mesocarp waxy; stone minute, smooth. Very common in the foothills and extending well up into the chaparral; less common in the interior. June-July. ** Inflorescence glomerate or spike-like; fruit viscid, reddish. 3. R. integrifolia (Nutt.) B. & H. Low evergreen shrub, 1-2 m. high, often more or less depressed, with short stiff branches; leaves oval, rigid-coriaceous, very obtuse at both ends, or acutish at base, entire or sometimes serrate, 2.5-4 cm. long, dark green and shining ahove, veiny and paler beneath ; petioles 5-8 mm. long; inflorescence and young parts cinereous or canescently puherulent ; flowers white or rose-colored, glomerate, sessile, sub- tended by rather thick orbicular bracts within which are 2 simi- lar but thinner bractlets ; sepals oval-orbicular, scarious-margined, ciliolate; drupes very viscid and acid, about 10 mm. in diameter. Bluffs along the seashore; rarely extending inland on our range, Cahuenga Pass: rather frequent in the foothills back of San Diego. February-March. 4. R. ovata Wats. Erect or spreading evergreen shrub, 1.5-3 m. high ; leaves rigid-coriaceous, very smooth and shining, ovate or subcordate, acute at apex, entire or sharply serrate; inflores- cence glabrous or glabrate; bracts as in the last; calyx scarcely or not at all ciliolate; fruit 8 mm. in diameter, otherwise as in the last. Occasional in the chaparral belt throughout our range. March-April. 240 A.oeraceae 5. R. trilobata Nutt. Low branching deciduous aromatic shrub, more or less pubescent when young; leaves 3-foliate; the terminal leaflet 2.5-5 cm. long, 3-lobed and coarsely toothed above the middle; the lateral pair 1-1.5 cm. long, round-ovate, scarcely lobed, crenate; flowers yellowish, appearing before the leaves in short spike-like clusters; drupes viscid-hirsute. Frequent in the foothills and mountains throughout our range. March. Family 51. ACERACEAE. Maple Family. Trees or shrubs with watery often saccharine sap, opposite simple and palmately lobed or pinnate leaves. and axillary or terminal cymose or racemose regular polyg- amous or dioecious flowers. Calyx generally 5-parted, the segments imbricated. Petals of the same number or none. Disk thick, annular, lobed, sometimes obsolete. Stamens t 1 "J. often 8; filaments filiform. Ovary 2-lobed, 2-celled; styles 2, inserted between the lobes. Fruit of 2 long-winged samaras, joined at the base and 1-seeded or rarely 2-seeded. Seeds compressed, ascending ; cotyle- dons thin, folded. 1. ACER L. Maple. Characters of the family. 1. A. macrophyllum Pursh. Becoming a tall tree with thick rough and furrowed bark ; leaves large, deeply 3-5-parted, the lobes irregular, coarsely toothed, soft pubescent when young, becoming -labiate above and minutely puberulent below; flowers polyg- amous, in many-flowered drooping racemes; sepals and petals rather broad, nearly equal; filaments pubescent at the base, in- serted above the disk ; anthers sagittate ; carpels covered with stiff tawny hairs ; wings 2.6-4 cm. long, diverging at an acute angle. Occasional in all our mountains in canyons between 3l)tiu and tit mil fret Family 52. RHAMNACEAE. Buckthorn Family. Erecl or climbing shrubs or small trees, often thorny. Leaves simple, stipulate, generally alternate. Stipules Buckthorn Family 241 small, deciduous. Inflorescence commonly of axillary or terminal cymes or panicles. Flowers small, regular, per- fecl or polygamous. Calyx-tube obconic or cylindric, the limb 4-5-toothed. Petals 1 5, inserted on tHe calyx, sometimes wanting. Stamens 4-5, inserted with the petals and opposite them ; anthers short, versatile. Disk fleshy. Ovary sessile, free from or immersed in the disk, 2-5-celled ; ovules 1 in each cell, anatropous, ascending. Fruit a drupe or capsule, often 3-celled. Endosperm fleshy, rarely none ; embryo large; cotyledons flat. Petals clawless or wanting. 1. Rhamnus. Petals long-clawed. 2. Ceanothus. 1. RHAMNUS L. Buckthorn. Shrubs or small trees with alternate pinnately veined (in ours) evergreen leaves, and small axillary cymose perfect or polygamous flowers. Calyx-tube urceolate, its limb 4-5-toothed. Petals 4-5, nearly sessile, some- what emarginate and hooded, or none. Disk free from the 3-4-celled ovary ; style 3-4-cleft, Drupe berry-like, oblong or globose, containing 2-4 nut-like stones. 1. R. crocea Nutt. Low, much branched, the branches with short spine-like branchlets, 6-12 dm. high ; leaves rigidly coriace- ous, about 1 cm. long, bright green above, often yellowish beneath, roundish-ovate, glandular-denticulate; flowers about 3 mm. in diameter, reddish. Occasional on the dry plains and in the chaparral belt of our interior region. 2. R. crocea ilicifolia (Kell.) Greene. Shrub, sometimes arborescent, branches scarcely spinescent ; leaves green on both sides, often 2.5 cm. long; Mowers often 5-merous ; fruit some- what larger than in the type. Common in the chaparral belt throughout our range. In foliage closely resembling Prunus ilicifolia. 3. R. California Esch. Shrub, sometimes arborescent. 1-4 m. high, young }>arts pubescent, becoming glabrous; leaves thin- 242 Rhamnaeeae coriaceous, elliptic-oblong, acute or obtuse, entire or denticulate, 3-5 cm. long; flowers in small umbel-like clusters, 5-merous ; petals small, ovate, emarginate; stamens exserted ; fruit globose, 8-10 mm. in diameter. Common in the chaparral belt of all our mountains. Commonly called wild coffee. 4. R. Californica tomentella (Benth.) Brew. & Wats. Leaves tomentose beneath, the margins revolute, entire, otherwise as in the type. The more common form in the mountains, especially in the interior region. 2. CEANOTHUS L. California Lilac. Unarmed or spinescent, often arborescent shrubs, with alternate or opposite leaves, and small but showy white, blue or purple usually fragrant flowers, in often long- peduncled dense axillary or terminal clusters. Calyx 5-lobed. Petals 5, hooded, long-clawed. Ovary im- mersed in the disk and adnate to it at the base, 3-lobed. Disk adnate to the calyx. Style short, 3-cleft. Fruit somewhat 3-lobed, separating at maturity into 3 nutlets. * Fruit hornless, sometimes keeled or crested; stipular base not enlarged; leaves alternate. ■*- Leaves not glandular-toothed. 1. C. integerrimus II. & A. Tall, loosely branching and sometimes arborescent with green or at length somewhat brownish branches, slightly angled when young, not at all spinescent; leaves ovate, 2-6 cm. long, prominently or sometimes indistinctly 3-veined, entire, somewhat loosely hairy above when young, paler beneath and glabrescent or with a few soft hairs; petioles Blender, somewhat villous, 6-8 mm. long ; inflorescence 6-16 cm. long and .'5-10 cm. broad; flowers blue, varying to white; fruit r>-ii mm. in diameter, somewhat lobed at apex, nearly smooth and with low but broad, deeply dorsal evanescent crests. Frequent in the pine belt of all our mountains and in the uppermost por tions of the chaparral belt. 2. C spinosus Nutt. Tall shruli or somewhal arborescent, with at length cinnamon-brown, more or less divaricate, sparingly Buckthorn Family 243 slender-spiny glabrous twigs; leaves elliptic, very obtuse or emarginate, rounded or acutish at base, coriaceous, glabrous, 2-3 cm. long, entire, petioles glabrous or appressed-pubescent, 4-S mm. long; thyrsus 10-15 cm. long and half as broad; flowers pale blue; carpels depressed, 6 mm. in diameter, scarcely lobed, smooth, crestless. Santa Monica and Santa Ana Mountains, in canyons; extending northward to Santa Barbara, where it was first found by Nuttall. 3. C. divaricatus Nutt. Shrub, 1-2 m. high, with pale green glabrous or puberulent mostly very glaucous twigs, divergent, some ending in spines; leaves ovate, sometimes slightly cordate, obtuse or acutish, glabrous and glaucous, coriaceous, 3-nerved, 10-15 mm. long; inflorescence 5-7 cm. long, mostly narrowly oblong, dense, glabrate; flowers pale blue; capsule smooth, not lolied, and scarcely crested, clammy, becoming dry. Very common in the chaparral belt. ■*-+■ Leaves glandular-toothed. A. C. tomentosus Parry. Shrub 2-4 m. high, with slender gray or reddish, at first tomentose and usually densely verrucose branches ; leaves round-ovate or elliptic, conspicuously glandular- toothed, minutely velvety above, densely white or brownish tomentose beneath, 1-3 cm. long, short-petioled ; inflorescence loosely tomentose, 2.5-5 cm. long; flowers deep blue or rarely white; capsule 4 mm. in diameter, somewhat depressed, smooth, slightly crested, distinctly lobed. Occasional in the chaparral belt of the San Gabriel, San Bernardino and Cuyamaca Mountains, 3000-5000 feet altitude. 5. C. sorediatus H. & A. Shrubby or somewhat arborescent, 2-4 mm. high, with olive or at length purplish twigs; leaves oblong-ovate, rounded or subcordate at base, glandular-dentate, 1-2 cm. long, glabrous and glossy or sparingly pubescent when young above, glabrous or minutely pubescent beneath, silky- pubescent on the principal veins and petioles; inflorescence at first villous, 2.5-5 cm. long; flowers deep blue; capsule globose, 4 mm. in diameter, smooth or slightly wrinkled, slightly lobed, crestless. A species of the coast mountains of central California, said to occur in the San Gabriel Mountains, but not seen by the author. 244 Vitaceae 6. C. hirsutus Nutt. Shrubby or arborescent, 3-5 m. high, with grayish or reddish, densely villous, rather flexible twigs; leaves ovate to broadly elliptic, rounded or Bubcordate at base, obtuse or acute, 2-4 cm. long, hirsute with rather long appressed hairs above, loosely hirsute beneath especially along the veins; inflorescence loosely puberulent, villous, 2.5-5 cm. long; flowers deep blue to purplish ; capsule depressed, smooth, slightly lobed, strongly crested. (C. oliganthus Nutt.) Frequent in the chaparral belt of the San Gabriel Mountains. 8500-4500 feet. ** Fruit crested and with horns; stipular base large and corky. -*- Leaves alternate. 7. C. macrocarpus Nutt. Shrubby, 2-3 m. high, with gray or reddish, at first appressed-pubeseent twigs ; leaves rather thick, spatulate or obovate, cuneate, obtuse to emarginate, glabrous and dull above, minutely canescent beneath, 1-2 cm. long, margin slightly revolute, entire or rarely denticulate; capsule 8-12 mm. in diameter, laterally horned, apical crests low, scarcely lobed. Frequent in the Santa Monica and Santa Ana Ranges. ■«-•«- Leaves opposite. 8. C. cuneatus Nutt. Much resembling the last, but the branches more rigid ; leaves similar but opposite, capsule slightly oblong, 5 mm. in diameter, with 3 conspicuous horns near the top. Occasional along the southern rim of the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Ranges. (.t. C. crassifolius Torr. Shrub,2-3m. high, with grayish white or rusty tomentose twigs; leaves thick, elliptic-obovate, cuneate or rounded at base, obtuse, somewhat revolute, pungently den- tate or rarely entire, 1.5-3 cm. long, minutely roughened, a) Length glabrous and pale green above, densely tomentose beneath ; stipules very large; capsules 8 mm. in diameter, with :'■ stout. erect horns near the tip. Common In the chaparral belt of all our mountains. Family 53. VITACEAE. Grape Family. Climbing or erect shrubs, with nodose joints, alternate petioled leave-, and small flowers in panicles, racemes or Malvaceae 245 cymes. Calyx entire or 4—5-toothed. Petals 4—5, separ- ate 01 coherent, valvate. Stamens . 4-5, opposite the petals : filaments subulate, inserted at the base of the disk or between its lobes. Disk sometimes obsolete or wanting ; anthers 2-celled. Ovary 1. generally immersed in the disk. 2— 6-celled ; ovules 1-2 in each cell, ascend- ing, anatropous. Fruit a l-(>-celled, commonly 2-celled, berry. Testa bony ; endosperm cartilaginous ; embryo short. 1. VITIS L. Wild Grape. Climbing or trailing woody vines, mostly with tendrils. Leaves simple, usually palmately lobed or cletate. Stip- ules generally small, caducous. Flowers mostly dioe- cious, or polygamo-dioecious, rarely perfect. Petals hypogynous or perigynous, coherent in a cap and decidu- ous without expanding. Ovary 2-celled, rarely 3-4-celled ; style very short, conic; ovules 2 in each cell. Berry globose or ovoid, pulpy. 1. V. Girdiana Munson. Strong climbing vine with thick diaphragms; leaves 15 cm. broad or less, broadly cordate-ovate, with a rather deep and narrow sinus, obscurely 3-lobed, and with many small and acute teeth, closely ashy tomentose beneath; flower clusters large, very compound; berries small, black, slightly glaucous; seeds pyriform. Occasional along streams in the foothills. June. Family 54. MALVACEAE. Mallow Family. Herbs or shrubs with alternate mostly palmately veined leaves. Stipules small, deciduous. Flowers regu- lar, perfect, or rarely dioecious or polygamous. Calyx often bracted at the base. Sepals 5, rarely 3 or 4, more or less united, usually valvate. Petals 5, hypogynous, convolute. Stamens many, hypogynous, monadelphous, forming a central column around the pistil, united with 246 Malvaceae the bases of the petals ; anthers 1-celled. Ovary several- celled, entire or lobed ; styles united below, distinct above, mostly as many as the cells of the ovary ; ovules 1 or several in each cell. Fruit capsular, rarely a berry, several-celled ; the carpels falling away entire or else loculicidally dehiscent. Embryo curved ; cotyledons large, plicate or conduplicate ; endosperm scanty or copious. Carpels 2-several-seeded. 1. Modiola. Carpels 1-seeded. Stigmas linear, on the inner side of the style branches. Stamens monadelphous. 2. Malva. Stamens united in phalanges in 2 series. 3. Sidalcea. Stigmas capitate or truncate. Flowers rose-purple or rarely 'white. 4. Malvastrum. Flowers cream-colored. 6. Sida. 1. MODIOLA Moench. Prostrate or ascending herbs often rooting from the nodes, with palmately cleft or divided leaves, and small axillary peduncled flowers. Bracts of the involucre •">. distinct. Calyx o-cleft. Cells of the ovary many, with 2-3 ovules in each. Style branches stigmatic at the summit. Carpels 15-20, septate between the Beeds, dehiscent into 2 valves, with awn-pointed tips, and aris- tate on the back. 1. M. Caroliniana (L.) Don. Decumbent, annual or biennial, more or less pubescent, freely branching; stems 15-45 cm. long; leaves nearly orbicular in outline, 1-6 cm. wide, petioled, pedately 3-5-cleft, rarely simply dentate or incised; flowers axillary, 6-10 mm. broad, red; peduncles at length elongated, slender; fruit depressed-orbicular, the carpels hispid-aristate along the back. In rather low moist places. El Monte; Santa Anita. 2. MALVA L. Mallow. Pubescenl or glabrate herbs with dentate Lobed or dis- sected leaves, and axillary or terminal solitary or elns- Mallow Family 247 tered flowers. Calyx 5-cleft. Bractlets of the involucre 3, rarely none. Petals 5. Ovary many-celled; cells 1-ovuled ; style branches of the same number, linear, Btigmatic along the inner side. Carpels arranged in a Circle, beakless, indehiscent, 1 -seeded. 1. M. parviflora L. Glabrous or sparingly hairy annual, with erect or ascending stems, 2-10 dm. high; leaves rounded, slightly 5-7-lobed, crenate, 3-10 cm. broad ; pedicels short ; bract- lets linear; calyx accrescent, the broadly lobed limb rotately spreading away from the mature fruit ; petals white or pale blue, about equaling the calyx-lobes ; achenes glabrous or pubescent, transversely and sharply rugose on the back, the acute winged margins distinctly toothed. A common vernal weed. 2. M. pusilla Smith. Much resembling the last in foliage and habit; pedicels somewhat longer ; calyx-lobes mostly closed over the fruit ; petals bluish, 10-15 mm. long, surpassing the calyx- lobes ; achenes reticulate-rugose, the margins acute, entire. Known within our region only from low ground along Ballona Creek, near Mesmer. 3. SIDALCEA Gray. Erect annual or (ours) perennial herbs with mostly palmately or pedately parted or deeply cleft leaves, small stipules, and purple or pink or sometimes white rather showy flowers, in terminal racemes or spikes, not rarely polygamous by the abortion of the anthers. In- volucre rarely present. Calyx 5-cleft. Petals 5, com- monly emarginate or truncate. Staminal column usu- ally distinctly double, the exterior series of 5 distinct 4-10-antheriferous phalanges, the inner or terminal one of about 10 mostly 2-antheriferous phalanges. Carpels 5-9, reniform, indehiscent, 1-seeded. 1. S. malvaeflora (Moc. & Sesse) Gray. Hirsute or stems and petioles hispid with few-forked and some simple hairs ; stems ascending or erect from decumbent base, 2-6 dm. high, from a thick stock or root, simple; basal leaves rounded crenate-incised, 248 Malvaceae the upper more dissected ; flowers in simple few-many-flowered spiciform racemes; petals rose-purple, 2-2.5 cm. long; mature carpels rugose-reticulate. (>S. humilis Gray; S. delphinifolia Nutt.) Frequent on the grassy hills and mesas. March-May. 2. S. parviflora Greene. Stems glabrous at least below, sub- simple, terminating in long slender loose racemes; lowest leaves orbicular, crenate-toothed, the others deeply divided, the divisions lobed ; pedicels 4-6 nun. long, subtended by simple linear bracts of scarcely the same length; petals 8-12 mm. long, rounded at apex; carpels reticulated. In low subsaline places throughout our range. Much resembling the last, but easily recognized by the glabrous stems and leaves, and by the usually smaller flowers. 4. MALVASTRUM Gray. Low annual herbs or shrubs, often densely stellate- pubescent. Braetlets 1-3 or rarely wanting. Calyx- lobes 5. Petals 5, often showy. Staminal tube simple, antheriferous at the summit. Styles filiform : stigmas capitate. Carpels 5 or more, 1-ovuled, rarely 2-valved. ^rcd ascending. * Annuals. 1. M. exile Gray. Stems decumbent, branching from the base, 2-4 dm. long, pubescent; leaves 12-18 mm. broad, broadly ovate, cordate or truncate at base, deeply 5-lobed, sparingly toothed, on slender petioles of about the same length ; (lowers mostly solitary and axillary on slender pedicels, 2-3 cm. long; braetlets 3, linear, persistent; calyx-lobes lanceolate, acuminate; petals obovate, purple, 4-6 mm. long; carpels 12-15, orbicular, glabrous, transversely rugose-reticulated. Chats worth Park. ** Perennials. ■♦ ()ipi'r xii r face nf the leaves densely stellate-tomentose and hoary. 2. M. Fremontii Torr. Shrubby below, 1-2.5 m. high, densely soft-tomento8e with long-rayed stellular pubescence; leaves roundish, Bhallowly <>r scarcely at till cordate crenate-toothed, Mallow Family 249 2.5-5 cm. broad; flowers in axillary sessile or short pedunculate clusters, interrupted spicate; bractlets about equaling the calyx- lobes; calyx densely lanate tomentose, its lobes triangular, acute, 4-5 mm. long, mucronate with a more naked tip; petals rose color, about 1 cm. long. In the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains. 3. M. Davidsonii Robinson. Tall shrub or arborescent, 2-4 in. high, densely stellate-tomentose throughout ; bractlets stout; leaves deeply cordate, with narrow sinus, 5-angled or shallowly 5-lobed, varying to 3-lobed, irregularly crenate-dentate, 5-7.5 cm. broad; inHorescence a dense racemose panicle; bractlets much shorter than the calyx-lobes; calyx canescent-tomentose without more naked mucronate tips, faintly 1-nerved orenervose; petals rose-purple, 1.5-2 cm. long; carpels stellate-tomentose above. San Fernando Valley and La Canada in washes. ■«--«- Upper surface of the leaves green, sparsely stellate-pubescent . 4. M. fasciculatum (Nutt.) Gray. Tall shrub or somewhat arborescent, 2-4 m. high, with wand-like branches, covered with a dense short stellate-tomentum ; leaves angular, 5-lobed and rather coarsely toothed, densely stellate-pubescent beneath, sparsely so above, 3-5 cm. broad ; inflorescence racemose, or amply racemose-paniculate; bractlets much shorter than the calyx-lobes, these triangular, as broad as long, acute; petals rose- purple, 2-2.5 cm. long. (31. Thurberi Gray; 31. splendidum Kell.) Common in the lower altitudes of the chaparral belt. 5. SIDA L. Herbs with serrate, crenate or lobed leaves and soli- tary or clustered axillary or terminal perfect flowers. Bractlets of the involucre none. Calyx 5-toothed or 5-cleft. Staminal tube anther-bearing at the summit. Carpels 5-many, 1-ovuled ; style-branches of the same number, stigmatic at the summit only. Carpels indehis- cent or at length 2-valved at the apex. Seed pendulous. 1. S. hederacea (Dough) T. & G. Perennial, stoutish, erect- spreading or prostrate, leafy, 2-4 dm. long, hoary-tomentose or 250 Sterculiaceae yellowish-tomentose throughout; leaves short-petioled, about 2.5 cm. long, reniform, oblique at the base, serrate or crenate; flowers axillary, solitary or clustered, on slender at length reflexed pedicels; bractlets 1 or 2, linear; calyx-lobes acuminate; petals 2 cm. long, cream color ; fruit short-conical, smooth ; carpels 6-10. Common in subsaline places. May-September. Family 55. STERCULIACEAE. Sterculia Family. Trees, shrubs or herbs (mostly tropical or subtropical) much resembling the Malvaceae. Calyx 5-parted, imbri- cated, in ours petal-like. Petals wanting in ours. Sta- mens in ours 5. monadelphous ; anthers adnate, extrorse, 2-celledj Longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary 5-celied or rarely 4-celled, with numerous horizontal anatropous ovules in the axils. Style simple, terminated by a minute undivided stigma. Capsule 5-valved. Seeds oval or ovoid ; embryo straight. 1. FREMONTODENDEON Coville. California Slippery- ELM. Shrub with hard wood and dark colored bark. Leaves tawny-canescent or ferruginous beneath. Bractlets 3, sometimes 5, minute, caducous. Sepals roundish, rotately spreading in anthesis, nectariferous-pitted at base. Sta- mens regular ; filaments adnate to the calyx at the base, monadelphous to or above the middle ; anthers elongated- oblong, emarginate at both ends, adnate to an incon- spicuous connective. Capsule ovoid, firm-coriaceous.. Seeds smooth. 1. F. Californicum(Torr.) Coville. Branching shrub or arbor- escent, 2-7 m. high ; leaves subcoriaceous, round-cordate to round- ovate, 3-5-lobed or 3-5-cleft, 2-5 cm. broad; flowers short-ped- nncled on short lateral branches ; calyx nearly glabrous, accrescent, thin, 5-7 cm. in diameter, light yellow in anthesis, becoming marcescent in age, within hairy at base and with a small nectarifer- Elatinaceae 251 ous pit; capsule 2.5 cm. long, hispid with short pungent hairs, the cells villous within. (Fretnontia Californica Torr.) Frequent in the upper altitudes of the chaparral belt of our interior region. June-July. Family 56. ELATINACEAE. Waterwort Family. Low herbs with opposite or verticillate stipulate entire or serrate leaves, and small axillary or fascicled regular perfect flowers. Sepals 2-5, imbricated. Petals of the same number, hypogynous. Stamens of the same num- ber or twice as many. Ovary 2-5-celled ; styles 2-5 ; ovules many, anatropous. Capsule with septieidal dehis- cence ; placentae central. Seed-coat crustaceous, rugose or ribbed. 1. ELATINE L. Small glabrous or glabrate aquatic or creeping herbs with opposite or verticillate leaves, and minute axillary mainly solitary flowers. Sepals 2-4, persistent, mem- branous. Capsule membranous, globose, 2-4-valved. Seeds straight or slightly curved, striate longitudinally and transversely. 1. E. brachysperma Gray. Terrestial or sometimes aquatic, spreading, tufted, 2-5 cm. long ; leaves oblong, oval or lanceolate, narrowed at the base, 4-6 mm. long, about 2 mm. wide; sepals, petals and stamens mainly 2; capsule globose, about 1 mm. in diameter; seeds short-oblong, nearly straight, about 0.5 mm. long, marked by 6-7 longitudinal strise and 10-12 transverse ones. Occasional along borders of ponds toward the coast. Family 57. FRANKENIACEAE. Frankenia Family. Low perennial herbs or undershrubs with opposite entire exstipulate leaves, sessile and often united at the 252 Cistaceae membranous and somewhal Bheathing base. Flowers small, perfect, solitary and sessile in the axils of the branches and branchlets. Calyx tubular or prismatic. furrowed, its lobes 4-5, valvate. Petals as many as calyx-lobes, hypogynousj narrowed to a claw which bears an appendage on its inner face. Stamens 4-7 or rarely more, hypogynous : anther 2-celled, Longitudinally de- hiscent. Ovary l-celled, with 2-4 parietal placentae ; styles 2— 4-cleft into filiform divisions. Capsule invested by the persistent calyx. Seeds few. on slender funiculi which are attached to the margin of the valves. 1. FRANKENIA L. Characters of the family. 1. F. grandiflora Ch. & Sch. Stem much branched from a somewhat woody base, more or less erect, slender, 1-3 dm. high, glabrous or soft-pubescent, very leafy ; leaves obovate to narrowly oblunceolate, revolute, 6-12 mm. long, dull green; calyx linear, 6 mm. long, strongly furrowed, the lobes short, acute; petals small, red, the blade 2 mm. long or more, erose at the summit, the appendages of the claw bifid ; stamens 4-7 ; style 3-cleft ; cap- sule shorter than the calyx, linear, angular; seeds numerous. Common in saline marshes. Flowering all summer. Family 58. CISTACEAE. Rock-rose Family. Shrubs or low woody plants with alternate or opposite simple leaves, and solitary, racemose, clustered or panic- ulate, regular, generally perfect flowers. Sepals 3-5, persistent, when ."> the %2 exterior smaller and bract-like, the inner 3 convolute. Petals 5 or 3 or sometimes want- ing, fugacious. Stamens many, hypogynous. Ovary 1. [e, l-several-celled ; ovules ort hot ropous, stalked; style simple; stigma entire or 3-lobed. Capsule dehis- cent by valves. Seeds several or numerous) embryo slender ; endosperm present. Violaceae •_'•">.". 1. HELIANTHEMUM L. Rock-rose. Woody herbs or low shrul>s, more or less hranehing, mostly with showy yellow (lowers. Petals 5, yellow, fugacious. Stamens numerous. Placentae or false septa .".. ovules few many : style short or filiform or spatulate, jointed with the ovary; stigma capitate or 3-lobed. Embryo curved. 1. H. scoparium Nutt. Stems tufted, slender, somewhat wendy below, sparsely stellate-pubescent, 2.5-3.5 dm. bigh ; leaves few, narrowly linear, 8-20 cm. long; flowers on slender pedicels, solitary or cymose at the ends of the branches; sepals 6 mm. long, acuminate, the 2 outer linear and much shorter; petals 6-8 mm. long; stamens about 20; capsule equaling the calyx. Frequent on dry ridges in the chaparral belt of all our mountains and foothills. Our plants are slightly more pubescent than the form about Monterey (which is typical), being often cinereous, and may prove to be a good subspecies. H. Aldersoxii Greene. A larger, nearly glabrous plant, with petals 10-15 mm. long. Common in the foothills of San Diego County. Family 59. VIOLACEAE. Violet Family. Ours herbs with alternate or basal simple entire or lobed leaves, and axillary or scapose usually solitary perfect irregular flowers. Sepals 5, unequal. Petals 5, hypogynous, imbricated in the bud, the lower one spurred. Perfect stamens 5, hypogynous ; anthers erect, connivent in a ring, sessile or on short filaments. Ovary 1, 1-celled, with 3 parietal placenta? ; style simple. Cap- sule dehiscent by valves. Seeds anatropous with a crus- taceous testa ; embryo straight ; endosperm copious. 1. VIOLA L. Violet. Characters of the family. The later flowers often produced on runners or on short peduncles, and are 254 Violaceae apetalous, or eleistogamous and abundantly fertile, while the early showy ones are often sterile. * Flowers blue or ichite. 1. V. palmata cucullata (Ait.) Gray. Acaulescent, the leaves and scapes directly from rather short and thick rootstocks, glabrous or somewhat villous-pubescent ; leaves rounded-cordate, reniform or hastate-reniform, the basal sides often cucullate-involute ; corolla only saccate-spurred, blue or violet-purple, rarely white; lateral petals bearded toward the base; style gibbous-clavate, beardless at summit. In swamp-lands about Los Angeles, Davidson. 2. V. blanda Willd. Acaulescent, leaves and scapes from slender filiform rootstocks, glabrous or nearly so; leaves thin, ovate-cordate to round-reniform, crenulate ; petals oblong to ovate-lanceolate; petals white with purple veins on the lower and sometimes the lateral ones, usually beardless; spur short and saccate. Occasional about cold springs in the upper portions of the pine belt of the San Bernardino and San Jacinto Mountains. ** Flowers yelloiv, at least within. 3. V. pedunculata T. & G. Stems 5-15 cm. long, prostrate or ascending, puberulent or nearly glabrous; leaves rhombic- cordate, usually almost truncate at the broad base, obtuse, coarsely crenate ; stipules foliaceous, narrowly lanceolate, entire or incised ; peduncles erect, much exceeding the leaves, 10-20 cm. long; con- spicuously bibractiolate ; flowers 2 cm. broad or more, yellow, the upper petal dark brown without, the others purple-veined within, the lateral ones bearded. Frequent in open grassy places in the lower foothills and on the mesas. March-April. 4. V. lobata Benth. Rootstocks erect ; stems stoutish, erect, 15-30 cm. high, leafy to the summit, puberulent or nearly gla- brous; leaves reniform or cordate in outline, 5-10 cm. broad, pahnately cleft into 5-9 narrowly oblong lobes, the central largest or 1< mgest, some of the basal leaves often less lobed or merely coarsely toothed ; petals 12 mm. long, yellow, the upper brownish without, the lateral slightly bearded. Occasional on the borders of mountain meadows in thr San licrnardino Mountains. Hear Valley. Loasaceae 255 5. V. Douglasii Steud. Stems clustered from a deep fascicled root, mostly subterranean, only the leaves and flowers appearing above the ground, more or less pubescent; leaves large, bipin- nately dissected into long linear or oblong segments; stipules lanceolate, entire or toothed ; peduncles equaling or exceeding the leaves; petals 10-14 cm. long, yellow, the upper brownish purple without. ( V. chrysautha Hook.) Bear Valley, San Bernardino Mountains. Family 60. LOASACEAE. Loasa Family. Erect »>r climbing branching herbs, often armed with hooked stinging or viscid hairs, with alternate or oppo- site exstipulate leaves, and solitary, racemose or cymose, regular and perfect flowers. Calyx-tube adnate to the ovary, its limb 4-5-lobed, persistent. Petals 4— ">. inserted on the throat of the calyx. Stamens many. inserted with the petals ; filaments filiform, commonly arranged in clusters, opposite the petals ; anthers in- trorse, longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary 1-celled, rarely 2-3-celled with 2-3 parietal placenta? ; styles filiform, entire or 2-3-lobed ; ovules anatropous ; endosperm scanty. 1. MENTZELIA L. Erect herbs with alternate entire lobed or pinnatifid leaves, and terminal solitary or cymose, usually showy flowers. Petals 5 or 10, spreading, convolute in the bud, usually yellow. Styles 3, more or less united. Capsule dehiscent at the tip, few-many-seeded. Seeds flat, some- times winged, roughened or smooth. * Petals 5, less than 15 mm. long. 1. M. integ-rifolia (Wats.) Rydb. Slender, about 3 dm. high ; leaves narrowly lanceolate, sinuate-toothed or entire, the upper- most often ovate; flowers clustered near the ends of the many branchlets; calyx-lobes 2 mm. long, shorter than the petals; filaments all filiform ; capsule narrowly linear-clavate, 12-18 mm. 256 Loasaceae long; Beeds usually in 1 row, short-prismatic, the 3 angles grooved, the sides faintly tuberculate. (.)/. albicaulis integrifulia Wats. ; M. dispersa Wats.) Said to occur in our mountains, but not seen by us. 2. M. affinis Greene. Steins stouter, 3-6 dm. high, simple and leafy below, widely branching above; leaves lanceolate, deeply sinuate-pinnate ; Mowers scattered, 12 mm. broad; calyx- lobes attenuate, subulate, 4-(i mm. long; filaments all filiform; capsule 2.5 cm. long, almost linear, hispid with short stiff hairs; seeds prismatic, with grooved angles. Frequent in the upper portions of the chaparral belt and among the pines. May-July. 3. M. micrantha T. & G. Rather slender, 3-6 dm. high, simple below, corymbosely and rather compactly dichotomous above; leaves ovate, acute or acuminate, serrate or sinuate- toothed or entire, 2.5-5 cm. long; flowers small, shorter than the floral leaves; calyx-lobes 2 mm. long; petals oval, 3 nun. long; 5 outer stamens with dilated filaments; capsule cylindric or nearly so, B-12 mm. long, few-seeded; seeds prismatic, with a very shallow groove, the sides faintly tuberculate. Occasional in the chaparral belt throughout our range. 4. M. gracilenta T. & G. Stems rather stout, 3-4 dm. high, branching from the base; leaves narrowly lanceolate, pinnatifid, with many narrow lobes, or only sinuate-toothed ; flowers usually clustered; calyx-lobes 4-10 mm. long; petals obovate to oblanceo- late, 8-1 (5 mm. long; filaments subulate-filiform ; capsule Blightly clavate-dilated, 12-24 mm. Ion- ; seeds iii 3 rows: irregularly angular, minutely tuberculate, 1.5 mm. long. Frequent on the plains and foothills and also on the sand-dunes along the seashore. ** Petals usually /<>, 25 mm. long or more. 5. M. laevicaulis (Dougl.) T. & <;. (Blazing Stab.) Bien- nial; stem stout, erect, branched above, 6-10 dm. high, often white; leaves lanceolate, sinuate-toothed, 5-15 cm. long ; flowers sessile on short branches, 6-8 cm. broad, light yellow, diurnal; calyx-tube naked; calyx-lobes 2.5 cm. long or i -e ; petals In, rarely 5, obJanceolate, acute; stamens numerous, about equaling the petals in length, the outer with dilated filaments; eapsule 3 cm. long; Beeds many in double rows on the 3 placentee, Datiscaceae 257 horizontally flattened and winged, minutely tubereulate, 3 nun. broad. Frequent in dry washes in our interior valleys and canyons. May-Sep- tember. Family 61. DATISCACEAE. Datisca Family. Ours smooth stoui perennial herbs with unequally laciniate pinnatifid leaves, and small dioecious or some- times perfect flowers arranged in leafy racemes. Calyx of sterile flowers very short "with 4-9 unequal lobes : stamens 10 -25, with short filaments. Pistillate flowers with calyx-tube ovoid, somewhat 3-angled, 3-toothed ; stamens when present •">, alternate with the teeth. Styles .">. bifid, the linear Lobes stigmatic on the inner side. Capsule 1-celled. opening at the apex between the styles. Seeds many, small, in several rows on the 3 parietal placenta' : embryo cylindric ; endosperm present. 1. DATISCA L. Diraxgo Root. Characters of the family. 1. D. glomerata (Presl) B. & W. Stems erect, 1-2 in. high, simple or sparingly branched ; leaves ovate or lanceolate in out- line, acuminate, about 15 cm. long, the floral shorter; flowers 4-7 in each axil of the long leafy raceme; petals minute or want- ing; the fertile flowers perfect; anthers subsessile, 4 mm. long, yellow; styles exceeding the ovary: capsule oblong-ovate, (i-8 mm. long, slightly narrowed toward the truncate, triangular, 3-toothed summit. Frequent along the streams in all our mountains, mostly in the upper portions of the chaparral belt. Family 62. CACTACEAE. Cactus Family. Fleshy plants with flattened, terete, rigid or tuber- cttled, continuous or jointed stems, leafless or with small leaves, generally spiny, the spines developed from cush- ions of minute bristles (areolae). Flowers mostly solitary, 2~>s Cactaceae sessile, terminal or lateral, perfect, regular and showy. Calyx-tube adnate to the ovary, its Limb many-lobed or with distinct sepals. Petals numerous in several rows. mostly distinct. Stamens numerous, inserted on the throat of the calyx, with filiform filaments and small anthers. Ovary 1-celled, with numerous anatropous ovules borne on several parietal placentae. Style ter- minal, elongated ; stigmas numerous. Fruit a berry, mostly fleshy. Seeds smooth or tubercled, the testa usu- ally crustaceous or bony ; endosperm scanty or copious. Spines never barbed: flower-bearing areola? distinct from those bearing the spines. 1. Cereus. Spines minutely barbed; flowers from the same areohe as the spines. 2. Opuntia. 1. CEREUS Baworth. Stems oval or cylindric, with the spine-bearing areolae on vertical ribs. Flowers from the older or fully de- veloped parts of the plant bursting through the epider- mis just above the bunches of spines, usually about as long as broad, sometimes elongated. Scales of the ovary distinct, with naked or woolly axils, or almost obsolete and the axils spiny. Berry succulent, covered with spines or scales, or nearly naked. Seeds black ; endo- sperm none; embryo straight or curved. 1. C. Emoryi Engelm. Stems spreading, branching from the base, cylindric, with 16-20 ribs, closely set with prominent hemi- spheric areolae, bearing numerous thin straight yellow interlocked spines; radials 40-50, very slender; central solitary, stouter and much longer; flowers greenish yellow, 3-6 cm. broad, crowded on one side near the end of the branches; fruit globose, very spiny, 3.5 cm. in diameter; seeds obovate, acutely keeled, shining and minutely tuberculate, 2.4-2.8 mm. long. Said to occur from San Diego to the Salinas Valley, but we have not seen it north of San Diego. 2. OPUNTIA Mill. Plant- with flat or Cylindric more or less tuberculate joints and COnspicUOUB hut caducous leaves. These each Cactus Family 259 with an axillary pulvinus, which is usually clothed with soft wool intervened with barbed bristles ;it the upper edge and usually bearing spines at the lower edge. Flowers developed from the bristle-hearing part of the pulvinuSj with rotate corollas. Ovary covered with caducous leaves bearing axillary wool and often bristles and spines. Fruit dry or succulent. Seeds large, flat- tened and discoid, often margined, whitish ; cotyledons foliaceous, curved about the endosperm. * Joints flattened. Prickly Pear. 1. O. liindheimeri occidentalis (Engehn.) Coult. Erect and spreading, 1-3 m. high, usually forming thickets; joints often 3 dm. long and 2 dm. wide; pulvini remote, about 4 cm. apart, with very fine closely set bristles, 1-3 white (dusky at base) de- flexed spines; fruit sour, very juicy; seeds 5-6 mm. broad, their margins crenulate. Frequent in our valleys and foothills from Los Angeles eastward. 2. O. Lindheimeri littoralis (Engelm.) Coult. Erect or spread- ing, about 10 dm. high ; joints often 30-45 cm. long and 20-25 cm. wide; pulvini usually about 2.5 cm. apart; spines straw color (dusky at base), deflexed, slender ; seeds 3-4 mm. broad, their margins undulate. Frequent on bluffs along the seashore. ** Joints cylindric. 3. O. Bernardina Engelm. Stems erect or nearly so, loosely branched, slender, 6-15 dm. high, with reticulate wood; joints cylindric, 7.5-30 cm. long, with slender oblong tubercles, 2.5-3 cm. long; pulvini with a dense row of very short, dark, more or less persistent bristles at upper edge ; spines yellow, the sheathed ones 4-5, 1-3 cm. long, the lowest longest and usually reflexed ; and 4 appressed short radial ones mostly on lower edge of pul- vinus ; flowers greenish yellow, tinged with red without, 2.5-4 cm. broad; fruit ovate, less than 2.5 cm. long, at length dry; seed flat, 6 mm. broad, with a channeled commissure and con- spicuous persistent funiculus. Frequent on the interior plains east of Monrovia; also in the Santa Clara Valley, Ventura County. 260 Lythraceae 4. O. prolifera Engelm. Stems 1-3 m. high, much branched and often forming tliickets, with reticulated wood; joints cylin- dric, dark green, 7.5-15 cm. long, 3.5-5 cm. thick ; pulvini tomen- tose and the older with line straw-colored bristles; spines 8-10, variable, with large loose yellowish or rusty sheaths, 2.5-3.5 em. Ion-. 1 subcentral, the others stellate-spreading; flowers dark red, 3.5 cm. broad; fruit clavate to subglobose, strongly tubercu- late like the joints, often proliferous; seeds large, (i mm. broad with broad commissure. Common about San Diego. Known in our region only at San Pedro, where it is growing on bluffs near the bay. Family 63. LYTHRACEAE. Loosestrife Family. Herbs or shrubs, often trees in tropical regions, mostly with opposite leaves and solitary or clustered perfect flowers. Stipules usually none. Calyx persistent, free from the ovary, but generally enclosing it, the limb toothed and often with accessory teeth in the sinuses. Petals as many as primary calyx-teeth or none. Sta- mens various, inserted on the calyx; anthers versatile, longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary 2-6-celled, or some- times 1-celled ; style 1 ; stigma capitate, 2-lobed ; ovules many, rarely few, anatropous. Capsule 1-several-celled, variously dehiscent or sometimes indehiscent. Endo- sperm none ; cotyledons fiat, often auricled at base. Calyx-tube campanulate or hemispheric. 1. Ammannia. Calyx-tube cylindric. 2. Lythrum. 1. AMMANNIA L. Annual glabrous or glabrate herbs, mostly with t-angled stems, opposite sessile narrow leaves, and small axillary solitary or clustered (lowers. Calyx campanu- Into, globose or ovoid, -1-angled, l-tootlied. often with small accessory teeth in the sinusrs. Petals I. decidu- ous. Stamens t-8, inserted on the calyx-tube ; fila- ments slender or Bhort. Ovary enclosed in the calyx- tube, nearly globose, 2-4-celled, bursting irregularly. Onagraceae 261 1. A. coccinea Rottb. Erect, glabrous, branching below, 15-45 cm. high; leaves linear lanceolate, all obtusely cordate, auriculate, dilated at the somewhat clasping base, acuminate or acute at the apex, entire, 2.5-7.5 cm. long, 2-6 mm. broad; flowers 1-5 in each axil, sessile or nearly so; petals purple, fugacious; style very slender, more than half the length of the capsule. Soldiers Home, EaS8t . •2. LYTHRUM L. Herbs or shrubs with 4-angled sterns, opposite, alter- uate or rarely verticillate entire leaves, and solitary cymose-paniculate and terminal flowers. Calyx-tube cylindric, 8-12-ribbed, with 4-6 primary teeth and as many accessory ones inthe si uuses. Petals 4-6, rarely wanting. Stamens 8-12, inserted on the calyx-tube. Capsule enclosed by the calyx, membranous, 2-celled, 2-valved or bursting irregularly. Seeds flat or angular. 1. L. Californicum T. & G. Stems erect from a perennial stoloniferous root, simple below, paniculately branched above; lower leaves lanceolate, the upper and floral linear, acute at apex, tapering below to a sessile base; calyx with 12 strise and very short teeth ; stamens not at all exserted and the style elon- gated, or the stamens much exserted and exceeding the short style. Common in damp ground along streams, both in the valleys and moun- tains. July- October. Family 64. ONAGRACEAE. Evening-primrose Family. Annual or perennial herbs, rarely shrubs, with alter- nate or opposite leaves, no stipules or mere glands in their places, and axillary spicate or racemose, generally perfect regular or sometimes irregular flowers. Calyx- tube adnate to the ovary, often prolonged beyond, the limb 2-6-lobed, usually 4-lobed. Petals 2-9, mostly 4, convolute in the bud, rarely none. Stamens commonly as many or twice as many as the petals and inserted with them on the summit of the calyx-tube, or on the 262 Onagraceae epigynous or perigy nous disk. Ovary 1-6-celled, usually 4-eelled ; styles united; stigma capitate, discoid or 4-lobed ; ovules many in each cell. Fruit usually a capsule. Seeds mostly small, sometimes with a coma : endosperm scanty or none; embryo straight. Calyx-tube not produced above the ovary, its lobes persistent 1. Jussiaea. Calyx-tube usually produced above the ovary, the free portion and lobes deciduous. Seeds comose. Flowers showy, scarlet. 2. Zadschneria. Flowers small, white or purplish. 3. Epilobium. Seeds naked. Anthers attached at or near the base and remaining erect. Flowers minute; calyx-lobes erect. 4. Boisdcvalia. Flowers showy; calyx-lobes erect or united at the tip and turned to one side in anthesis. Petals distinctly clawed. 5. Clarkia. Petals sessile. 6. Godetia. Anthers attached in the middle and versatile. Capsule 4-celled. Stigma 4-lobed: calyx-tube much exceeding the capsule. 7. Onagra. Stigma capitate. Calyx-tube with a lobed disk at the throat. 8. ECLOBUS. Calyx-tube naked at the throat. 9. Sphaerostigma. Capsule 2-celled; flowers minute. 10. Gayophyttm. 1. JUSSIAEA L. Perennial herbs with alternate, usually entire Leaves, and white or yellow axillary solitary flowers. Peduncles mostly 2-bracted at the summit. Calyx-tube elongated, cylindric or prismatic, adnate to the ovary but not pro- longed beyond it, the limb 4-6-lobed, the lobes acute, per- sistent. Petals 4-6, rarely more, inserted under the margin of the disk. Stamens 8-12 in 2 rows, inserted with the petals ; filaments short. Ovary I 6-celled ; Btigma 4-6-lobed ; ovules many. Capsule linear, oblong or club-shaped, angular or ribbed, septicidally dehiscent. Seeds numerous. 1. J. Califomica (Wata.) Jepson. Perennial; stems stout, 3-12 r biennial caulescent herbs with mostly civet stems. Leaves alternate, undulate or toothed, ses- sile or somewhat petioled. Flowers yellow, nocturnal, in terminal spikes. Calyx-tube elongated, terete; gradu- ally enlarged at the throat ; the segments narrow, the tips fre<- in the bud. Petals 4, spreading. Stamens many, equal in Length; filaments filiform; anthers Linear. Ovary L-celled ; styles united, filiform ; stigma L-clefl : ovules numerous, in 2 or more row-, horizontal. Capsule L-celled, 4-angled, more or less tapering, Locu- Licidally dehiscent. Seeds more or less prismatic-angled. Evening-primrose Family 269 1. O. Hookeri (T. & G.) Small. Biennial; stem reddish, stout, angular, L-2 m. high, herbage canescently pubescent and somewhat villous; leaves lanceolate, sessile, acute, obscurely denticulate, calyx-tube 3 cm. long; the segments nearly as long; petals about 4 cm. long, obcordate, pale yellow, turning to rose color; stigma-lobes yellow, spreading; capsule 2 cm. long, ses- sile, caneseent with a fine close pubescence; seeds brown, 1 mm. long, faintly striate, not wing-angled. {(Enothera biennis MrsU- tissima < rray.) Frequent in moist ground, usually along streams, both in the valleys and mount a ins. May-August. 8. EULOBUS Nutt. A smooth erect annual with alternate leaves and middle-sized flowers; sessile along the virgate branches. Calyx-tube scarcely at all produced beyond the ovary, the limb 4-parted, reflexed. Petals 4, rhombic-ovate, sessile, pale yellow turning reddish. Stamens8 ; anthers oblong, attached near the middle. Ovary 4-celled ; stigma capitate. Capsule linear, elongated, 4-angled, 4-valved. imperfectly 4-celled, reflexed. Seeds numerous, ovate-oblong, naked. 1. E. Californicus Nutt. Stem 3-10 dm. high, rather stout, simple or with a few spreading virgate branches ; leaves linear. 2.5-5 cm. long, sinuately pinnatifid, with numerous unequal divaricate acute teeth; calyx-tube prolonged less than 1 mm. above the ovary; petals 8-10 mm. long, pale yellow or nearly white; capsule 6-10 mm. long ; seeds 3-angled. Frequent in the chaparral belt throughout our range. 9. SPHAEROSTIGMA F. & M. Annual or perennial herbs with erect branching or spreading stems, the bark often exfoliating and shiny. Leaves alternate, entire or dentate, petioled or sessile. Flowers solitary in the axils or in terminal spikes, usu- ally yellow, rarely white or rose color, often with a brownish spot at the base, turning' green or reddish in 270 Onagraceae age. Stamens 8 ; anthers versatile, oblong. Style fili- form : stigma capitate. Ovary 4-celled, usually linear, 4-angled, often contorted, membranous, sessile, dehiscent loculicidally. Seeds in 1 row in each celL * Flowers yelloiv, axillary. ■*- Capsule more or less contorted. -- Flowers more than 1 cm. broad. 1. S. viridescens (Lehni.) Walp. Silvery-canescent, with a short and dense appressed pubescence; branches prostrate or ascending, 3-8 dm. long, somewhat woody; leaves rather thick, spatulate-oblong or linear-oblong to ovate-cordate, sessile, usually entire, 2 cm. long or more; petals 12-16 mm. long, turning green- ish in age; anthers linear-oblong, fixed below the middle; cap- sule short-pubescent. ((Fnothera viridescens Lehm.; (E. cliei- ranthifolia suffruticosa Wats.) Common on the sand-dunes along the seashore. Flowering nearly through- out the year. 2. S. spirale (Lehm.) Walp. Steins herbaceous, prostrate or ascending, 3-6 dm. long; leaves rather thick, spatulate to ovate- cordate, the lowest short-petioled, entire or dentate, more or less hirsute; calyx-pubescent; petals 8-12 mm. long, turning red or tawny in age; anthers linear-oblong, fixed in the middle; cap- sule acutely 4-angled, hirsute. (n Umbelliferae incisely toothed or lobed, decurrent on the rachis, and forming a toothed wing ; teeth acute or slightly pointed; umbel with 3-4 elongated rays; involucre of leaf-like bracts; involucels of small narrow acute bractlets ; flowers purple, in dense heads, the sterile ones pedicelled ; fruit bristly all over, 3 mm. long; seed-face broadly concave with a prominent central longitudinal ridge. Occasional on grassy hillsides. 6. S. bipinnata H. & A. Slender, 2—4 dm. high, from a slender fusiform root; leaves twice or thrice pinnate, with divisions not at all decurrent on the rachis, cuneate-oblong to ovate, incisely and mucronately toothed; umbel 3-4-rayed ; involucre of leaf- like bracts; involucels of a few small bractlets more or less united; flowers yellow; fruit 3 mm. long, with strong tubercles tipped with short hooked bristles; seed-face deeply sulcate, some- times inclosing a central cavity, with a central longitudinal ridge. Los Angeles River, San Fernando Valley; Oak Knoll, Pasadena 7. S. tuberosa Torr. Stems 1-6 dm. high from a small globose tuber; leaves twice or thrice pinnate, usually very finely divided, ultimate segments very small ; umbel 1— 4-rayed ; bracts leaf-like; bractlets unequal, united; flowers yellow, the sterile ones on long pedicels; fruit broader than long, rather strongly flattened later- ally for the genus, 2 mm. long, tuberculate and not at all bristly ; seeds somewhat laterally flattened, with plane face. Occasional in open places in the foothills. 4. ERYNGIUM L. Glabrous perennials, with often rigid coriaeeous spi- nosely toothed or divided leaves, and white or blue flowers sessile in dense bracteate heads. The outer 1 tracts form the involucre, the inner bractlets intermixed with the flowers represent the involucels. Sepals prominent, rigid, persistent. Fruitovoid, flattened laterally, covered with hyaline scales or tubercles. Carpels with ribs obsolete. Stylopodium wanting ; styles short or Long, often rigid. Oil-tubes mostly ">, ."> dorsal and 5 commis- sural. Seed-face plane. 1. E. Parishii C. & R. Stems slender, much branched, erect <>r spreading, 1-1 dm. long; basal leaves simple <>r pinnate, the Carrot Family 281 blades or segments laciniate-toothed or cleft, tapering into a long more or less spinosely toothed petiole; inflorescence beginning near the base, diffusely branching; the heads on very short ped- uncles, nearly globose, about 6 mm. long; bracts very narrow, rigid, 12-18 mm. long, with a few spinose bristles at the base, not at all scarious-margined ; bractlets about the size of the bracts, short, scarious-margined below, broadening upward to a short lobe on each side, the margined base inclosing the fruit and fall- ing with it; sepals ovate, scarious-margined, 1.5 mm. long, tapering to a cuspidate bristly tip; styles longer than the sepals. In low heavy ground toward the coast. First collected by Parish near Oceans ide. 5. WASHINGTON!. A Raf. Glabrous or hirsute perennials from thick aromatic roots, with ternately decompound leaves and white or purple flowers in few-fruited umbels. Calyx-teeth obso- lete. Fruit linear to linear-oblong, more or less attenu- ate at base, acute or beaked at apex, glabrous or bristly on the ribs. Carpels slightly or not at all flattened dorsally. Stylopodium conic, sometimes depressed. Oil- tubes obsolete in mature fruit, often numerous in young fruit. Seed-face from slightly concave to deeply sulcate. 1. W. brachypoda (Torr.) Heller. Stems rather stout, 3-9 dm. high, pubescent or sometimes glabrous; leaves ternately compound ; leaflets 2-3 cm. long, acute, laciniately lobed or toothed ; umbel 1-6-rayed ; involucre and involucels of linear bracts, the latter equaling or exceeding the flowers ; rays, 3.5-10 cm. long; pedicels 1-2 mm. long; fruit 12-16 mm. long, 4 mm. wide, short-attenuate at base, rough-bristly on the very prom- inent ribs; stylopodium and style 3 mm. long; the former hroad and somewhat depressed ; seed-face very concave, nearly inclosing a central cavity. (Osmorhiza brachypoda Torr.) Occasional in all our mountains on shady slopes. 6. CAUCALIS L. Mostly hispid annuals with pinnately dissected leaves and white flowers. Calyx-teeth prominent. Fruit ovate or oblong, flattened laterally. Carpel with 5 filiform 282 Umbelliferae bristly primary ribs and 4 prominent winged secondary ones, with barbed or hooked bristles. Stylopodium thick, conic. Oil-tube's solitary in the intervals under the secondary ribs, 2 on the commissural side. Seed-face deeply sulcate. 1. C. microcarpa H. & A. Erect slender, 1-3 dm. high, more or less hispid ; leaves much dissected, the segments small; um- bels at the ends of the stem and branches, very unequally 3-6- rayed ; involucre of foliaceous divided bracts ; involucels of entire or somewhat divided bractlets ; rays slender, 7.5 cm. long or less ; pedicels very unequal; fruit oblong, 4-6 mm. long, armed with rows of hooked prickles; the primary lateral ribs near margin of commissural face. Frequent in sandy or stony places in the valleys and mountains below the pine belt. 2. C. nodosa Hudson. Stems erect with few branches, re- trorsely scabrous; leaves pinnate; leatlets bipinnately dissected; umbels scattered along the stems opposite the leaves on very short peduncles, simple or with supplementary short proliferous umbel; fruit 1-4 mm. long, the outside of the umbel with the exterior carpel densely covered with hooked bristles, the inner carpel as well as the inner fruits smooth or with tubercles. Oak Knoll, near Pasadena, McClatchu . 7. APIASTRUM Nutt. Very slender smooth branching animals, with finely dissected leaves having filiform or linear segments, and small white flowers in naked unequally few-rayed umbels. Calyx-teeth obsolete. Fruit ovate or cordate, with obscure or obsolete ribs, more or less tuberculate. Carpel with thin pericarp. Stylopodium minute, de- pressed ; styles short. Oil-tubes solitary in the inter- vals and beneath the ribs, 2 on the commissural side. Seed-face narrowly concave or sulcate. 1. A. angustifolium Nutt. Slender, 0.5-3 dm. high, usually much branched ; leaves 2.5-5 cm. long, biternately or triternaielv divided, with linear or nearly filiform segments; umbels sessile; Carrol Family 283 ray- from 2.5 cm. long to wanting; pedicel* 12 mm. lorn: or want- ing; fruit with narrow commissure, cordate in outline, 1 mm. lull-. Common in sandy soil in the foothills and valleys. S. CONIUM L. Poison- Hemlock. Tall biennial glabrous herbs with sj>< >t t «•« 1 stems. pin- nately decompound leaves, and small white flowers in compound many-rayed umbels. Involucre and Lnvolu- cels of ovate acuminate bracts. Calyx-teeth obsolete. Fruit broadly ovate, glabrous, somewhat flattened later- ally. Carpels strongly many-ribbed. Large oil-tubes none, hut with a layer of oil-secret 1112' tissue next the deeply concave seed. 1. C. maculatum L. Erect, much branched, 6-15 dm. high; lower and basal leaves petioled, the upper sessile or nearly so, all pinnately dissected, the leaflets ovate in outline, thin, the ulti- mate segments dentate or incised; petioles dilated and sheathing at the base; umbels 2.5-7.5 cm. broad; rays slender, 2.5-4 cm. long; pedicels filiform, 4-6 mm. long in fruit; fruit 3 mm. long, its ribs very prominent when dry. Occasional in waste places, especially in damp ground. 9. DEWEYA T. & G. Caulescent plants with simply pinnate leaves, mostly no involucre, involucels of few linear braetlets, and yellow flowers. Calyx-teeth prominent. Fruit oblong, flattened laterally, glabrous. Carpel with 5 prominent very acute ribs. Stylopodium none. Carpophore divided. Oil-tubes several in the intervals and on the commissural side. Seeds nearly terete, the face deeply sulcate. 1. D. arguta T. & G. Glabrous, 3-7.5 dm. high, rarely acau- lescent; leaves simply pinnate; petioles of the lowest pair of leaflets sometimes prominent, giving a divaricate appearance ; leaflets 5-7, ovate, 2.5-7.5 cm. long, the lowest often subcordate, finely and sharply mucronate-serrate, the terminal and the lowest 284 Umbelliferae often 3-lobed ; umbel 12-10-rayed ; rays 5-9 cm. long; pedicels short, 3-10 mm. long; fruit oblong, smooth, 8 mm. long; oil- tubes 3-5 in the intervals, 4-ti on the commissural side. ( Velaea arguta C. & R.) Frequent in dry open ground in the chaparral belt. 10. DRUDEOPHYTUM C. & R. Caulescent or acaulescent plants with usually ter- nately compound leaves and yellow flowers. Calyx-teeth evident or wanting. Fruit orbicular, flattened laterally, glabrous or pubescent. Carpel with 5 slender filiform rihs. Stylopodium none. Carpophore variable, oil- tubes several in the intervals and on the commissual side. Seeds nearly terete, the inner face with a narrow and deep sulcus, which enlarges into a central cavity. 1. D. Parishii C. & R. Glabrous throughout, nearly acaules- cent, 3-4 dm. high; leaves thickish, ternate-pinnatifid, the seg- ments ovate, irregularly cuspidate-toothed and lobed ; umbel 20-rayed, with no involucre; bractlets few, setaceous; rays 5-7.5 cm. long; pedicels about 4-7 mm. long; calyx-teeth prominent; fruit oblong, glabrous, 6-7 mm. long; carpophore 2-parted; oil- tubes 3-4 in the intervals, 4-5 on the commissural side. ( Valuta I'u risliii ( '. & R.) Occasional in the Santa Monica and San Gabriel Mountains. 11. APIUM L. Annual or perennial glabrous herbs with pinnate or pinnately compound leaves and white or greenish yellow flowers in compound umbels. Calylx-teeth obsolete. Stylopodium depressed or short-eonie. Fruit ovate or broader than long, smooth or tuberculate. Carpels mostly with prominent ribs, somewhal 5-angled. Oil- tubes mostly solitary in the intervals, 2 on the commis- sural side. Seed terete or nearly so. 1. A. graveolens L. Glabrous; stems erect, H-!> din. high, several-leafed; leaves pinnate, the basal and lower ones long- ('arret Family 2s.", petioled, the upper short-petioled or nearly sessile, thin, broadly ovate to oval, coarsely toothed and often incised, 1-3 cm. long; umbels opposite the leaves and terminal, 3-7-rayed; involucre and involucels small or none; flowers minute, white, very short- pedicelled; fruit oval, scarcely 1 mm. long, the ribs somewhat winged. Common in low marshy places. 12. CICUTA L. Water-hemlock. Smooth poisonous marsh perennials with pinnately compound leaves and serrate leaflets and white flowers. Calyx-teeth rather prominent. Fruit flattened laterally, oblong to orbicular, glabrous. Carpel with strong flat- tish corky ribs, the lateral ribs largest without strength- ening cells. Stylopodium low, sometimes low-conic. Oil-tubes solitary in the intervals, 2 on the commissural side. Seed nearly terete or somewhat dorsally flattened, with face plane to slightly concave. 1. C. occidentalis Greene. Stout, 9-18 dm. high; rootstock short, giving rise to slender roots above and a fascicle of thick and elongated ones below ; leaves twice pinnate ; leaflets from linear-lanceolate to lanceolate, 5-8 cm. long, sharply serrate and conspicuously reticulate beneath ; fruit oblong, 3 mm. long, con- stricted at the commissure, the ribs apparently equal , but laterals largest in section, the intervals broad; oil-tubes large. Frequent in marshes toward the coast. 13. CARUM L. Smooth erect slender herbs with tuberous or fusiform fascicled roots, pinnate leaves with few linear leaflets, and white flowers. Calyx-teeth prominent for the size of the fruit. Fruit flattened laterally, orbicular to oblong, glabrous. Carpel with filiform or inconspicuous ribs. Stylopodium conic. Oil-tubes large and solitary in the intervals, 2—6 on the commissural side. Seed dorsally flattened, more or less sulcate beneath the tubes, the face plane or slightly concave. 2si; Umbelliferae 1. C. Gairdneri (H. & A.) (.ray. Stem 3-12 dm. high from fascicled tuberous or fusiform roots; leaves few, usually simply pinnate, with 3-7 linear-filiform leaflets, 5-15 cm. long; umbels 6-15-rayed ; bracts several or none; bractlets linear, acuminate ; rays 2.5-4 cm. long; fruit broadly ovate or nearly orbicular, 1-2 mm. long, with small ovate calyx-teeth, low conic stylopodium and long slender styles ; seed terete. Occasional along borders of marshes. 2. C Lemmoni C. & K. Resembling the last, but fruit oblong, tapering somewhat at base and apex, 3 mm. long and 2 nun. broad, with conspicuous ribs, each of which contains a small group of strengthening cells; calyx-teeth prominent, concealing the stylopodium; styles long and slender. Occasional in marshes toward the coast. 14. SIUM L. Smooth perennials growing in water or wet places, with pinnate leaves, serrate or pinnatifid leaflets, involu- cres and involucels of numerous narrow bracts, and white flowers. Calyx-teeth minute. Fruit flattened laterally, ovate to oblong, glabrous. Carpel with promi- nent corky nearly equal ribs. Stylopodium depressed ; styles short. Oil-tubes 1-3 in the intervals. Seed sub- angular, with plane face. 1. S. cicutaefolium Gmel. Stout, 6-8 dm. high; leaflets 3-8 pairs, linear-lanceolate, sharply serrate and mostly acumi- nate, 5-13 cm. long, lower leaves sometimes submersed and finely dissected; umbel many-rayed; rays 2.5-4 cm. long ; pedicels 2-f> mm. long; fruit 3 mm. long, with prominent ribs; oil-tubes 2-(> on the commissural side. Oak Knoll, McVlatchie. 2. S. heterophyllum Greene. Stems stout, angular and flexu- ose, 1 in. high; lowest leaves with a single lamina which is rather broadly rhombic-lanceolate, serrate or laciniate-cleft, 5-20 cm. long; petiole stout, fistulose; the other leaves 3-lobed or divided and passing to the truly pinnate, with 2 pairs of broadly lanceolate, acute, serrate leaflets; bracts broadly lanceolate, taper- ing at both ends ; fruit 3 nun. lung, strongly ril>bed. Near Pasadena, Dai tdeon. Carrot Family 287 15. BERULA Hnffra. Smooth aquatic perennial herbs with simple pinnate leaves, variously cul Leaflets, and small white flowers. Calyx-teeth minute. Fruit flattened laterally, nearly round, emarginate at base, glabrous. Carpel nearly glo- bose, with very slender inconspicuous ribs, thick corky pniearp and no strengthening cells. Stylopodium conic. Oil-tubes numerous and contiguous, closely sur- rounding the seed-cavity. >i'vtl terete. 1. B. erecta (Huds.) Coville. Erect, 1.5-9 dm. high ; leaflets 5-9 pairs, linear to oblong or ovate; serrate to cut-toothed, often laciniate-lobed, sometimes crenate, 1-7.5 cm. long; umbels many- rayed ; rays 5 cm. long or less ; bracts usually conspicuous ; bract- lets narrow; pedicels 4-6 mm. long; fruit scarcely 2 mm. long. Occasional along watercourses. 16. OENANTHE L. Mostly aquatic glabrous herbs with succulent stems, pinnate or decompound leaves, and usually involucrate umbels of white flowers. Calyx-teeth rather prominent. Fruit globose, slightly flattened laterally if at all, gla- brous. Carpel semiterete in section, with broad obtuse corky ribs ; laterals the largest ; a band of strengthen- ing cells investing the seeds and oil-tubes. Stylopodium very short-conic, with elongated styles. Oil-tubes soli- tary in the intervals, 2 on the commissural side. Seed suleate beneath each oil-tube. 1. O. sarmentosa Californica (Wats.) C. & R. Succulent stems, 6-15 dm. high ; leaves ternate and biternate ; leaflets approximate, acute or acutish, toothed, often lobed at base, 1-2.5 cm. long; umbels many; bracts few, linear or none; bractlets similar, more numerous; rays 2.5 cm. long or less; pedicels numerous, short; fruit about 4 mm. long, with commissural face as well as ribs very corky. Frequent along slow-running streams. 2ss Umbelliferae 17. FOENICULUM Adans. Fennel. Erect biennial 01 perennial glabrous herbs, with pin- nate compound leaves, linear or capillary leaflets, and compound umbels of yellow flowers. Involucre and in- volucels none. Calyx-teeth obsolete. Petals obtuse or slightly retuse at the apex. Stylopodium long, conic. Fruit linear-oblong, glabrous, terete or nearly so. Car- pels half terete, dorsally flattened, prominently ribbed. Oil-tubes solitary in the intervals. Seed-face Hat or slightly concave. 1. F. Foeniculum (L.) Karst. Perennial, branched, 7-20 dm. high; leaves very finely dissected into capillary segments; petioles broad, clasping ; umbels large, 9-25-rayed ; rays glaucous, 2.5-7.5 cm. long in fruit; pedicels 2-8 mm. long, slender; fruit about 6 mm. long. (F. vulgare Gaertn.) In waste places and along streets. Native of Europe. 18. SPHENOSCIADIUM Gray. Nearly simple thick-rooted perennials, with stout stems glabrous up to the tonientose umbel, once or twice pinnate leaves with bladdery dilated petioles, and scari- ous white or purplish flowers sessile on an enlarged receptacle and forming a compact head. Calyx-teeth obsolete. Fruit flattened dorsally, cuneate-obovate, hir- sute. Carpel strongly flattened at base, winged above, the dorsal and intermediate wings narrow, the lateral broader. Stylopodium small and conic or flat in flower. Oil-tubes solitary in the intervals, 2 on the commis- sural side. Seed-face plane. 1. S. capitellatum Gray. Very stout, 3-14 dm. high ; leaves large and glabrous; the leaflets oblong to linear-lanceolate, 2.5-5 cm. long, with rather few laciniate teeth or lol.es, more or less entire below; umbel equally 4-15-rayed, with globose umhellets of sessile pubescent flowers; bractlets few, deciduous; rays 2.5-6 cm. long; fruit cuneate-obovate, about 5 nun. long. Cienega, Davidson, Carrot Family •>'.' 1!) LOMATIUM Raf. Acaulescent or Bhorl caulescenl dry-ground perennials, with fusiform or tuberous roots, ternate sometimes pin- nate to disserted leaves, no involucre, and yellow, white or purple flowers. Calyx-teeth usually obsolete, Fruit Btrongly flattened dorsally, oblong to orbicular. Carpel with filiform and approximate dorsal and intermediate rihs. and winged laterals coherent until maturity with those of the other carpel ; pericarp thin with strengthen- ing cells beneath each rib. Stylopodium wanting. Oil- tubes 1-several in the intervals, rarely obsolete, 2-10 on the commissural side. Seed dorsally flattened with plane or randy slightly concave face. (Pencedaniim.) 1. Li. utriculatum (Nutt.) C. & R. Caulescent or nearly acau- lescent, ca?spitose to 3 dm. high or more, from a more or less thickened root, puberulent or glabrous; petioles very broadly dilated; leaves ternately or pinnately decompound, with ulti- mate segments narrowly linear 12 mm. or less long; umbel unequally 5-20-rayed ; bracts much dilated, mostly obovate, often toothed ; rays 5 cm. long or less ; pedicels 4-10 mm. long; flowers yellow; fruit broadly elliptic, glabrous, 4-10 mm. long, 2-7 mm. broad, with wings nearly as broad as the body, and prominent dorsal and intermediate ribs ; oil-tubes large, solitary in the intervals, 4-0 or sometimes 2-3 on the commissural side, very short accessory ones in the intervals ; seed-face somewhat concave. Frequent on the mesas and grassy foothills. 2. Li. Vaseyi C. & R. Short, caulescent, 15-20 cm. high; slightly pubescent ; petioles wholly inflated; leaves small, 2.5-5 cm. long, bipinnate, with the small ovate segments irregularly 3-5-lobed ; umbel equally 2-5-rayed ; bractlets obovate, petiolu- late, toothed; rays 2.5 cm. long; pedicels 2-4 mm. long; flowers yellow; fruit broadly oblong, emarginate, glabrous, 12-14 mm. long, S mm. broad, with wings twice as broad as the body, and mostly prominent dorsal and intermediate ribs ; oil-tubes solitary in the intervals, 4 on the commissural side. Frequent in heavy soil on the mesas throughout our range. 290 Fmbelliferae :>. L. dasycarpum (T. &G.) C. & R. Very short, caulescent or acaulescent, with several stout peduncles, 1.5-3 cm. long, from a common root, tomentose-pubescent ; leaves rather small, pin- nately decompound, with numerous short linear segments ; umbel somewhat equally 6-15-rayed; bractlets linear to ovate, more or less tomentose; rays 2.5-7.5 cm. long; pedicels (5-10 mm. long; flowers white ; fruit nearly orbicular, coarsely pubescent, becom- ing almost glabrous, 8-14 mm. long, 7-12 mm. broad, with thin membranous wings, broader than the body, and filiform dorsal and intermediate ribs ; oil-tubes large and solitary in the intervals (an occasional secondary one in the lateral intervals), 4 on the commis- sural side ; seed deeply silicate beneath the oil-tubes, with plane face. Occasional on dry hillsides, especially in the interior region. 20. EURYPTERA Nutt. Acaulescent or caulescent glabrous perennials, with elongated roots, branching only from the base, leaves once or twice compound, with usually broad sharply toothed leaflets. Flowers yellow. Calyx-teeth minute or obsolete. Fruit strongly flattened dorsally, orbicular to shortly oblong. Carpel with filiform ribs, and with broadly winged laterals, these often distinct at base and becoming cordate or emarginate, cohering until maturity with those of the other carpel : pericarp thin. Stylopodium wanting; disk impressed. Oil-tubes 1-sev- eral in the intervals. Seed strongly dorsally flattened, with plane face. 1. E. lucida Nutt. Short, caulescent, glabrous, rather stout, 1.5-5 dm. high; leaves ternate; leaflets broadly cordate, some- what lobed, coarsely mucronate-toothed, 1-2.5 cm. long; umbel equally 8-15-rayed ; bractlets lanceolate ; rays 1-5 cm. long; pedi- cels 12 mm. long; fruit nearly orbicular, emarginate at each end, glabrous, 10-14 mm. in diameter, with wings more than twice as broad as the body, and prominent dorsal and intermediate rilis; oil-tubes solitary in the intervals, 2-4 on the commissural side. i )cc:ision:tl on dry ground in the chuparral belt in all our mountains. Carrot Family 291 2. E. Hassei C. & R. Caulescent, stout, 6 dm. high or more, glabrous and somewhat glaucous, from a long slender woody root; leaves biternate on very long petioles (sometimes 2.5 dm., including petiole) ; leaflets broadly ovate with cuneate base, irreg- ularly lobed, coarsely niucronate-toothed, 2.5-10cm. long, becom- ing 6 cm. broad; umbel long-peduncled, equally 8-18-rayed; bractlets varying from rather short linear-setaceous to oblanceo- late, foliaceouSj entire or toothed and much exceeding the pedi- cels; rays 5-10 cm. long; pedicels 12-16 mm. long; fruit as in the last. v Sierra Madre Canyon," Hasse. We have seen no specimens that answer the description of this plant, but forms of the last found in the Santa Monica Mountains seem to approach it. No doubt it will be found to be only a robust form of the last species. 21. PASTINACA L. Tall cicct mostly biennial branching herbs, with thick roots, pinnate leaves, and compound umbels of yellow flowers. Involucre and involucels commonly none. Calyx-teeth obsolete. Stylopodium depressed. Fruit oval, glabrous, much flattened dorsally ; dorsal and in- termediate ribs filiform, the lateral winged, coherent with those of the other carpel and forming a broad mar- gin to the fruit. Oil-tubes solitary in the intervals, and 2-4 on the commissural side. Seed very flat. 1. P. sativa L. Usually biennial, glabrous or somewhat downy-pubescent, 6-15 dm. high; the root long conic, fleshy; lower and basal leaves petioled, pinnate, often 4.5 dm. long; leaf- lets rather thin, ovate or oval, obtuse, sessile, lobed or incised and sharply dentate, 2-6 mm. long; upper leaves generally much reduced ; umbels several or numerous, 5-15 cm. broad, 7-15-rayed ; the rays slender, 1-5 cm. long; pedicels very slender, 6-12 mm. long in fruit; fruit broad, the dorsal and intermediate ribs not prominent, but the oil-tubes conspicuous. Rather frequent in marshes, especially toward the coast. 22. DAUCUS L. Bristly annuals or biennials, with pinnately decom- pound leaves, foliaceous and cleft involucral bracts, 292 Cornaceae entire or toothed bractlets, and usually white flowers in concave umbels which become connivent in fruit. Calyx-teeth obsolete. Fruit oblong, flattened dorsally. Carpel with 5 slender bristles, primary ribs and 4-winged secondary ones, each bearing a single row of prominent barbed prickles. Stylopodium depressed or wanting. Oil-tubes solitary in the intervals, under the secondary ribs, 2 on the commissural side. Seed flattened dorsally, the face somewhat concave or almost plane. 1. D. pusillus Michx. Stems mostly simple, papillate, hispid, 2.5-60 cm. high; leaves finely dissected into narrowly linear seg- ments; umbels unequally few-many-rayed, forming a rather compact head; rays 1-3.5 cm. long; pedicels very unequal ; fruit 3-5 mm. long. Frequent in open dry ground in the chaparral belt and on the planes throughout our range. 2. D. Carota L. (Wild Carrot.) Hispid, usually biennial, erect, 3-9 dm. high, the root, fleshy, deep conic; lower and basal leaves 2-3-pinnate ; leaflets linear or lanceolate, dentate, lobed or pinnatifid; upper leaves smaller, less divided; bracts parted into linear or filiform lobes; umbels 5-10 cm. broad ; rays numerous, crowded, 1-5 cm. long; the outer ones longer than the inner; pedicels very slender, 2-4 mm. long in fruit; flowers usually white, the central one of each umbel often purple; fruit 3-4 mm. long, bristly on the winged ribs. Occasional in waste places. Family 68. CORNACEAE. Dogwood Family. Trees or shrubs or rarely herbs, with simple and entire opposite or rarely whorled leaves, and flowers in cymes or spikes, perfect or dioecious. Calyx-tube adnate to the ovary, its Limb 1 5-dentate or 1 5-lobed or none. Petals generally I or 5, sometimes wanting, usually valv- ate spreading, inserted nt the base of the epigynous disk. St mucus ;i> many as the petals or more numerous. inserted with them; filaments subulate or Hat. Ovary Dogwood Family 293 inferior, 1-2-celled ; styles 1 or 2 ; ovules pendulous. Fruit a drupe or berry, 1-2-seeded. Flowers perfect ; petals present. 1. Cornus. Flowers dioecious; petals wanting. 2. GARRYA. 1. CORNUS L. Dogwood. Shrubs or trees or rarely herbs, with simple mostly entire and usually opposite, rarely verticillate leaves. and small flowers in cymes or heads, the latter involu- crate with large white bracts. Calyx-limb minutely 4-toothed. Petals 4. valvate. Stamens 4. Ovules 1 in eaeh cell. Drupe ovoid or globose, the stone 2-celled ami 2-seeded. 1. C. occidentalis (T. & G.) Coville. Shrub, 2-5 m. high, with smooth purplish branches; leaves ovate to oblong-elliptic, acute or somewhat acuminate, shortly cuneate at base, 5-10 cm. long, paler beneath and more or less pubescent with loose silky hairs, especially on the veins ; cyme spreading, round-topped, 3-5 cm. broad; fruit white, subglobose; stone 5 mm. broad, some- what compressed, furrowed on the edges. (C pubescens Nutt.) Occasional in moist ground, especially in the mountains, but reported from Cienega by Davidson. 2. GARRYA Dougl. Silk-tassel Tree. Evergreen shrubs with 4-angled branchlets, opposite entire coriaceous leaves, the short petioles connate at the base, and dioecious apetalous flowers in axillary aments, solitary or in 3's between the decussately con- nate bracts. Calyx of staminate flowers 4-parted, with linear valvate segments. Stamens 4. with distinct fila- ments. Disk and ovary none. Pistillate flowers with the calyx-limb shortly 2-lobed or obsolete. Disk and stamens none. Ovary 1-celled ; ovules 2; styles 2, stig- matic on the inner side, persistent. Berry ovoid, 1-2-seeded. 294 Pyrolaceae 1. G. Veatchii Palmeri (Wats.) Eastwood. An erect, branch- ing shrub, 18-2") dm. high; branchleta sparsely pubescent with close appressed silky hairs when young, becoming smooth with age; petioles short, 2-6 mm. long; leaves coriaceous, oval or oblong-ovate, slightly undulate or entire, acute at apex and aris- tate, rounded or cuneate at base, glabrous or nearly so above, densely tomentose beneath with matted hairs, 2.5-5 cm. long; bracts prominent, acute or acuminate, the lower foliaceous; fruit cuneate at base, the lower short-pedicelled, densely silky, becom- ing glabrate; calyx-teeth prominent and close to the base of the styles. (G. flavescens Palmeri Wats.) Rather frequent in the upper portions of the chaparral belt of the San Antonio and Cuyamaca Mountains. January. 2. G. Veatchii undulata Eastwood. Leaves elliptic or ellip- tic-ovate, obtuse or aristate at apex, cuneate at base, the margins undulate; fruit densely clustered, concealing the upper bracts; calyx-teeth hidden in dense wool and some distance below the base of the styles. Occasional on Mount Wilson and Mount Lowe. 3. G. pallida Eastwood. Leaves ovate to ovate-lanceolate, acute and with a recurved mucro, entire, sparsely silky-pubes- cent beneath, with straight upwardly appressed pubescence; racemes short; bracts about 3 mm. long; calyx-teeth close to the base of the styles and concealed in the young fruit by dense hairs. Santa Ana Mountains, where it was collected by the author on the trail to Santiago Peak. Family 69. PYROLACEAE. Wintergreen Family. Low mostly very green perennials, with blanched I'uutstocks, simple petioled leaves, and nearly regular white or purple perfect flowers, racemose solitary Or corymbose. Calyx 4-5-lobed. Corolla very deeply 4—Vparted. or of ."> distinct petals. Stamens twice as many as the divisions of the corolla, the anthers introrse in the bud. inverted a1 anthesis, opening by pores or short slits; pollen grains in 4's. Ovary superior, I 5-celled ; Btyle short or slender, often declined ; stigma 5-lobed or 5-crenate ; ovules very numerous, anatropous. Ericaceae 295 Capsule loculicidally dehiscent. Seeds very numerous, minute, the loose cellular coat much larger than the almost undifferentiated embryo. 1. CHIMAPHILA Pursh. Perennial herbs with decumbent stems, ascending leafy branches, opposite or verticillate evergreen short- petioled serrate Leaves, and spreading or nodding white or purplish flowers in terminal corymbs or rarely soli- tary. Pedicel- mostly bracteolate. Calyx 5-cleft or 5-parted, persistent. Petals 5, concave, nearly orbicular, sessile, spreading or recurved. Stamens 10, the filaments usually dilated above and somewhat pubescent. Ovary globose, 5-lobed, 5-celled ; styles very short, obconic : Btigma Large, orbicular, 5-crenate. 1. C. Menziesii Spreng. More or less branched from the base, 1-2 dm. high ; leaves ovate to oblong-lanceolate, 12-36 mm. loii'_r, sharply serrulate, the upper surface often mottled with white; peduncle 1-3-flowered ; bracts ovate or roundish; fila- ments slender, with a round dilated portion ahove the middle, villous; flowers about 1 cm. in diameter. Mount Wilson under pines. Frequent in the San Antonio, San Bernardino and Cuyamaca Mountains. Sarcodes saxguinea Torr. (Sxow- plant.) Stems stout, red- dish, 15-35 cm. high, more or less glandular-pubescent, clothed with firm fleshy scales, the upper narrower, passing into the linear bracts, these ciliate-margined, exceeding the flowers; corolla cylindraceous-campanulate, 5-lobed, persistent ; stamens 10, unappendaged ; ovary Sdobed, 5-celled. Frequent in the coniferous forests of the San Antonio and San Bernardino Mountains above 7000 feet. This interesting parasitic plant belongs to the closely related family Monotropaceae. Family 70. ERICACEAE. Heath Family. Shrubs, perennial herbs or trees, with simple exstipu- late leaves, and mostly perfect sympetalous or rarely 296 Ericaceae choripetalous flowers. Calyx tree from the ovary, 4 5-parted or 1 5-cleft3 mostly persistent. Corolla regu- lar or rarely somewhat 2-lipped and irregular, usually •1 5-toothed, Lobed or divided. Stamens hypogynous, usually as many or twice as many as the corolla-lobes : filaments mostly separate ; anthers 2-celled. attached to the filament by the back or base, the sacks often pro- longed above into tubes, dehiscent by terminal pores or chinks, often awned. Disk crenate-lobed or often none. Ovary usually 2-5-celled ; style elongated or short; stigma peltate or capitate : ovules usually numerous. anatropous. Fruit a capsule, berry or drupe. S Is numerous or sometimes only 1 in each cavity : endo- sperm fleshy. Fruit granular, baccate. 1. Akbutcs. Fruit not granular, smooth or pubescent, drupaceous. 2. Arctostaphylos. 1. ARBUTUS L. Trees or shrubs, with evergreen and coriaceous alter- nate petiolate leaves, and white or flesh-colored small flowers in a terminal cluster of racemes or panicles. bracts and bractlets scaly. Calyx small. 5-parted. Corolla urceolate with 4-5 small recurved teeth. Ovary on an hypogynous disk, 4— 5-celled ; ovules crowded od a fleshy placenta projecting from the inner angles of each cell. Style rather long ; stigma obtuse. Fruit a many- seeded berry. 1. A. Menziesii Pursb. (MahroSo.) Commonly 5-10 m. high; hark exfoliating, deep red; leaves glahrous, elliptic <>r ovate, green above, glaucous heneath, 5-10 cm. long, entire or those of young shoots denticulate; petioles about 1 cm. long: flowers in an ample terminal panicle or dense racemes; berry Meshy, red, suhgloliose, 8-10 mm. in diameter, surface granular. Mount Wilson and Sturtevant trails at about 8000 feet altitude, and In Los Tunas Canyon, Santa Monica Moun Heath Family 297 2. ARCTOSTAPHYLOS Adans. Manzanita. Shrubs or -mall trees with evergreen coriaceous alter- cate leaves, and small white or rose-colored flowers, in racemes, spikes or panicles. Bracts and bractlets present, scale-like. Ovules solitary in the cells, which become bony nutlets or combine into a few-several-celled stone. Fruit a drupe with a hard surface and a mealy or almost bony pulp between it and the nutlets. * Leaves plane, alike or nearly alike on both sides. *- Ovary and pedicels smooth or glabrate. 1. A. Manzanita Parry. Shrubby or arborescent, 2-8 m. high ; bark mahogany-red, exfoliating, twigs and petioles minute- ly tomentose-pubescent ; leaves dull green, commonly vertical by a twist in the short petiole, rigid, ovate-oblong, glabrous on both surfaces, 2.5-5 cm. long; petioles 6-10 cm. long; bracts less than 4 mm. long; pedicels smooth, corolla pinkish; ovary smooth; fruit irregularly depressed-globose, 8-12 mm. broad, reddish brown ; nutlets irregularly separable, rough-carinate. Occasional in the San Gabriel Mountains. More common in the San Ber- nardino Range. In both confined mostly to the upper portions of the chapar- ral belt. 2. A. patula Greene. Diffusely branched shrub, 1-1.5 m. high ; young twigs rusty puberulent or nearly smooth ; leaves smooth, bright green, ovate to broadly cordate, 2-5 cm. long, entire, obtuse ; bracts lanceolate; pedicels smooth ; fruit smooth, depressed-globose, about 6 mm. in diameter ; nutlets united into a deeply lobed stone. Occasional on dry ridges in the open pine woods of the San Antonio and San Bernardino Mountains, 5000-S'JOO feet altitude. •*-•*- Ovary and pedicels tomentose or glandular-pubescent. 3. A. tomentosa Dougl. Shrubby, erect, 1.5-3 m. high, twigs, foliage and pedicels minutely tomentose when young, the twigs often also hispid with scattered hairs ; leaves glaucescent, paler and tomentose beneath, ovate to elliptic, entire or some times denticulate; bracts conspicuous, foliaceous, usually exceeding the short pubescent or somewhat hispid pedicels ; ovary densely 298 Primulaceae hirsute, 7-10-celled; fruit hirsute, minutely roughened ; nutlets all separate or some united in pairs. Common in all our mountains in the upper chaparral belt. The common form in the San Gabriel Mountains is usually more or less glandular and must be referred to A. glanduloaa Eastwood; but all gradations occur, so that it does not seem possible to separate them. 4. A. glauca Lindl. Shrubby, erect, 3-6 m. high, smooth throughout; leaves glaucous, ovate, entire or denticulate; bracts foliaceous, conspicuous ; pedicels stout, glandular-pubescent ; ovary viscid-glandular, ti-8-celled; fruit dark red, very viscid; stone with longitudinal ridges, sharply apiculate. Occasional in the San Gabriel Mountains. More common in the San Antonio and San Bernardino Ranges. 5. A. Pringlei Parry. An erect, branching shrub, 1.5-2 m. high; twigs and petioles hispid and glandular-pubescent ; leaves ovate to obovate, mucronate, rough, with ciliate margins, on petioles 4-8 mm. long; infloresence in dense divaricate panicles; bracts linear-lanceolate; pedicels slender, 10-15 mm. long, glan- dular pubescent; calyx-lobes lanceolate, densely glandular, ovary glandular-hispid ; nutlets consolidated into a rough carinate stone, or separable. Occasional in the pine belt of the San Bernardino, San Jacinto and Cuya- maca Mountains. ** Leaves revolute, smooth above, tomentose beneath. ti. A. bicolor (Nutt.) Gray. Shrub, 1-2 m. high ; leaves ovate or oblong, 4-6 cm. long, margins entire, strongly revolute, gla- brous above, white tomentose beneath, short-petiolate ; inflores- cence in few-rlowered compact racemes; bracts stout, pedicels lanceolate; calyx-lobea and ovary tomentose; fruit glohose, 6-8 mm. in diameter, dark brown, puberulent or smooth ; nutlets united into a round solid, nearly smooth stone. Frequent in the foothills of western San Diego County. Reported from Catalina Island. Family 71. PRIMULACEAE. Primrose Family. Herbs with alternate opposite or basal Leaves and per- fect regular Bowers in terminal <>r axillary racemes Bpikee umbels or corymbs, or solitary in the axils. Primrose Family 2U(.) Calyx free from the ovary, usually 5-parted : persistent or rarely deciduous. Corolla sympetalous, usually 5-cleft, the lobes (in ours) spreading or reflexed. Stamens as many as the corolla-lobes and opposite them, inserted on the tube or at the base of the ovary : anthers introrse, attached by their hacks to the filaments, 2-celled, longi- tudinally dehiscent. Ovary superior, 1-celled ; placenta central, free : style 1 : stigma simple, capitate. Capsule 2-6-valved ; valves erect, entire or 2-cleft. Seeds few or many : endosperm present. Sterile filaments alternate with the corolla-lobes. I. Samolus. Sterile filaments wanting. Flowers axillary on leafy stems. 2 Anagallis. Flowers in umbels at the ends of scapes. 3. Dodecatheon. 1. SAMOLUS L. Brookweed. Low glabrous herbs with alternate entire leaves and small white flowers in loose racemes. Calyx 5-cleft, its base coherent with the lower part of the ovary. Corolla campanulate, 5-cleft, with a slender tooth borne at each sinus. Stamens 5, short and included, inserted on the tube of the corolla. Capsule globular, 5-valved at the summit, many-seeded. 1. S. floribundus H. B. K. Erect or ascending, branched at least at the base, 15-45 cm. high ; leaves membranous, 25-75 mm. long, obovate, obtuse at the apex, narrowed at the base into pet- ioles, the basal often rosulate ; flowers email, less than 2 mm. broad, usually numerous, in loose elongated panicled racemes; pedicels filiform, spreading, bracteolate near the middle; calyx- lobes acute, shorter than the corolla; capsule 2-3 mm. in diame- ter, the 5 apical valves spreading at maturity. (S. Valerandi Americanus Gray.) Occasional along watercourses. Ly tie Creek; San Bernardino Valley. 2. ANAGALLIS L. Pimpernel. Annual or perennial diffuse or erect branching mostly glabrous herbs, with opposite or verticillate sessile or 300 Primulaceae short-petioled leaves entire or nearly so. and small axillary peduncled flowers. Calyx 5-parted, persistent. Corolla deeply 5-parted, rotate. Stamens 5, inserted at the base of the corolla ; filaments puberulent. distinct or united into a narrow ring at the base ; anthers oblong, obtuse. Ovary globose ; ovules numerous ; stigma obtuse. Capsule globose, circumscissile. Seeds minute. Hat on the back. 1. A. arvensis L. Annual, diffuse, usually much branched ; steins 1-3 dm. long, 4-sided; leaves ovate or oval, numerous, opposite, sessile or somewhat clasping, obtuse or acutish, 6-20 mm. long, black-dotted beneath; peduncles filiform, 1—1 cm. long, recurved in fruit; calyx-lobes keeled, rather rigid, slightly shorter than the crenate glandular ciliate corolla-segments; flowers scarlet or salmon color, usually with a dark center, 4-6 mm. broad ; capsule glabrous. Common in waste places and gardens. Flowering nearly all the year. 3. DODECATHEON L. Shooting-star. Glabrous scapose perennial herbs, with entire or repand basal leaves, and rather large flowers in involucrate umbels terminating scapes. Calyx deeply 5-lobed, the lobes reflexed, slightly unequal, the tube very short, thickened at the throat. Stamens 5, inserted on the throat of the corolla ; filaments short, flat, monadelphous, connivent into a cone, exsertecl ; anthers linear or lance- olate, connivent, attached by their bases to the filaments. Ovary ovoid or subglobose, superior; style filiform, ex- serted : stigma 5-(>-valved at the apex or splitting to the base. Seeds numerous, minute, the testa punctate. 1. D. Clevelandi Greene. Pale green and glandular, 3-6 dm. high; roots formed at the beginning of the dry season and remain- ing dormant, no tubers formed; leaves scarcely fleshy, ascend- ing or erect, spatulate-obovate, the margins erose ; corolla hright purple with a yellow base; filaments purple, becoming yellow Plumbaginaceae 301 at the base of the anthers ; anthers purple except the midvein, about twice the length of the staminal tube, the apex blunt, retuse ; capsule oblong, circuniscissile at the top. Frequent on dry mesas and grassy hillsides. March-April. Family 72. PLUMBAGINACEAE. Plumbago Family. Perennial, mostly acaulescent erect herbs, with basal tufted leaves and small perfect regular clustered flowers. Calyx tubular or funnelform, 5-toothed, plaited at the sinuses, the tube 5-15-ribbed. Corolla of 5 hypogynous clawed segments, connate at the base or united into a tube. Stamens 5, opposite the corolla-segments, hypog- ynous ; filaments separate or united at the base ; anthers 2-celled, attached by the backs to the filaments, longi- tudinally dehiscent. Ovary superior, 1-celled ; ovules solitary, anatropous, pendulous ; styles 5, separate or united. Fruit a utricle or achene, enclosed by the calyx, rarely a dehiscent capsule. Seed solitary; endosperm mealy or none. 1. LIMONIUM Adans. Marsh Rosemary. Herbs, mostly with flat basal leaves, and numerous very small flowers cymose-paniculate on the branches of bracted scapes, in 1-3-flowered bracteolate clusters, form- ing 1 -sided spikes. Calyx campanulate or tubular, the limb scarious, 5-toothed, the tube usually 10-ribbed. Petals 5, clawed. Styles 5, separate, stigmatic along the inner side. Fruit a utricle. 1. L. Californicum (Boiss.) Small. Leaves 15-25 cm. long, obovate-oblong, entire, rieshy-coriaceous ; scape 3-6 dm. high; spikes corymbose-panicled ; calyx-tube more or less hairy on the angles. Occasional in salt marshes along the coast. •M)2 Oleaceae Family 78. OLEACEAE. Olive Family. Trees or shrubs with opposite or rarely alternate simple or pinnate exstipnlate entire or dentate leaves, and regular perfect, polygamous or dioecious, 2-4-parted (lowers in terminal or axillary panicles, cymes or fasci- cles. Calyx free from the ovary, usually small, some- times mme. Stamens 2-4, inserted on the corolla ; fila- ments usually short, separate ; anthers mostly large, 2-celled, longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary superior. 2-celled ; ovules few in each cell ; style usually short or none. Fruit a capsule, samara, berry or drupe. Seeds erect or pendulous; endosperm present or wanting; embryo straight. 1. FRAXINUS L. Ash. Trees or tall shrubs with opposite and usually odd- pinnate leaves, and small dioecious or polygamous, randy perfect, greenish fasciculate flowers, appearing before or with the leaves. Calyx small, 4-eleft. irregu- larly toothed, entire or none. Petals none or 2-4, separ- ate, or united in pairs at the base, indiiplicate valvate. Stamens 2. rarely 8-4, inserted on the base of the petals or hypogynous ; filaments short-elongated ; anther- ovate, oblong or linear. Ovules 2 in each cell, pendulous ; stigma 2-cleft. Fruit a flat samara, winged at the apex only or all around, usually 1-seeded. Seed oblong. 1. F. Oregana Nutt. A small or middle-sized tree; leaves tomentose or glabrate in age; leaflets 5-9, oval to oblong-lanceo- late, entire, sessile, 5-10 cm long; flowers all with minute calyx and no petals; fruit marginless at base, margined upwards into oblanceolate or spatulate retuse wing, the whole 2.5-4 cm. long. San Gabriel and Lytle Creek Canyons. 2. F. dipetala II. & A. Shrub 2.5-4 m. high ; leaves 5-15 cm. long; leaflets 3-9, green above, yellowish green beneath when Gentianaceae 303 young, oblong, coarsely serrate above the middle, mostly petioled, 2— i cm. long; flowers mostly perfect; calyx less than 2 nun. long; petals 2, oval, narrowed at base to a short claw, 6 mm. long ; white; style slightly lobed at apex ; fruit linear-oblong to spat u- late-oblong, the terminal wing frequently emarginate at apex. Occasional in canyons. Family 74. GENTIANACEAE. Gentian Family. Hitter, mostly quite glabrous herbs, with opposite rarely verticillate exstipulate entire leaves, and regular perfect flowers in terminal or axillary clusters or solitary at the ends of the stems or branches. Calyx persistent, 4-12-lobed, -toothed or -divided, the lobes imbricated or not meeting in the bud. Corolla funnelform, campanu- late or rotate, often marcescent, 4-12-lobed or -parted. Stamens as many as the lobes of the corolla and alter- nate with them, inserted on the tube or throat; anthers 2-celled, longitudinally dehiscent ; filaments filiform or dilated at the base. Ovary superior, 1-celled or partly 2-celled; ovules numerous ; style simple or none ; stigma entire or 2-lobed or 2-cleft. Capsule mostly dehiscent by 2 valves. Seeds globose, angular or compressed ; endosperm copious ; embryo small, straight. 1. ERYTHRAEA Xeck. Canchalagua. Herbs, mostly annual or biennial, with sessile or amplexicaul leaves, and pink or yellow flowers in cymes or spikes. Calyx tubular, 4-5-lobed or 4-5-divided, the lobes narrow, keeled. Corolla salver-shaped, 4-5-lobed, the lobes spreading, contorted, convolute in the bud. Stamens 4-5, inserted on the base of the corolla-tube ; filaments short, filiform ; anthers linear or oblong, becoming spirally twisted. Ovary 1-celled, the placentae sometimes intruded ; stvle filiform ; stigma 2-lobed. 304 Apocynaceae Capsule oblong-ovoid or fusiform, 2-valved. Seed-coat reticulated. 1. E. venusta Gray. Simple and cymosely several-flowered at the summit or corymbosely branched, 8-20 cm. high; leaves ovate to oblong-lanceolate, 1-2 cm. long, obtusish ; calyx-lobes very narrow to the base; corolla bright pink with a yellow cen- ter, the limb 2 cm. broad, lobes oval or obovate; anthers oblong- linear; seed spherical. Frequent in our interior valleys. May-June. Family 75. APOCYNACEAE. Dogbane Family. Perennial herbs or rarely shrubs, mostly with acrid milky juice, simple opposite or alternate exstipulate haves, and perfect regular cymose, solitary or paniculate flowers. Calyx 5-parted, persistent, the lobes imbri- cated in the bud. Corolla 5-parted, the lobes convo- lute in the bud. Stamens as many as the lobes of the corolla and alternate with them, inserted in the tube or throat ; anthers linear-oblong, sagittate, 2-celled. Ovary superior or its base adherent to the calyx, of 2 distinct carpels, or 1-celled with 2 parietal placentae, or 2-celled ; ovules few or numerous ; style simple or 2-divided : stigma simple. Fruit of 2 follicles or drupes. Seeds often appendaged by a coma ; endosperm present ; embryo straight. 1. APOCYNUM L. Dogbane. Perennial herbs with opposite leaves and small white or pink flowers in terminal and sometimes axillary corymbed cymes. Calyx-lobes acute. Corolla campanu- late, the tube beading within 5 small triangular append- ages alternate with the stamens. Stamens inserted on the base of the corolla ; anthers sagittate connivent around the stigma and slightly adherent to it. Disk 5-lobed. Ovary of 2 distinct carpels; ovules numerous A.sclepiadaceae 305 in each carpel ; stigma ovoid, obtuse, obscurely 2-lobed. Follicles slender, elongated, terete. Seeds small, tipped with a large coma. 1. A. cannabinum L. (Indian Hemp.) Root deep, vertical ; stem much branched, the branches erect or ascending, glabrous or nearly so, more or less glaucous ; leaves oblong or lanceolate- oblong to ovate-oblong, acute or obtuse and mucronate at apex, □arrowed or rounded at base, glabrous above, sometimes pubes- cent beneath, 5-15 cm. long ; petioles 2-12 mm. long or sometimes none; cymes dense; pedicels short, bracteolate at the base; flowers 5-7 mm. broad; calyx-lobes about equaling the tube of the greenish white corolla; corolla-lobes nearly erect; follicles about 10 cm. long, narrowed at the apex. Occasional in moist places along streams. Family 76. ASCLEPIADACEAE. Milkweed Family. Perennial herbs, vines or shrubs, mostly with milky juice, opposite verticillate or alternate exstipulate leaves, and mostly umbellate perfect regular flowers. Calyx- tube very short, its segments imbricated or separate in the bud. Corolla 5-lobed or 5-cleft, the segments com- monly reflexed. A 5-lobed or 5-parted crown (corona) between the corolla and the stamens and adherent to one or the other. Stamens 5, inserted on the corolla ; filaments short, stout, mostly monadelphous or distinct ; anthers attached by their bases to the filaments, in- trorsely 2-celled ; anther-sacs tipped with an intiexell or erect scarious membrane or unappendaged ; pollen coherent into waxy or granular masses. Ovary of 2 carpels ; styles 2, short, connected at the summit by the peltate discoid stigma ; ovules numerous, pendulous. Fruit of 2 several-many-seeded follicles. Seeds com- pressed, usually appendaged by a long coma. Plants twining. 1. Philibertella. Plants erect or decumbent, not twining. 2. Asclepias. 306 Asclepiadaceae 1. PHILIBERTELLA Vail. Twining herbs or somewhat shrubby, with < >}>pi >-i t <* Leaves and umbellate flowers. Calyx small. 5-parted, the Lobes acute. Corolla campanulate or rotate, deeply 5-parted, the lobes acute or obtuse, with a shallow entire or undulate ring forming an outer crown in its throat. The inner staminal crown consisting of 5 turgid fleshy or hard scales or flatfish appendages, attached in a circle at the base of the sessile or slighly stalked column, forming a hollow entire or undulate spreading surface near the level of the conic stigmas. Follicles naked, slender, attenuate at both ends or obtuse at base. 1. P. Hartwegii heterophylla (Engelm.) Vail. Steins slen- der, twining, glabrous, puberulent or somewhat pubescent above; leaves 2.5-5 cm. long, 2-4 mm. wide, variable, some tapering into the petiole, others with rounded and more with dilated or auricu- late-cordate or truncate base; corolla scarcely puberulent, 1 cm. broad, its lobes acute; column sessile. Occasional on dry hillsides in our interior valleys, growing over low shrubs or herbs. 2. ASCL.EPIAS L. Milkweed. Perennial erect or decumbent herbs, with opposite ver- ticillate or rarely alternate' leaves, and flowers in ter- minal or axillary umbels. Calyx 5-parted or 5-divided, usually small, the lobes acute, often glandular within. Corolla deeply 5-parted, the lobes most ly valvate. reflexed in anthesis. Corona-column generally present. Corona of ■"> concave, erect or spreading hoods, each bearing within a slender or subulate incurved horn. Filaments connate into a tube ; anthers tipped with an inflexed membrane ; winged, the wings broadened below the middle ; pollen-masses solitary in each sac, pendulous on their caudicles. Stigma aearly flat, 5-aneled or Convolvulaceae 307 5-lobed. Follicles usually thick, acuminate. Seeds usu- ally <•( ui icse. 1. A. eriocarpa Benth. Erect, 5-8 dm. high ; densely floccose- woolly, the loose wool hardly deciduous except from the angled stem below; leaves not rarely ternate and the uppermost alter- nate, elongated-oblong or the upper lanceolate, obtuse or subcor- date at base, short-petioled, 10-20 cm. long; umbels few or several, on stout peduncles; flowers dull white; corolla at first woolly outside; the lobes longer than the pedicels; column short but distinct; hoods shorter than the anthers, rather spreading, ventricose, semiorbicular in outline and open round to near the middle of the back, the summits produced inwardly into an acute angle or tooth barely enclosing the filiform acute horn ; ovaries glabrous, the summit of the styles villous ; follicles more or less woolly. Frequent on dry mesas and in the foothills, also occasionally in the pine belt of the San Gabriel Mountains. 2. A. Mexicaxia Cav. Stems 6-12 dm. high, glabrous or sparsely puberulent; leaves in whorls of 3-6 or the lower and uppermost opposite, linear to linear-lanceolate, 6-15 cm. long, 4-12 mm. broad, short-petioled ; umbels many, corymbose, densely many-flowered, on peduncles longer than the pedicels; flowers greenish-white; corolla-lobes 4 mm. long; hoods broadly ovate, entire, shorter than the anthers, exceeded by the stout subulate incurved horn. Frequent on the mesas and in the foothills. Family 77. CONVOLVULACEAE. Morning-glory Family. Herbs (some tropical species shrubs or trees), the stems twining or ascending, trailing or erect, with alter- nate exstipulate leaves and regular perfect axillary, cymose or solitary flowers. Calyx 5-parted or 5-divided, usually persistent, the segments imbricated. Corolla often funnelform or campanulate, the limb 5-angled, 5-lobed or entire. Stamens 5, inserted low down on the 308 Convolvulaeeae tube of the corolla and alternate with its Lobes : anthers 2-celled, longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary superior, ses- sile, 'i—l-eelled. with 2 ovules in each cell, entire or 2-4-divided ; styles 1-3. Fruit a 2-4-valved capsule or of 2-1 distinct carpels. Seeds erect, villous, pubescent or glabrous ; embryo plaited or crumpled. Stigmas capitate. L Ipomoea. Stigmas filiform or oblong. 2. CONVOLVULUS. 1. IPOMOEA L. MOBNING-GLORY. Twining, trailing, ascending or rarely erect herbs with large showy axillary solitary or cymose flowers. Sepals equal or unequal. Corolla funnelform or campanulate, the Limb entire. 5-angled or 5-lobed. Stamens equal or unequal, included ; filaments filiform or dilated at the base; anthers globose or ovoid; ovary 2-4-celled, 4-6- ovuled : style filiform, included ; stigmas 1-2. capitate or globose. Capsule septifragally 2-4-valved, 2-4-seeded. 1. I. purpurea (L.) Roth. Annual, pubescent ; stem retrorse- ly hairy, twining or trailing; leaves broadly ovate, deeply cor- date, acute or acuminate, 5-10 cm. broad; peduncles slender, 1-5-fiowered ; sepals lanceolate or oblong, acute, pubescent or hirsute toward the base; corolla 5-7 cm. long, blue or purple vary- ing to white; ovary 3-celled, rarely 2-celled; capsule depressed- globose, shorter than the sepals. An escape from gardens. Introduced from tropical America. 2. CONVOLVULUS L. Herbs, mostly perennials with slender rootstocks and trailing, twining or erect stems. Flowers axillary, soli- tary or clustered, Large and showy. Sepals nearly equal or the outer Larger, the calyx bractless or with a pair of bracts at or mar its base. Corolla and stamens as in Ipomoea. Ovary 1-2-celled ; style filiform; stigmas 2, Morning-glory Family .'101 ) filiform, oblong or ovoid. Capsule globose or nearly so, L-i-celled, 2-4-valved. * Bracts remote fru)n the calyx, small, subulate. 1. C. arvensis L. Perennial, prostrate; the stems 3-10 dm. long; leaves oblong, sagittate or hastate, 2.5-5 cm. long, the basal lobes short; pedicels 1-3-flowered, with a pair of subulate bracts near the base; corolla white with a tinge of purple on the outside, neither lobed nor angled ; stigma filiform. Occasional in cultivated fields and waste places. May-November. * Bracts usually embracing the calyx, foliaceous. 2. C. Soldanella L. Low, glabrous, slightly succulent ; stems 15-30 cm. long, prostrate; leaves reniform, deep green and shin- ing, 2.5-5 cm. long; corolla 4 cm. broad, pinkish; capsule 1-celled; stigma ovate-oblong, thickish. On the sandy beaches along the seashore. May-June. :;. C. repens L. Stems from a horizontal slender running rootstock, 6-10 dm. long, twining or more commonly prostrate; herbage from minutely to tomentose-pubescent ; leaves sagittate, obtuse or acutish, the basal lobes obtuse or rounded, entire; bracts ovate-cordate acute, completely enfolding the calyx ; corolla pinkish, 5 cm. long or more; stigma oblong. In moist meadows in the coast region. 4. C. occidentalis Gray. Glabrous or minutely pubescent; stems freely twining over shrubs; leaves slender-petioled, from angular-cordate with a deep and narrow sinus to sagittate or the upper hastate; the basal lobes often 1-2-toothed; peduncles elongated, surpassing the leaf, 1-3-flowered; bracts at base of the calyx ovate or obscurely cordate, membranaceous, equaling it or somewhat longer, mostly obtuse; corolla campanulate-funnelform, white or pinkish, 3-5 cm. long; stigma linear. Common in the chaparral belt in all our foothills and mountains. 5. C. occidentalis tenuissimus Gray. Much resembling the typical form; leaves narrowly hastate or sagittate; the middle and basal lobes mostly narrowly lanceolate; bracts ovate-oblong or ovate-lanceolate, acute or acuminate. Frequent in the San Gabriel and Santa Ana Mountains, south to San Diego. 310 Cuscutaceae Family 78. CUSCUTACEAE. Dodder Family. White or yellow slender twining parasites, the leaves reduced to minute alternate scales. Calyx 5-lobed, rarely 4-lobed or 4-5-parted. the lobes imbricated in the hud. Corolla usually campanulate, 5-lobed, rarely 4-lobed. the tube bearing as many fimbriate or crenulate scales as there arc lobes and alternate with them, or these sometimes obsolete. Stamens as many as corolla-lobes ami alternate with them, inserted in the throat or sinuses above the scales ; anthers short, 2-celled, longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary 2-celled ; ovules 2 in each cavity ; styles 2, separate or rarely united below; stigmas capi- tate or linear. Capsule globose or ovoid, circumscissile, irregularly hursting or indehiscent, 1-4-seeded. Seeds globose or angular ; embryo linear, curved or spiral ; cotyledons none. 1. CUSCUTA L. Dodder. ( haracters of the family. Stems filiform, parasitic on herbs and shrubs by minute suckers. * Ovary and capsule depressed-globose . 1. C. arvensis Beyrich. Stems filiform, pale yellow ; Mowers nearly sessile in small clusters; calyx-lobes broad, obtuse; corolla campanulate, its lobes as long as the tube, acute or acu- minate, reflexed ; scales large, ovate, equaling or exceeding the tube, densely fringed all around ; capsule depressed-globose. On various herbs about Los Angeles, Davidson. 2. C. Californica Choisy. Stems capillary, low; flowers L'-4 nun. long, pedicelled in loose cymes ; calyx-lobes acute; corolla- lobes lanceolate-subulate, as long as or longer than the campan- ulate tube ; filaments nearly equaling the linear oblong anthers; appendages none or rudimentary ; style slender. Occasional along the coast and in the Interior, growing on various low shrubs. Polemoniaceae .".1 1 ** Ovanj and capsule pointed. 3. C. salina Engelm. Stems slender; flowers 3-5 mm. long, pedicelled in loose cymes; calyx-lobes ovate-lanceolate, acute, as 1 o 1 1 <-r as the denticulate corolla-lobes; corolla-tube shallow-cam- panulate; filaments about as long as the oval anthers; fringed scales shorter than the corolla-tube ; capsule conic, usually 1 -seeded. In salt marshes along the coast, growing over Salicornia, etc. 4. C. subinclusa D. & II. Stems rather coarse, ascending small shrubs to the height of a meter or more; flowers 5-7 mm. long, sessile or short-pedicelled, at length in clusters 1-2.5 cm. thick; calyx-lobes ovate-lanceolate, acutish, much shorter than the cylindric or urn-shaped corolla-tube; corolla-lobes much shorter than the tube, minutely crenulate or papillose; anthers oval, subsessile; scales narrow, fringed, reaching to the middle of the tube; capsule conic, capped by the marcescent corolla. Common in the foothills, usually on shrubs or coarse herbs. Family 79. POLEMONIACEAE. Phlox Family. Herbs or rarely low shrubs, with alternate or opposite, entire, lobed or dissected leaves, and perfect regular or nearly so flowers, corymbose-capitate, cymose or panicu- late. Calyx tubular or campanulate, 5-cleft, the seg- ments slightly imbricated. Corolla 5-parted, the lobes contorted. Stamens 5, inserted on the tip of the corolla and alternate with its lobes ; filaments slender ; anthers versatile, 2-celled, longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary superior, mostly 3-celled ; ovules few-many in each cell ; style simple, filiform ; stigmas 3, linear. Capsule mostly loculicidally 3-valved. Seeds various. Leaves alternate; annual herbs, or 1 species perennial and lignescent at base. Calyx scarious between the angles, ruptured by the distended capsule. 3. GlLIA. Calyx scarious or coriaceous at base. 2. Navarretia. Leaves alternate, palmately lobed; shrubby. 4. Leptodactylon. Leaves opposite and — Entire, the floral alternate. 1. Microsteris. Palmately lobed, upper verticillate. 5. Linanthus. 312 Polemoniaceae 1. MICROSTERIS Greene. Small much branched annuals with entire leaves, all except floral ones opposite, ami minute flowers scattered singly or in pairs in the axils of the alternate leaves. Calyx tubular, 5-cleft, the lobes acute, scarious-margined. ( !orolla salver-shaped, the tube narrow. Stamens straight, short, unequally inserted on the corolla-tube. Capsule 3-celled, at length distending and rupturing the calyx- tube. Seeds few. large, the coat when moistened develop- ing a thick glutinous mass. 1. M. Californica Greene. Slender, 1-2 dm. high, loosely and somewhat dichotomously branched from the middle; leaves from obovate-subulate in the lowest to oblong and oblong-lanceolate, 1-2 cm. long, all more or less pubescent with scattered hairs, a few line gland-tipped hairs on the flowering branches and calyx ; calyx-teeth slightly shorter than the tube ; corolla red, the lobes emarginate, little surpassing the calyx; capsule ovoid. (Collomia gracilis of recent authors, not of Douglas.) Occasional in shady places in the foothills. Collomia grandiflora Dougl. A strict erect annual, with entire oblong-lanceolate leaves, and large salmon-colored flowers in terminal and axillary heads. Common in open pine woods in the San Bernardino, San Jacinto and Cuya- maca Mountains. 2. NAVARRETIA R. & P. Glabrous and scentless or viscid-pubescenl and heavy- scented animal herbs, with leaves all alternate setace- ously or spinosely pinnatifidj or the lowest subentire. Flowers in crowded bracted clusters at the ends of the branches. Calyx-tube scarious between the green angu- lar or costate segments, unequal, erecl or spreading, pungent-tipped or pungent-cleft, the 2 outer sometimes spinulose-toothed or -deft. Corolla-tube funnelform or salver-shaped. Stamens and style exserted or included, straighl ordeclined. Capsule L-3-celled, L— many-seeded, Phlox Family 313 partially dehiscenl or Lndehiscent. Seeds commonly mucilaginous and sending oul threads containing each a spiral coil. 1. N. prostrata < < ray, Greene. Glabrous or nearly bo ; flower clusters sessile near the ground, the few branches radiating from beneath and prostrate; leaves pinnatifid, the rachis broad and strap-shaped, the segments short and spreading; calyx-tube minutely white-hirsute, thin-hyaline between the stout costse, constricted over the capsule, the segments spreading, 2 subulate ami entire. ."> spinulose trilid ; pericarp a transparent indehiscent utricle close-fitted to the amalgamated mass of glutinous seeds, breaking transversely or irregularly when soaked ; seeds 4 in each cell. (Gilia prostrata cm. high; lower leaves bipinnatifid, the upper pin- nately-parted or pinnatifid, becoming small and entire; flowers somewhat crowded and subst-ssile or at length loosely panicled ; corolla violet or purplish, 6-15 mm. long, narrowly funnelform, the tube scarcely equaling the calyx. Frequent in the chaparral belt of all the hills and mountains. ** Leaves, at least the outline, entire or pinnatifid; flowers scattered, rarely clustered in the first. 6. G. gilioides (Benth.) Greene. Loosely branching, erect or diffuse, 2-6 dm. high, commonly villous and glandular throughout ; basal leaves and the lower cauline leaves pinnately-parted into narrowly oblong or lanceolate divisions, or rarely all so divided, or the upper palmately divided into 3-5 obovate or lanceolate divisions; corolla 8-12 mm. long, salver-shaped, blue-purple ; sta- mens unequally inserted ; capsule globose ; seeds 1-2 in each cell. (Collomia gilioides Benth.) Frequent in shady places in the chaparral belt throughout our range 7. G. latiflora exilis Gray. Diffusely paniculate-branched above, 3-4 dm. high, glabrous below or the young parts some- what arachnoid-tomentose, more or less glandular above; basal and lower leaves simply pinnatifid, linear-lanceolate, 3-5 cm. long, with short ovate or triangular and cuspidate-tipped lobes, these often enlarged and toothed or lobed; the cauline few, becoming entire and subulate above; paniculate cymes very loose; flowers mostly on elongated almost capillary pedicels, about 1 cm. long, dilated-funnelform, abruptly contracted below into a narrow tube, which equals or slightly exceeds the calyx, its lobes rounded-obovate, purple, the throat yellowish below; capsule obovoid. Wilson's Peak under pines, and similar places throughout the San Gabriel Mountains. 8. G. tenuiflora altissima Parish. Loosely paniculate, branch- ed above, 5-8 dm. high, hispid pubescent below, glandular above; basal leaves 4-6 cm. long, bipinnately parted or divided; the upper becoming simple, small and entire; branches loosely few- flowered; pedicels shorter than the flowers; corolla 2.5-3 cm. 316 Polemoniaceae long, lilac color with purple tube, narrowly funnelform, tapering to the long slender tube ; capsule ovoid-oblong. Frequent in open pine forests in the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains. ***Leaves slender, entire or with a feu: slender lobes, pungent; flowers crowded in leafy-bracted clusters; bracts and calyces iroolly-matted. 9. G. virgata Steud. Annual, white-floccose, becoming gla- brate; stems slender, either simple and virgate or with virgate branches from the base and paniculately branched above, 1-3 dm. high; leaves slender-filiform, the lower mainly entire and the upper rarely more than 3-parted ; corolla blue or lavender, its tube 8-12 mm. long, surpassing the acerose calyx-lobes; anthers linear-sagittate, 2 mm. long. Frequent in the foothills and plains in the interior region, mostly east of our limits. 10. G. virg-ata floribunda Gray. Branches few, terminated by large, compact flower clusters; most of the leaves pinnately 3-7- parted ; corolla somewhat larger than in the type. On dry plains from Azusa eastward. 11. G. densifolia Benth. Perennial, canescent-lanate when young, becoming glabrate in age; stems rigid, branched from the woody base, usually somewhat spreading, 1.5-3 dm. high ; leaves rigid, mostly pinnatifid or incisely laciniate into short subulate, spinulose lobes; flowers densely clustered, capitate-glomerate; corolla violet-blue, its tube about 12 mm. long, 2-3 times the length of the calyx; anthers sagittate. Occasional in open places, mostly on dry ridges, in the pine belt of all our mountains. 4. LEPTODACTYLON Il.it A. More <>r less woody or shrubby, commonly tufted, very Leafy plants. Leaves commonly alternate, and much fascicled in the axils, palmately 3— 7-parted, acerose- Bubulate, rigid and pungent. Flowers showy, solitary and sessile or few in clusters at the summit of the branches or branchlets. Corolla salver-shaped, the throat some- what funnelform. Filaments short, attached equally in Phlox Family 317 or below the throat; anthers short, included. Capsule many-seeded. Seeds nol mucilaginous. 1. L. Californicum H. & A. Shrubby, fi-12 dm. high, the branches and very crowded leaves tomentose-pubescent and more or less glandular, leaf-segments narrowly linear, about 1.5 cm. long; corolla rose color or lilac, its limb 2-4 cm. in diameter, with broadly wedge-obovate lobes, their margins often minutely ■ p'-i. ; ovules 20 or more in each cell. (Gilia Californica Benth.) Frequent in the chaparral belt. March-June. 5. LINANTHUS Benth. Mostly low or slender annuals, with haves opposite, or the upper rarely alternate, palmately divided to the base into narrowly linear or filiform divisions (appear- ing as if in whorls in some species), rarely entire. Flowers scattered or in terminal capitate clusters. Calyx- tube scarious between the ribs or angles, its teeth equal. Corolla varying from salver-shaped to subrotate. Stamens equally inserted on the corolla. Capsule with few-many seeds in each cell. * Corolla funnel for in . 1. Li. diantbiflorus (Benth.) Greene. Branching from the base, the branches decumbent or simple and erect, 4-12 cm. high, more or less pubescent ; leaves all simple, narrowdy linear ; corolla short-funnelform, 2 cm. long or more, lilac with a darker or yellowish throat, the ample lobes from denticulate to strongly fringed-toothed ; filaments inserted near the base of the tube; ovules 12-20 in each cell. (Gilia dianthoides Endl.) Common in sandy soil in the coast and interior valleys. February-April. 2. L. liniflorus (Benth.) Greene. Stems slender, dichotomous- ly branched, about 3 dm. high, glabrous; leaf-segments about 3, filiform; flowers on long slender pedicels in a loose cymose panicle; corolla with nearly obsolete tube; the limb rotate, 12-24 mm. broad; the obovate entire lobes white, marked with 7 deep blue veinlets ; stamens nearly as long as the corolla-lobes ; 318 Polemoniaceae filaments with a dense pilose ring near the base; ovules 6-8 in each cell. (Gilia liniflorus Benth.) Frequent on plains and foothills nearly throughout the state, but known within our limits only on low hills near Trabuco Canyon, Santa Ana Moun- tains. 3. L. pusillus (Benth.) Greene. Stems very slender, diffusely dichotomously branched, pubescent; pedicels capillary; calyx 3 mm. long, the teeth subulate, barely half as long as the tube, hispid-ciliolate ; corolla short-funnelform, little or not at all exceeding the calyx; seeds 3-4 in each cell. (Gilia pusillus Benth.) Occasional on dry hillsides in our interior region. 4. L. aureus (Nutt.) Greene. Nearly simple or more commonly diffusely branched, 5-15 cm. high ; leaf-segments narrowly linear, 6 mm. long, hispidulous ; pedicels seldom longer than the flowers ; corolla open-funnelform, golden yellow; the lobes rounded obo- vate, widely spreading, equaling the tube ; filaments inserted just below the sinuses, glabrous at base; seeds about 10 in each cell. (Gilia aurea Nutt.) Frequent in the interior in dry washes. 5. L. Iiemmoni (Gray) Greene. Stems widely branching, about 10-15 cm. high, hirsutely pubescent; leaf-segments linear, 5-6 mm. long; flowers solitary or few in the axils and subsessile, but more densely clustered at the ends of the branches ; calyx turbinate-prismatic, strongly 5-costate; lobes acerose-subulate, equaling the throat of the yellowish short-funnelform corolla; capsule many-seeded. (Gilia Lemmoni Gray.) Open places in the chaparral belt. ** Corolla salver- shaped, the tube long-exserted. 6. L. parviflorus (Benth.) Greene. Stems slender, branched from the base, 8-15 cm. high; leaf-segments linear or narrowly oblanceolate ; corolla-tube very slender, 18-25 mm. long; throat yellow; lobes oval, 4-6 mm. long, mostly pale yellow or nearly white, tinged with red or brown on the outside; style and fila- ments half or more than half as long as the corolla-limb. ( /< pto- siphon parviflorus Benth.; Gilia micrayitha Steud.) Common on the plains and foothills throughout our range in san — to mill, long; calyx-lobes ovate-lanceolate, acute; corolla 15-25 mm. broad, rotate-cam panulate, the tube scarcely half the length of the lobes, usually deep blue, slightly hairy toward the Water-leaf Family 321 base; -rales rather broad, ciliate; seeds usually li'. corrugate- roughened. Frequent on sandy or dry plains and foothills throughout our range. The ratber persistent cotyledons are usually spatulate. March-April. 4. N. integrifolia (Parish). Steins usually much branched, rather weak ami spreading, somewhat densely pubescent through- out with spreading hairs, the petioles nearly ciliate ; leaves 2-3- toothed or pinnatitid, seldom entire; peduncles slender and usually exceeding the leaves; calyx-lobes lanceolate, acute and mucronulate; corolla usually less than 1 cm. broad, rotate-cam- panulate to nearly rotate, pale blue or nearly white, with darker veinlets, hairy toward the base; scales linear, the upper half usually free, hairy; seeds usually 8-12, corrugate-roughened, sometimes minutely so, globose. (X. Afenziesii integrifolia Parish.) Rather common in the chaparral belt in all the hills and valleys, especi- ally away from the coast. April-May. 2. EU CRYPT A Nutt. Erect paniculately branched viscid annuals, with small racemose flowers. Calyx 5-parted, the sinuses naked. Corolla small, tubular-campanulate, without appendages. Capsule globose, 1-celled. with 2 dilated placentae lining the pericarp, 2-valved, 8-seeded, 2 seeds remaining in each valve between the pericarp and the placentae after dehiscence. Seeds corrugated or smooth. 1. E. chrysanthemifolia (Benth.) Greene. Stems rather slender, widely branching, 3-9 dm. high; leaves ample, 2-3-pin- natifid; racemes short and close, scarcely surpassing the leaves; calyx-lobes ovate, acutish; corolla white or bluish, scarcely sur- passing the calyx-lobes; free seeds oblong-oval, corrugated, the concealed ones flattened, smooth. (EUisia chrysanthemifolia Benth.) Common in the chaparral belt and in the open foothills. March-May. 3. PHACELIA Juss. Annual rarely perennial mostly hirsute or hispid herbs, or rarely suffrutescent, with entire or variously lobed or dissected leaves, and often showy flowers in 322 Hydrophyllaceae seorpioid spikes or racemes. Calyx deeply 5-parted, commonly more or Less accrescent, unappendaged. Co- rolla from nearly rotate to campanulate, tubular or funnelform, deciduous, the tube commonly with internal lamellate projections or appendages. Stamens inserted on the base of the corolla-tube. Style 2-cleft. Capsule 1 -celled, 2-valved, the thin septa-like placentse adherent. * Ovules 4 ; corolla-tube with 10 laminate appendages in pairs at tfte base of the stamens. 1. P. Magellanica (Lam.) Coville. Hispid and the foliage strigOBe, more or less eanescent, 2-5 dm. high, from a perennial or biennial root; leaves lanceolate to ovate, acute, pinnately and obliquely straight-veined ; the lower tapering into a petiole, and commonly some of them with 1-2 pairs of smaller lateral leaf- lets; inflorescence hispid, the dense spikes thyrsoid-congested ; corolla whitish or bluish, moderately 5-lobed, longer than the oblong-lanceolate or linear calyx-lobes ; filaments much exserted sparingly bearded. Frequent on dry hillsides in the valleys and mountains. 2. P. ramosissima suffrutescens Parry. Perennial ; stems much branched from the base, decumbent or ascending, Lignes- cent at base, often 2 cm. or more in diameter; herbage hispid pubescent and more or less glandular above; leaves 5-9-divided or -parted, with oblong or narrower pinnatifid-incised divisions; spikes glomerate, short and dense; flowers subsessile, ascending in fruit; sepals ovate to obovate-oblanceolate ; corolla bluish or dirty white; its lobes spreading or somewhat refiexed, short, scarcely as long as the diameter of the throat ; stamens and style moderately exserted; capsule globose-ovoid; seeds deeply pitted, oval. Common in the chaparral belt and on sand-dunes along the seashore. Specimens from Port Ballona show 5 annular rings near base. 3. P. hispida Gray. Annual (as are all the following species), 5 dm. high or less, diffusely 1 > ranched, setose-hispid with long slen- der white bristles; leaves with rather few, coarse divisions, the uppermost sometimes merely laciniate-incised ; spikes soon loose and loosely paniculate; flowers on short slender horizontal pedi- cels; corolla very pale blue, rotate or campanulate ; lobes rounded Water-leaf Family 323 a1 apex; calyx-lobes narrowly linear with attenuate base nearly equaling the corolla, in fruit 8-12 nun. long and almost 4 times the length of the globose capsule; seeds short-oval, roughish- scrobiculate. Very common in the chaparral belt in open grassy places. April-June. 4. P. distans Benth. Stems much branched, ascending, 3-5 dm. high; herbage with scattered hispid hairs and close fine pubescence; leaves pinnately 9-17-divided into linear-oblong 1-2- pinnatifid or cleft divisions; spikes scattered, solitary or gemi- nate; sepals unequal, narrowly obovate to spatulate ; corolla 6-8 mm. long, rotate-campanulate, usually blue, rarely paler, the lobes rounded ; internal appendages semiovate with free pointed tips ; stamens little or not at all exserted. Very common in the plains and foothills. March-May. 5. P. tanacetifolia Benth. Much resembling the last, but usually stouter, erect, sparsely branching or simple; leaves simi- lar, larger and less finely dissected; spikes terminating the branches, approximate, 6-9 cm. long; sepals linear, beset with rigid bristles, in fruit little exceeding the oval capsule; corolla open-campanulate, 6-8 mm. long, lavender, the lobes blunt, not rounded ; internal appendage entirely adnate, the tip rounded. Slender specimens of this species were collected on the northern slope of the Santa Monica Mountains, between Cahuenga Pass and Encino, by the author in April, 1901 ; otherwise it is not known within our limits. 6. P. ciliata Benth. Branched from the base with rather simple ascending branches, 2-4 dm. high, herbage scabrous, otherwise glabrous; leaves pinnately divided, the divisions ob- long, toothed or incised ; spikes rather short, becoming loose in fruit; pedicels short or almost wanting; calyx-lobes lanceolate to broadly ovate, chartaceous, 7-10 mm. long in fruit, with thick- ened midrib and reticulations, sparsely bristly-ciliate; corolla blue ; stamens shorter or about equaling the corolla ; capsule ovate, mucronate, about half the length of the calyx-lobes, which are arched over it ; seeds oval, favose. Open grassy hills, not common. Hollywood: Capistrano. ** Ovules mostly yiumerous. ■*- Appendages none. 7. P. viscida (Benth.) Torr. Stem erect, mostly simple, 3-6 dm. high, very glandular above; leaves ovate or obscurely cordate, 324 Hydrophyllaceae doubly or incisely and irregularly dentate, 2.5-0 cm. long; calyx- lobes linear or obscurely spatulate, obtuse, 7-8 mm. long; corolla deep blue with purplish or whitish center, rotate-campanulate, LO-20 mm. broad; capsule ovate, abruptly cuspidate-pointed, equaling the calyx. Frequent in all the mountains bordering our coast valleys, especially common on tire-swept places in the chaparral belt. March-May. P. viscida albiflora (Nutt.)Gray. Flowers white, otherwise as in the typical form. Same range as the last but less common. 8. P. grandiflora (Benth.) Gray. Closely resembling the last, but usually more robust and more viscid; leaves larger; calyx-lobes linear 8- mm. long; corolla rotate-campanulate, 2.5-4 cm. broad, purplish or pale bluish; capsule equaling the calyx, the cuspidate persistent and indurated, base of the style 2 mm. long. Same range as the last and growing in similar places. April-May. +-■*- Appendages 5, small truncate or emarginate scales, 1 adnate to tlie inner base of each filament. !t. P. Whitlavia Gray. About 3 dm. high, loosely branching, hirsute and glandular; leaves ovate or deltoid, incisely toothed ; calyx -lobes linear; corolla with cylindraceous ventricose tube, usually about 2 cm. long and twice the length of the lobes, purple; appendages to the exserted filaments hairy. Occasional on low hills and in the chaparral belt. Verdugo Hills: San Gabriel and Sants Ana Mountains. 10. P. Parryi Torr. Stems more or less branching, the branches somewhat spreading; herbage hirsute or somewhat his- pid and glandular; leaves ovate, irregularly and incisely doubly toothed or lanciniate or the lowest sometimes pinnately lobed, the upper longer than the petioles, the lower on rather long slen- der petioles; racemes very loose; pedicels filiform, widely spread- ing; calyx-lobes narrow ; corolla cleft beyond the middle, rotate- campanulate, deep violet, 2 cm. broad; filaments bearded, ex- serted; ovules on each placenta 20-30, and seeds 15-20. Occasional in the chaparral belt in our interior region. Rather common in the Santa Ana Mountains and throughout the western part of San Diego County. 1 1 . P. longipes Torr. Much resembling the last but more slender, loosely branching; cauline leaves roundish-oval <>r sub- Water-leaf Family 325 cordate, coarsely and obtusely 5-8-toothed, about 12 mm. long, all shorter than the petioles; corolla about 1 cm. long, nearly white, 5-cleft barely to the middle ; ovules on each placenta 8-10; seeds fewer. •' Rare and local in the San Gabriel Mountains," Davidson- *** Ovules several (6-12) or more numerous on each plancenta; ap- pendages of JO vertical salient lamellae. *• Seeds areolale, reticulate or favose-pitted but not transversely rugose; styles cleft to the middle. 12. P. brachyloba (Benth.) Gray. Stems branched, erect, 3-6 dm. high, roughish-pubescent, viscid-glandular above; leaves pinnatifid, elongated, oblong or spatulate, short-petioled, lobes 7-15, entire or obtusely few-toothed; spikes crowded, solitary or geminate, at length much elongated and slender; pedicels very short; corolla white, campanulate, the lobes about half the length of the tube ; the long narrow appendages nearly free from the stamens; ovules about 6, rarely more, on each plancenta; cap- sule oblong-oval, very obtuse, membranous, shorter than the narrow spatulate calyx-lobes; seeds oval, reticulated. Frequent in the upper portions of the chaparral belt of the San Gabriel Mountains. April-June. 13. P. Douglasii (Benth.) Gray. Stems branched from the base; the branches prostrate or decumbent, 1-2 dm. long; herb- age pubescent and hirsute with mostly spreading hairs ; leaves elongated-oblong or linear in outline, pinnatifid or pinnately parted into several-many pairs of lobes, the terminal lobe not larger nor parallel-veined ; racemes becoming elongated ; pedicels filiform, 1-2 cm. long; calyx-lobes spatulate; corolla rotate-cam- panulate, pale blue, about 1 cm. broad ; appendages semi-oblanee- olate ; ovules to each dilated placenta 12-14 ; capsule ovate, mucro- nate; seeds roundish, oval, scrobiculate. Frequent near the coast along the borders of the sand-dunes. Much re- sembling some of the large-flowered Nemophilas. 14. P. Davidsonii macrantha Parish. Stems branched from the base, decumbent, ascending or erect, 2-4 dm. long, rather soft pubescent and villous ; leaves deeply pinnatifid into 2-4 tri- angular entire lobes and a much larger terminal one, the evident veins of which are nearly parallel, the upper leaves commonly entire and slender petioled ; pedicels shorter than the fruiting calyx-lobes ; calyx-lobes narrowly spatulate, fully twice the length ."._'(', Hydrophyllaceae of the ovate capsule; corolla 1 cm. high or more, the lohes dark purple, the throat and tube yellowish. Frequent In the pine belt of the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Moun- tains. May-August. *-+■ Seeds strongly corrugated transversely ; style cleft only at apex. 15. P. Fremontii Torr. Much branched from the base, 1.6-3 dm. high; leaves pinnatifid into 7-15 oblong or obovate entire or obtusely 2-3-lobed divisions ; flowers crowded in the at length elongated spiciform racemes; corolla broadly funnelform, twice the length of the spatulate calyx-lobes; the long and nar- row appendages united below with the filaments or almost free from them ; capsule oblong ; seeds 20-30, oblong, strongly and somewhat evenly corrugated. Los Angeles River; Wilson's Peak, Davidson. Summit of Santiago Peak. 4. EMMENANTHE Benth. Annuals with the habit of Phacelia and differing from that genus only by its yellow or cream-colored persist- ent corollas, destitute of appendages. 1. E. penduliflora Benth. (Whispering Bells.) Erect, usually much branched from the base, 2-4 dm. high, villous- pubescent and somewhat viscid ; lobes of the pinnatifid leaves numerous, short-toothed or incised; racemes loose, straight, ascending; pedicels filiform, as long as the flowers, these soon pendulous; calyx-lobes ovate, 6-8 mm. long; corolla cream- colored, campanulate, about 1 cm. long; filaments adnate to the base of the corolla; seeds about 16, pitted. Common throughout the chaparral belt of all the mountains. April-June. 5. CONANTHUS Wats. Low herbs or suffrutescent plants with entire leaves and purple, bluish or white flowers. Calyx deeply 5-parted. Corolla funnelform or somewhat salver-shaped, the tube destitute of Internal appendages. Stamens often unequal and unequally inserted, included. Styles 2, distinct to the base or rarely united: stigmas some- Water-leaf Family :;-J7 what capitate Capsule thin, completely or incompletely 2-celled by the meeting of the 2 thin and dilated placen- tae, 2-valved, the valves entire Seeds usually numerous. 1. C. demissus ( mm. long, nearly equaling the sepals ; seeds very numerous. Growing about the borders of ponds. Santa Monica, Davidson; Soldiers Home. 6. ERIODICTYON Benth. Low shrubs or rarely herbaceous, with alternate more or less dentate leaves, and funnelform or campanulate flowers in terminal panicles or scorpioid cymes. Sepals narrow, not dilated above. Filaments more or less adnate to the tube of the corolla, little or not at all exserted, sparsely hirsute. Ovary nearly or quite sessile, 2-celled by the meeting of the dilated placentae in the axis. Capsule first loculicidal then septicidal, thus 4-valved ; each valve with a short beak or acumination and closed on one side by the adherent dissepiment or half-parti- tion. 1. E. Californicum (H. & A.) Greene. Shrub, commonly 10-20 dm. high ; leaves oblong to oblanceolate, tapering below and fre- quently above, dentate at least above the middle, very glutinous, .".•js Boraginaceae the areas between the veins on the under side with a close dense felt; calyx 2 nun. long, with linear lobes; corolla white or pale blue tubular-funnelform, 8-12 mm. long; stamens and Btyles included. (E. glutinosum Benth.) Occasional in the chaparral belt of the San Gabriel Mountains. Afore common on the dry plains east of our range, as well as in the San Antonio and San Bernardino Mountains, where it extends up to the pine belt. May- August. 2. E. tomentosum Benth. Shrub, 25-30 dm. high, whitish tomentose with a more or less dense coat of short villous hairs, Bometimes rusty-colored, branches leafy to the top; leaves oblong or oval, rigid, obtuse, 5-10 cm. long; cymes at length broad ; calyx densely villous, the corolla slightly so; corolla somewhat salver- shaped and about twice the length of the calyx. Frequent in the chaparral belt of the San Gabriel and Santa Ana Moun- tains. April-June. 3. E. Parryi (Gray) Greene. Stems about 8-18 dm. high, woody below ; branches rather simple and erect, hirsute or vil- lous, viscid-glandular and strong-scented; leaves 5 cm. long, 1-1.5 cm. broad in the middle, tapering above to an acute apex and below to a very short petiole; the leaves at the base of the branches often much reduced, bullate and the margin strongly revolute; calyx-lobes narrowly linear, about 4 mm. long; corolla tubular-funnelform, about 15 mm. long, blue; stamens included, unequal; ovary oval, about 3 mm. long; seeds 4 or sometimes more. (Nama Parryi Gray.) Occasional in the San Gabriel, San Rernardino and Santa Ana Mountains. Occurring in the upper portions of the chaparral belt and in the lower por- tions of the pine belt. June-August. Family 82. BORAGINACEAE. Borage Family. Herbs or rarely shrubs with mostly alternate exstipu- late entire and pubescent leaves, and perfect regular or nearly so flowers in scorpioid spikes, racemes or cymes or rarely scattered. Calyx o-lobed or 5-parted, usually persistent. Corolla o-lobed, sometimes crested or append- aged in the throat. Stamens inserted in the tube or throat, alternate with the lobes; anthers 2-celled, lon- gitudinally dehiscent. Ovary superior, of 2 2-valved Borage Family 329 carpels, these commonly 2-rlobed appearing as t L-ovuled carpels; style simple, entire or 2-cleft. Fruit mostly. of 4 1-seeded outlets. Ovary not lobed ; glabrous perennial. 1. Heliotkopium. Ovary 4- lobed; hispid or pubescent annuals. Flowers white. Nutlets divergent, wing-margined and bristly, at least at apex. ■■i. Pbctocarya. Nutlets erect. Nutlets inserted at the base; scar rounded. 3. Allocarya. Nutlets laterally inserted. Scar rounded. 6. Plagiobotjiuvs. Scar linear, often bifurcate at base. Calyx circumscissile near the middle. 5. Piptocai.yx. Calyx not circumscissile. Roots imparting a purple stain; spikes leafy bracted. 4. Eremocarya. Roots not imparting a stain: spikes naked. 7. Cryptanthe. Flowers yellow. 8. Amsinckia. 1. HELIOTKOPIUM L. Heliotrope. Herbs or shrubs with alternate mostly entire petioled leaves, and small blue or white flowers in scorpioid spikes or scattered. Calyx-lobes lanceolate or linear. Corolla salver-shaped or funnelform, naked in the throat. Stamens included; filaments short or none. Style ter- minal, short or slender ; stigma conic or angular. Fruit 2— 4-lobed, separating into 4 1-seeded nutlets or into 2 2-seeded carpels. 1. H. Curvassavicum L. Annual, fleshy, glabrous through- out, more or less glaucous, branched, diffuse, the brandies 15-45 cm. long; leaves oblanceolate or sometimes linear, 2.5-5 cm. long, obtuse at the apex, narrowed into petioles or the upper ses- sile ; scorpioid spikes densely flowered, bractless, mostly in pairs ; flowers about 4 mm. broad; calyx-segments lanceolate, acute; corolla white or rarely lavender; stigma annular. Common in low saline places. 2. PECTOCARYA D. C. Low slender annuals with strigose-hirsute pubescence, small narrow leaves, and small white flowers scattered 330 Boraginaceae alone the stems and branches. Calyx deeply 5-cleft, spreading or reflexed in fruit, persistent. Corolla with a circle of processes or crests which almost close the throat. Stamens included. Nutlets flat, thin, radiately divergent, bordered at apex or all around with a row of hooked bristles. 1. P. linearis (R. & P.) DC. Stems slender, diffusely branched from the base, decumbent or ascending, canescent throughout with appressed hairs, the leaves with spreading hairs; nutlets oblong, 4 mm. long, becoming recurved, the winged margins toothed, the teeth ending in an uncinate bristle, the apex thickly beset with slender uncinate bristles. Frequent on the mesas in the coast valleys and in moist places in the interior region. 2. P. penicillata (H. & A.) DC. Closely resembling the last in habit, usually smaller and densely canescent with appressed hairs throughout; nutlets oblong, 2 mm. long, the apex covered with slender uncinate bristles, the winged margin entire, in- curved, somewhat broader at the base and sometimes bearing 1 or 2 uncinate bristles. Common in all our valleys and foothills, mostly in dry ground. 3. P. setosa Gray. Stems erect, 4-6 cm. high, yellowish green, canescent with appressed hairs; calyx with a few strong hispid hairs; nutlets broad, about 1 mm. long, beset on the mar- gins and inner surface with uncinate bristles. First collected on the Mojave Desert. Common on the desert slopes of the San Gabriel, San Bernardino and Cuyamaca Mountains. :{. ALLOCARYA Greene. Mostly low spreading annuals, with linear entire leaves, the lowest opposite, and small flowers in terminal spikes or racemes. Pedicels thickened at the summit and persistent. Calyx 5-divided, persistent, the seg- ments narrow. Corolla salver-shaped, white, yellow in the throat. Sta mens ineluded. Ovary 4-divided ; style short. Nutlets crustaceous, smooth or rough, attached Borage Family •'!•'!! at their bases <»r below the middle to the receptacle, the scai- of the attachment concave or raised. 1. A. trachycarpa (Gray) Greene. Stem branching from the base, decumbent, 3 dm. long or less, rough with a rather coarse and somewhat spreading pubescence; racemes leafy almost through- out; Begments of the calyx linear, widely spreading; corolla very small ; nutlets ovate, straight, carinate on both sides, the dorsal keels and nearly straight transverse rugae dentate-interrupted ; scar suborbicular, nearly basal. In low ground near Inglewood. 4. EREMOCAEYA Greene. Hirsute-canescent low annuals with numerous leafy- bracted racemose branches. Roots imparting a purple stain. Leaves in a basal rosulate tuft. Racemes dense, biserial, Leafy-bracted ; pedicels filiform, short and per- sistent with the calyx. Calyx 5-parted to the base, campanulate in fruit, its lobes nerveless, not bristly. * lorollas small, white. Nutlets neither margined nor car- inate, erect, attached for their whole length, the groove open, slightly dilated and not furcate at base. Style enlarged in fruit and persistent. 1. E. micrantha (Torr.) Greene. Hirsute-canescent through- out; stems slender, erect, diffusely branched from the base, 6-12 cm. high ; leaves linear, 4-10 mm. long ; flowers crowded ; corolla scarcely 2 mm. long, its lobes about 1 mm. long, obscurely append- aged at the throat ; nutlets oblong-ovate, acuminate, smooth or nearly so, about 1 mm. long. Frequent in dry washes in the interior valleys. 2. E. lepida (Gray) Greene. Stems stouter than in the last, S-15 cm. high; corolla larger, its limb 4-6 mm. broad, append- ages conspicuous ; nutlets nearly 2 mm. long, pectinate-scabrous. Frequent in the dry interior foothills of San Diego and San Bernardino Counties. 5. PIPTOCALYX Torr. Hispid-canescent low diffusely branching annuals, leafy-racemose throughout. Calyx villous-hispid, o-cleft '.V.V2 Boraginaceae t<> the middle, circumscissile near the middle, the Lower scarious part together with tin' short pedicel persistenl ; the lobes herbaceous, filiform, hispid-bristly, nerveless. Nutlets 4, not carinate, margined, scabrous-roughened or smooth and shining, the ventral groove divaricate- forked at base. 1. P. circumscissus (II. & A.) Torr. Strongly hirsute-canes- cent throughout; stems much branched from the base, forming rounded tufts, 4-6 cm. high ; leaves linear, those of the racemes 4-5 mm. long; flowers crowded; corolla minute, naked; nutlets oblong-ovate, acute, smooth or minutely puncticulate-scabrous. Frequent in dry stony or sandy places in the interior foothills and moun- tains. Mount Wilson; Ly tie Creek Canyon; Bear Valley. 6. PLAGIOBOTHRYS F. £ M. Pop-corn Flower. Rather large but slender annuals with most of their leaves in a close basal tuft, the elongated branches erect or decumbent. Racemes spike-like, elongated, loose, naked or leafy-bracted ; pedicels very short, filiform, per- sistent. Calyx o-eleft or 5-parted, closed or oampanu- late, often irregularly circumscissile near the base. Nut- lets carinate on both sides toward the apex, usually with well-defined lateral margins, the back very irregularly rugose; insertion almost medial on a depressed gymno- base ; areola or scar rounded, rarely stipitate. * Nutlet* nut stipitate. 1. P. canescens Benth. Stems much branched from the base, decumbent or ascending, 2-4 dm. long; pubescence pale, soft- villous; calyx cleft nearly to the base, the segments broadly lanceolate, 4-6 nun. long in fruit; nutlets 2 mm. long, incurved- connivent, rugose-reticulate, the areola longer transversely, t la- lateral angles very distinct. Frequent in grassy places in our interior valleys and foothills. 2. P. nothofulvus (iray. Stems 1-several from the depressed rosulate tuft of leaves, erect or suberect, 3-ti dm. high, branching mostly above, silky-villous, the hairs reddish when young, espe* Borage Family 333 cially on the calyx ; leaves oblong-obovate or oblanceolate ; spikes leafless; calyx cleft only to the middle. 3 nun. long in fruit, cir- cumscissile below the middle; nutlets with dot-like granulations between the rather prominent rugte. Frequent on rather moist grassy hillsides about Los Angeles and on mesas in the coast region. **Nutlet8 stipitaU . 3. P. Cooperi Gray. Diffusely branched from the base with slender sparsely-leaved ascending flowering stems, 1.5-3 dm. long, hispidulous; leaves spatulatedinear to oblongdanceolate ; spikes at length sparsely-flowered, sparingly bracteate or above bract- less; corolladiml) 4-ti mm. broad; nutlets trigonous and reticu- late-rugose, dentate-muriculate on the reticulations. Occasional on moist grassy slopes in the coast valleys. 7. CRYPTANTHE Lehm. Mostly low erect brandling setose or hispid annual herbs, with narrow alternate entire leaves, and small mostly white flowers, in scorpioid bractless or bracteolate spikes. Calyx 5-parted or 5-cleft, at length deciduous, erect or spreading in fruit. Corolla small, funnelform, usually with 5 scales closing the throat. Stamens in- cluded ; filaments short. Ovary 4-divided ; style short : stigma capitate. Nutlets erect, rounded on the back, the margins obtuse acute or winged, attached laterally to the conic or elongated receptacle, scar elongated. * Xutlets muriculate. 1. C. muriculata (A. DC.) Greene. Rather stout, branch- ing, rough-hirsute or hispid, 2-4 dm. high, with well-developed rather dense spikes, mostly in 2's and 3's at the ends of the branches; calyx about 3 mm. long, lanceolate; corolla 4-6 mm. long; nutlets 2 mm. long, muricate-papillose and somewhat rugose on the back ; ventral groove and its basal bifurcation mostly closed, lateral angles acutish, distinct. Frequent in the upper portions of the chaparral belt and in the pine belt of all our mountains. 334 Boraginaceae 2. C. barbigera (Gray) Greene. Rather stout, much branched, 2-4 dm. high, hispid and hirsute; leaves narrowly linear; spikes elongated, the Mowers becoming rather distant; calyx-lobes lin- ear, attenuate, 6-8 mm. long in fruit, covered with long shaggy bristles, usually intermingled with long white villous hairs; corolla often t> mm. broad; nutlets rarely acuminate, ahout 2 mm. long, grayish, nmricate-papillose ; Bear open, dilated at base. Common in open dry places on the plains and foothills. March-May. 3. C. intermedia (Gray) Greene. Resembling the last in habit; calyx-lobes 3-5 mm. long, armed with rather rigid and pungent, whitish or rusty-yellowish bristles; corolla usually less than 4 mm. broad; nutlets grayish, about 2 mm. long, oblong- ovate, thickly rough-muricate ; scar wholly or partly open, with an open areola. Frequent on dry open ridges and on the plains in the interior region. March-May. 4. C. ambigua (Gray) Greene. Stems rather slender, loosely branching, 20-25 cm. high, sparsely hispid and hirsute; leaves rather broadly linear ; flowers becoming scattered ; calyx-lobes 5-7 mm. long, beset with rather short, rigid bristles; corollas about 3 imn. broad ; nutletsdeltoid-ovate, 2 mm. long, brownish, sparsely and faintly muricate. Occasional in the upper portions of the chaparral belt and among the pines. May-July. ** Nutlets smooth and shining. 5. C. flaccida (Lehm.) Greene. Slender, strict, 3-6 dm. high, strigulose with minute close pubescence; leaves linear, minutely more or less strigulose-hispid ; calyx erect in fruit, appressed to the rachis, 4-5 nun. long; sepals filiform-linear, thickish below, their bases very hispid with deflexed and strong, somewhat hooked bristles; nutlets solitary, scarcely flattened ventrally, the groove of attachment enlarged at base but not fur- cate. (Krynitzkia oxycarya Gray.) Known in our region only from Chatsworth Park. 6. C. microstachys Greene. Rarely over 3 dm. high, much branched from the base, hispidulous or hispid; calyx in fruit ascending or erect, but not appressed to the rachis, 2-3.5 nun. Long ; sepals linear, hispid with widely spreading, but not deflexed, straight and somewhat pungent hairs; nutlet solitary, BOmewhal Borage Family •".">•"> flattened laterally, the groove of attachment divaricately forked and somewhat open at the hase. Frequent in sandy soil in the foothills throughout our range. Our plants usually somewhat canescent, but otherwise not differing from the northern form. 7. C. leiocarpa (F. & M.) Greene. Commonly branched from the base, 1-3 dm. high ; spikes leafy bracted, the terminal larger and interrupted, the lateral short and glomerate; sepals short- linear, hispid bristly; nutlets 4, narrowly ovate, acute, 1.5 mm. long, the ventral groove not forked or scarcely so. Frequent on the sand-dunes along the seashore. 8. AMSINCKIA Lehm. Hispid annual herbs with erect or spreading branched stems, alternate linear leaves, and yellow flowers in elon- gated scorpioid spikes. Calyx herbaceous ; sepals 5 or 4. by the union of 2 into 1 broader one. Corolla salver- shaped, the throat somewhat funnelform with more or less distinct folds hut destitute of crests or processes. Filaments short. Style filiform ; stigma capitate, 2-lobed. Nutlets crustaceous, erect or incurved, smooth or rough, triquetrous or ovate-triangular. 1. A. spectabilis F. & M. Stems erect, 3-6 dm. high, often branched at base, the branches spreading or decumbent ; herbage sparsely hispid, the hairs with very pustulate bases ; leaves linear- lanceolate, bright green; calyx-lobes lanceolate-linear, hispid with usually fulvous hairs; corolla orange-colored, usually 8-10 mm. long, the throat glabrous; anthers unequally inserted in the throat ; nutlets reticulate-rugose and granulate, dark-colored. Common in sandy soil near the coast, and apparently passing into the next. These plants have long been considered as belonging to A. lycopsoides Lehm., but that is a small-flowered species which has a bearded throat It belongs to the seaboard and ranges from San Francisco to Vancouver Is- land. In applying the name A. spectabilis to the narrow-leafed plant of the interior valleys of middle California, recent authors have clearly erred; for Fischer and Myer's specimens came from the seacoast at Bodega Bay, where the form we have in mind is common. February -June. 2. A. intermedia F. & M. Stems erect, in robust plants much branched and more or less spreading ; herbage hirsute and •"'•"••'' Verbenaceae hispid throughout ; leaves linear-lanceolate or linear, often canes- cent; calyx-lobes linear-lanceolate, much exceeding the nutlets, hispid with white or somewhat fulvous hairs; corolla orange or yellow, usually loss than S nun. long, the throat glabrous; nut- lets reticulate-rugose and granulate, usually pale. A very common weed in all the valleys and foothills. February -June. Family 83. VERBENACEAE. Vervain Family. Herbs or shrubs with usually opposite or verticillate leaves, and perfect more or less irregular flowers in ter- minal or axillary spikes, raeemes or panicles. Calyx usually 4— 5-lobed or 4— 5-cleft, persistent. Corolla regu- lar or 2-lipped, the tube usually cylindric, the Limb 4— 5-cleft. Stamens usually 1. didynamous, rarely only 2, inserted on the corolla and alternate with its Lobes : anthers 2-celled, the sacs longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary superior, 2-4-celled, composed of 2 carpels with 2 ovules; style simple; stigmas 1 or 2. Fruit dry, separ- ating at maturity into 2 or 4 nutlets, or a drupe con- taining the 2-4 nutlets. Corolla 5-lobed, regular or nearly so; nutlets 4. l VERBENA. Corolla J-lobed, 2-lipped; nutlets 2. 2. LlPPlA 1. VERBENA L. Herhs, mostly with opposite leaves and variously colored bracted flowers in terminal solitary, corymbose or panicled spikes. Calyx usually tubular, 5-angled, more or less unequally 5-toothed. Corolla salver-shaped or funnelform, its limb spreading, 5-lobed and slightly 2-lipped or regular. Stamens -1. didynamous or rarely only 2. included ; connective of anthers unappendaged or Bometimee provided with a gland. I >vary 4-celled ; ovules 1 in each cell ; Btyle usually stout. 2-lobed, only 1 of the Lobes -t igmal ic. Fruit dry. mostly enclosed by the calyx, Vervain Family 337 at Length separating into 4 1-seeded, linear or linear- oblong, smooth or rough nutlets. * Bracts shorter than the flowers. •*- Flowers, or at least the fruit, scattered. 1. V. urticifolia L. Steins minutely hirsute-pubescent to almost glabrous, erect, 10-1H dm. high; leaves thin, petioled, ovate to oblong-lanceolate, acuminate or acute, evenly or doubly serrate; spikes slender-filiform, panicled; bracts ovate, acumi- nate, shorter than the calyx; corolla 2-4 mm. long, white or purplish. Occasional in marshes. 2. V. polystachya H. B. K. Scarcely as tall as the last, scabrous, sometimes hirsute or hispid, paniculately branched ; leaves oblong to broadly lanceolate, 2.5-5 cm. long, sessile by a narrowed base or short-petioled, obtuse or acute, incisely serrate, occasionally somewhat lobed ; spikes thicker and denser than in the last. Occasional in marshes, less common than the last. +- +■ Fruit mostly crowded. 3. V. prostrata R. Br. Soft-villous to hirsute, diffusely spreading, at length much branched, 5-9 dm. long; leaves obo- vate or oblong, with cuneate base tapering into a margined petiole, veiny, acutely incised and serrate, often 3-5-cleft; spikes solitary or somewhat clustered, elongated, hirsute or villous; bracts sub- ulate, shorter than the calyx ; corolla violet or blue, 4 mm. long; nutlets oblong. Common on the plains and in the foothills throughout our range. ** Bracts exceeding the flowers. 4. V. bracteosa Michx. Hirsute, much branched from the base, the branches diffuse or decumbent, 2—4 dm. long; leaves cuneate-obovate, narrowed into a short-winged petiole, pinnately incised or 3-cleft and coarsely dentate; spikes thick, terminating the branches ; lowest bracts often pinnatifid or incised, the others lanceolate, acuminate, entire, rigid, all exceeding the flowers ; corolla purplish or blue. Occasional in low ground, especially in the bottoms of dried up ponds. June-September. Labiatae 2. LIPPIA L. Perennial herbs with opposite sometimes verticillate or rarely alternate leaves, and small bracted flowers in axillary or terminal heads or spikes. Calyx small, mem- branous, ovoid, campanulate or compressed and 2-winged, 2-4-toothed or 2— 4-cleft. Corolla cylindric, the limb oblique spreading, somewhat 2-lipped, 4-cleft, the Lobes broad, often retuse or eroded. Stamens 1. didynamous : anthers no1 appendaged, the sacs nearly parallel. Ovary 2-celled ; ovules 1 in each cell ; style short : stigma oblique or recurved. Fruit dry with a membranous exoearp, at length separating into 2 nutlets. 1. li. lanceolata Michx. Green, glabrous or very sparingly pubescent with forked hairs; stems slender, weak, procumbent or ascending, often rooting at the nodes, simple or little branched, 3-6 dm. long; leaves thin, oblong, ovate or ovate-lanceolate, short-petioled, acute, sharply serrate to below the middle, nar- rowed at base, 2.5-7 cm. long; peduncles axillary, slender, usually longer than the leaves; heads at first globose, becoming cylindric, about 15 mm. long in fruit; bracts acute; calyx flattened, 2-clefl : corolla pale blue, scarcely longer than the calyx. Occasional along slow-running streams in marshy places. June-August. Family 84 LABIATAE. Mint Family. Aromatic punctate herbs or shrubs, with mostly L-sided stems, simple opposite exstipulate Leaves, and irregular perfecl flowers variously clustered. Calyx regular or 2-lipped, 5-toothed or 5-lobed, or rarely 4-toothed or L-lobed, persistent. Corolla mostly 2-lipped : upper lip usually 3-lobed. Stamens inserted on the corolla-tube, generally 1 and didynamous, sometimes 2 with or without staminodia ; anthers 2-celled, introrse or confluently L-celled. ( >va ry superior, 4-lobed or 4-parted ; b1 vie 2-lobed. Fruil of I l-seeded nutlets. Mint Family 339 Flowers solitary in the axils. Calyx gibbous on the upper side. 2. SCUTELLARIA, Calyx not gibbous on the upper side. Trailing herbs; flowers small. v Miuromeria. Shrubby: flowers large. 7. Sphacele. Flowers not solitary. Calyx regular or its teeth nearly equal. Corolla slender curved; stamens fully twice the length of the corolla. 1. Trichostema. Corolla nearly regular. Flower-whorls axillary. Stamens 4. 18. Mentha. Stamens 2. 11. Lycopus. Flowers in terminal bracteate heads. 9. Monardella. Corolla evidently bilabiate. Stamens included in the corolla-tube. 3. Marrdbicm. Stamens exceeding the corolla-tube. Lower pair of stamens the longer. 4. Stachys. Stamens nearly equal. 10. Koeli.ia. Calyx bilabiate or its teeth unequal. Upper corolla-lip erect; filaments short; the connective transverse, the lower portion evident. 5 Salvia. Upper corolla-tip spreading; connective nearly continuous with the filament, the lower portion not evident or indicated by a tooth. 6. Ramona. 1. TRICHOSTEMA L. Blce-ccrls. Annual or perennial strong-scented herbs or rarely shrubby, with lanceolate, oblong or linear, entire or slightly repand leaves, and small or middle-sized, usu- ally blue or purple flowers, paniculate or in axillary loose or dense clusters. Calyx campanulate, very un- equally 5-lobed. Corolla-tube slender, exserted or in- cluded, the limb somewhat oblique and deeply 5-cleft into oblong more or less declined segments. Stamens 4, didynamous, ascending, curved, the anterior pair longer ; filaments filiform, spirally coiled in the bud, long exserted ; anther-sacs divaricate, more or less confluent at the base. Ovary deeply 4-lobed ; style 2-cleft at the summit. 1. T. lanceolatum Benth. Strong-scented annual, simple or branching from near the base, 1.5-3 dm. high, very leafy, herbage cinereous or villous-pubescent and minutely glandular; leaves 340 Labiatae lanceolate, acuminate, sessile or the lowest subsessile, with 3-5 strong, nearly parallel nerves, 2 cm. long; cymes short-peduncled or nearly sessile; calyx villous; corolla almost filiform, some- what pubescent, blue. Frequent in dry fields, especially on the mesas in our interior valleys. June-September. 2. T. lanatum Benth. (Romero or Woolly Blue-curls.) Shrubby, about 1 m. high, very leafy; leaves thickish, narrowly linear and with revolute margins, 1-nerved, glabrate and sinning above, canescent-tomentose beneath, sessile, many fascicled in the axils, uppermost reduced to bracts; cymes in a naked terminal, interrupted thyrsus, wbole inflorescence clothed with a dense violet or purple wool; corolla 1 cm. long; the filaments fully twice as long. Occasional in the chaparral belt on dry ridges in all the mountain ranges and extending northward as far as Monterey County. 2. SCUTELLARIA L. Skullcap. Annual or perennial herbs, with (lowers solitary or 2-3 together in the axils or in bracted racemes or spikes. Calyx campanulate, gibbous, bilabiate, the lips entire. the upper with a crest or protuberance upon its back, often deciduous in fruit, the lower persistent. Corolla much exserted, dilated above into the throat, glabrous within, upper lip arched, entire or emarginate, the lower spreading or deliexed. its lateral lobes small and some- what connected with the upper, its middle lobe broad. sometimes emarginate, the margins mostly recurved. Stamens 1. didynamous, ascending under the upper lip. the upper pair somewhat shorter ; anthers ciliate, the upper pair 2-celled, the lower 1-celled. Style unequally 2-cleft at the apex ; ovary deeply 4-parted. Nutlets subglobose or depressed, papillose or tuberculate. 1. S. tuberosa Benth. Perennial by tuberiferous rootstocks, soft-pubescent or villous; stems slender, often diffuse, 3-12 cm. high, rather sparsely leafy; leaves mostly ovate, truncate or cuneate at the base, thin, coarsely and obtusely few-toothed or Mint Family 3 11 nearly entire, 1-4 cm. long, nearly all petioled; floral about equaling or longer than the flowers; corolla narrow, about 15 nun. long, blue. Occasional in shady places in all the hills and in the chaparral belt of the mountains. April-June. 2. S. Bolanderi (Jray. Perennial by filiform rootstocks, pubes- cent; stems slender, simple or branched from the base, about 3 dm. high, very leafy to the summit; leaves ovate-elliptic, very obtuse, closely sessile by somewhat cordate base, 2.5 cm. long or less; flowers short-pedicelled, seldom equaling the leaf; corolla yellowish, throat inflated, villous within. Moist woods, El Monte, Davidson. 3. MARRUBIUM L. Hoarhound. Perennial, mostly woolly herbs, with dentate rugose leaves, and small flowers in dense axillary clusters. Calyx tubular, 5-10-nerved, regularly 5-10-toothed, the teeth acute or aristate, spreading or recurved in fruit. Corolla-limb 2-lipped, the upper lip erect, entire or emar- ginate, the lower spreading, 3-cleft, its broader middle lobe commonly emarginate. Stamens 4, didynamous, included, the posterior pair the shorter ; anthers 2-celled, the sacs divergent. Style 2-cleft at the summit, the lobes short. Ovary deeply 4-lobed. Nutlets ovoid, smooth. 1. M. vulgare L. Stems stout, tufted, erect, white-woolly, 3-10 dm. high; leaves roundish crenate, except at the cuneate, truncate or subcordate base, petioled, white-woolly beneath, green above, 2-4 cm. long; flowers whitish; calyx-teeth usually 10, subulate. Common in waste places. Flowering nearly all the year. 4. STACHYS L. Hedge-nettle. Annual or perennial, commonly pubescent or hispid herbs, with mostly purplish flowers loosely clustered in terminal dense or interrupted spikes. Calyx mostly campanulate, 5-toothed, the teeth nearly equal, erect or spreading, pointed. Corolla-tube not dilated at the 342 Labiatae throat, narmw ; the Limb strongly 2-lipped, the upper lip erecl or slightly turned back, overarched or concave, entire or emarginate, lower Lip spreading, 3-lobed, the middle Lobe broader than the often deflexed Lateral ones, sometimes 2-lobed. Stamens 4, didynamous. ascending under the upper lip, the anterior pair the Longer, some- times deflexed (ir twisted after anthesis ; anthers con- tiguous in pairs. Ovary deeply 4-lobed : style 2-cleft, the Lobes subulate. Nutlets ovoid or oblong. 1. S. ajugoides Benth. Villous with very soft white hairs, 1.5-3 din. high ; leaves oblong, very obtuse, crenately serrate, 2.5-7 cm. long, roundish or acutish at base, the lower petioled, the upper sessile, the floral as long as the subtended flowers; flower-clus- ters mainly distant ; calyx short-campanulate or becoming tur- binate in fruit, very slightly villous, the teeth triangular-ovate, aristate-acuminate, nearly equaling the corolla-tube; corolla whitish, its lips 4-0 mm. long, the upper woolly on the hack. Frequent along streams in the valleys and in the lower altitudes of the mountains below the pine belt. April-August. 2. S. albens Gray. Soft-tomentose or lanate with white wool, 3-15 dm. high, leafy; leaves oblong to ovate, usually with a more or less cordate base, acutish at apex, 5-8 cm. long, the lower short-petioled, the upper nearly sessile, the floral mostly shorter than the dense interrupted capitate clusters of thevirgate spikes; calyx turbinate-campanulate, the teeth triangular, aristulate, nearly equaling the corolla-tube; corolla as in the last. Frequent along marshes and streams in the valleys and extending into the pine belt of all our mountains. May-August. 3. S. Californica Benth. Steins rather slender, simple from the base or branched, 4-8 dm. high, sparsely retrorselv hispid, especially on the angles, and more or less glandular with sessile glands; leaves ovate-oblong, subcordate at the base, the lowest rather long-petioled, sparsely villous-hispid, crenate; flowers about 6 in the whorls, these rather remote; calyx campanulate- turbinate, the teeth triangular, cuspidate, spreading in age; co- rolla purple, its tube about twice the length of the calyx, with a horizontal hairy ring at its base within. Frequent on shaded slopes ana In oanyona In all the mountains and foot- hills. April .July. Mint Family 343 5. SALVIA L. Herbs or Buffrutescent plants, aromatic and bitter, with clustered usually showy flowers. Calyx bilabiate, its upper Lip usually 3-toothed or entire, the lower 3-cleft. Corolla deeply 2-lipped, erect, entire, emargi- nate or 2-lobed, usually concave, the lower spreading, its middle lobe often emarginate. Anther-bearing sta- mens 2, the posterior pair wanting or rudimentary ; fila- ments usually short ; connective of the anthers trans- verse, linear or filiform, bearing a perfect anther-sac on its upper end, its lower end dilated, capitate or s e- times bearing a small or rudimentary anther-sac. Ovary deeply 4-parted : style 2-cleft. Nutlets smooth, usually developing mucilage and spiral tubes when wetted. 1. S. carduacea Benth. (Thistle-sage.) Rather stout erect annual, 2-5 dm. high; stem with a cluster of ample sinuate- pinnatifid spinulose-toothed leaves at base, these and the whole plant white-woolly and thistle-like; flowers in 1-4 dense head- like verticillate clusters, these 2-3 cm. broad, equalled or sur- passed by the ovate-lanceolate j^ectinate-toothed bracts; calyx long- woolly, many-nerved ; corolla light blue, 2.5 cm. long ; upper lip erose-denticulate and cleft; lower with a large flabelliform fimbriately many-cleft middle lobe; filaments very short ; lower arm of the long filiform connective bearing a polleniferous anther- cell. Occasional in sandy soil in all the valleys and in the foothills. March- May. 2. S. Columbariae Benth. (Chia or Sage.) Slender annual, branching and leafy below, 2-5 dm. high, naked and peduncle- like above, more or less grayish pubescent with rather short re- flexed hairs ; leaves rugulose, 1-2-pinnatifid into toothed or incised divisions ; flowers in 1-several dense verticillate clusters, these about 1 5-2 cm. broad, scarcely equalled by the rounded bracts; bracts tipped with a slender awn, sparsely ciliate on the margins; calyx-lobes purplish tipped, the upper lip large, arched, tipped with a pair of partly connate short-awned teeth ; corolla deep blue, hardly exceeding the calyx, the upper lip small, notched, 344 Labiatae the lower with small lateral lobes and a large unguiculate trans- versely oval 2-lobed middle one. Frequent throughout our range in the foothills and on the plains. March- Ma y. 6. BAMONA Greene. Perennial aromatic herbs or shrubby plants, with rugose veiny mostly crenulate leaves, and rather showy flowers, capitate-glomerate or sometimes more open and paniculate. Calyx bilabiate, mostly deeply cleft on the lower side as if spathaceous. Corolla strongly 2-lipped, the upper lip spreading, 2-lobed or emarginate. Anther- bearing stamens 2 ; filaments slender, exserted, appar- ently simple and bearing a linear 1-celled anther, or with an articulation showing that the portion above it answers to a filiform connective, the lower end of which some- times projects into a subulate point. Otherwise as in Salvia. (Audibertia Benth.) 1. R. grandiflora (Benth.) Briquet. Herbaceous, very villous and glandular, aromatic ; stems stout, 3-6 dm. high ; lowest leaves hastate-lanceolate, obtuse, 8-20 cm. long, on margined petioles, the upper oblong, sessile, all very rugose, sinuate-crenate, white- tomentose beneath; flowers densely capitate-glomerate in large interrupted spicate heads; bracts broadly ovate, entire; calyx spathaceous, the orifice oblique, 2 lower teeth very short; corolla crimson, 3 cm. long. Frequent on shaded banks in all the mountains. March-May. 2. R. nivea (Benth.) Briquet. Shrubby below, 9-12 dm. high, hoary white throughout with a close tomentum; leaves oblong-lanceolate or the lowest ovate, obtuse; the upper with truncate base, very short-petioled ; flowers in dense verticillate gloinerules and interrupted spicate, much bracteate ; bracts her- baceous oval, or oblong, obtuse and muticous; calyx splitting il 3. R. stachyoides(Hentl).) Briquet. (Black Sage.) Cinereous- tomentose or glabrate, shrubby, 1 in. high or more, branching and leafy; leaves oblong-lanceolate, narrowed at base or short- petioled, crenate, green and rugose above, cinereous-tomentose beneath; Mowers in interrupted spicate heads or whorls ; t lie floral leaves much reduced, these and the ovate or oblong bracts as well as the calyx-teeth of the bilabiate calyx cuspidate-acumi- nate or spinulose-aristulate ; corolla white or lilac-tinged, about 1 cm. long, the tube longer than the limb; style, and especially the stamens, little exserted ; subulate appendages of the connect- ive often manifest. Common on the low hills throughout our range. April-June. 4. It. polystachya (Benth.) Greene. (White Sage.) Shrubby below, 1 m. high or more, minutely tomentose-canescent, the branches virgate ; leaves mostly very white on both surfaces, oblong-lanceolate, minutely rugose and crenulate, 5-8 cm. long; inflorescence thyrsoid-paniculate, 3-6 dm. long; the floral leaves, bracts and bractlets small and loose, at length reflexed, lanceolate or subulate, cuspidate-tipped ; flowers sessile, loose ; upper lip of calyx truncate or 3-toothed, at length concave or galeate, longer than the triangular-subulate lower lip; corolla white or nearly eo, the lower lip much enlarged, the middle lobe rounded, emar- ginate at apex, unguiculate, the upper lip short ; tube very short ; style and divergent stamens long-exserted ; filiform connective continuous with the filament, its lower end usually indicated by a minute tooth. Very common on the dry plains toward the foothills and ascending these to about 3000 feet. April-July. 7. SPHACELE Benth. Shrubby or suffrutescent aromatic plants with the floral leaves gradually reduced with rather large flowers solitary in their axils, forming a leafy raceme. Calyx campanulate, deeply and nearly equally 5-toothed, membranous in fruit, naked within. Corolla with a broad tube, with a hairy ring at its base within, and 5 broad or roundish and plane, rather erect lobes. Stamens 4, distant, somewhat ascending ; filaments naked ; anther- sacs divergent. 346 Labiatae 1. S. calycina Wallacei Gray. Shrubby at base, 6-i» dm. high, copiously villous, the branches leafy ; leaves ovate or oblong, obtuse at apex, truncate or hastate-subconlate at base, petioled, crenate, obtusely serrate or entire, rugose-veiny, 2.5-5 em. long; the uppermost and bracts sessile ; calyx-lobes attenuate-lanceolate from a rather narrow base, over 1 cm. long; corolla purplish, about 2.5 cm. long. Occasional in all our mountains, mostly in the upper portions of the chaparral belt, on shaded slopes. May-June. 8. MICROMERIA Benth. Erect branching or trailing perennia] aromatic herbs, with small pedicelled flowers solitary in tin' axils of the leaves. Calyx oblong or tubular, about equally 5-toothed and 12-15-nerved. Corolla distinctly bilabiate, naked within, upper lip erect, entire or emarginate ; the lower spreading, 3-parted. Stamens -1 ; filaments arcuate- ascending ; the upper pair longer ; anthers 2-celled. 1. M. Chamissonis (Benth.) Greene. (Verba Buena.) Stems slender, trailing or creeping, 3 dm. long or more, herbage slightly pubescent; leaves round-ovate, crenate, glandular-punctate, 2.5 cm. long or less; petioles 4-fi mm. long; flowers about 8 mm. long; calyx minutely hispidulous; corolla pubescent without. (AT. Douglasii Benth.) Santa Monica Mountains in shady places, not common. May-June. 9. MONARDELLA Benth. Annual or perennial aromatic herbs, with flowers in terminal heads which are subtended by broad often more or less colored involucral bracts. Calyx tubular, narrow, 5-toothed, 15-nerved. Corolla glabrous within, the upper lip erect, 2-cleft, the lower 3-parted, all the lobes linear or narrowly oblong. Stamens 1, distinct, Btrongly or moderately unequal, exserted, straight ; an- thers often divergent or divaricate. 1. M. lanceolata Gray. Annual, green and glabrous or the stems puberulent, brachiately branched, 3-6 dm. high ; leaves Mini Family 347 rather few, lanceolate or oblong-lanceolate, 2.5-5 cm. long, taper- in- below into a slender petiole, the upper acute, all with entire ami even margins; bracts foliaceous or nearly so, ovate or oblong, mostly acute with many cross veinlets between the ascending or parallel veins; calyx-teeth densely hirsute within, sparsely if at all 80 without, inconspicuously nerved; corolla bright rose color or purple, sometimes with darker spots. Frequent in dry ground in the interior region both in the valleys and mountains. June-August. 10. KOELLIA Moench. Perennial ereel herbs with small flowers in terminal or sometimes also axillary capitate or cymose clusters. Calyx ovoid, oblong or tubular, equally or more or less unequally 5-toothed. Corolla 2-lipped, the upper lip emarginate or entire, the lower 3-cleft. Stamen,- 1. didynamous, nearly equal or the lower pair a little the longer ; anther-sacs parallel. Ovary deeply 4-parted ; style slender. Nutlets smooth, pubescent or roughened. 1. K. Californica (Torr.) Kuntze. Aromatic, herbage whitish with a very fine and close soft pubescence ; stem erect, simple or with a few terminal branches, 5-9 dm. high; leaves ovate to ovate-lanceolate, sessile by an obtuse or subcordate base, entire or denticulate, 3-9 cm. long; heads terminal and compact; calyx pubescent, the tips of the teeth very woolly exteriorly ; corolla white, resin-dotted. (Pycnanthemum Califurnicum Torr.) Occasional in the canyons of all our mountains. April-July. 11. LiYCOPUS L. Water-hoarhound. Herbs, perennial by slender stolons or suckers, with erect or diffuse stems, and small white or purple flowers, bracted and vertieillate in dense axillary clusters. Calyx campanulate, regular or nearly so, 4-5-toothed, naked in the throat. Corolla funnelform-campanulate to cylindric, equaling or exceeding the calyx, the limb nearly equally 4-cleft, or 1 of the lobes broader and emarginate. Per- fect stamens 2, anterior, the posterior pair rudimentary 348 Labiatae or wanting ; anther-sacs parallel. Ovary deeply 4-parted ; style slender, 2-cleft. Nutlets truncate at the summit, narrowed below, trigonous, smooth. 1. Ii. lucidus Turcx. Pubescent or glabrate, perennial by stolons: stem usually stout, erect, strict, leafy, simple or some- time* branched, 3-9 dm. high; leaves oblong-lanceolate, acute at the apex, narrowed or rounded at the base, sessile or nearly so, 5-15 cm. long, sharply serrate; bracts ovate or lanceolate, acu- minate-subulate, the outer ones often as long as the flowers; calyx-teeth 5, subulate-lanceolate, nearly as long as the tube ; corolla slightly exceeding the calyx; rudimentary stamens slen- der, thickened at the apex ; nutlets much shorter than the calyx. Occasional along stream banks in the San Bernardino Valley. Parish. 12. MENTHA L. Erect or diffuse aromatic herbs with simple mostly punctate leaves, and small whorled Mowers, the whorls axillary or in terminal dense or interrupted spikes. Calyx campanulate to tubular, 10-nerved, regular or slightly bilabiate, 5-toothed. Corolla-tube shorter than the calyx, the limb 4-cleft, somewhat regular, the pos- terior lobe usually somewhat broader than the others, entire or emarginate. Stamens 4, equal, erect, included or exserted ; filaments glabrous; anthers 2-celled, the sacs parallel. Ovary 4-parted ; style 2-cleft. Nutlets ovoid, smooth. 1. M. piperita L. (Peppermint.) Perennial by subterranean sinkers; stems glabrous or sparsely puberulent, mostly erect, branched, 3-9 dm. high; leaves ovate-oblong to oblong-lanceolate, narrowed or rounded at the base, petioled, acute at the apex, sharply serrate, glabrous except the veins beneath; whorls of flowers in terminal, dense or interrupted spikes, 2.5-7 em. long in fruit; calyx tubular-campanulate, its teeth subulate, ciliate, half as long as the tube or more; corolla glabrous. Occasional along streams about Los Angeles and Santa Ana. August- Deoembi r. Solanaceae 349 2. M. spicata L. (Si-karmint.) Perennial by leafy stolons; herbage glabrous; stems branched, 3-5 dm. high ; leaves lanceo- late, short-petioled or sessile; whorls of flowers in terminal nar- row, acute, usually interrupted spikes, these becoming 5-10 cm. long in fruit; calyx campanulate, its teeth hirsute or glabrate, subulate, nearly as long as the tube; corolla glabrous. (M. viridti L-) Frequent in low ground along streams. August-December. Family 85. SOLANACEAE. Potato Family. Herbs, shrubs, vines or rarely trees, with alternate or rarely opposite exstipulate leaves, and perfect regular or nearly regular cymose flowers. Calyx mostly 5-lobed. Corolla varying from rotate to salver-shaped, mostly 5-lobed, the lobes induplicate-valvate or plicate in the bud. Stamens as many as the lobes of the corolla and inserted on the tube alternate with them, equal (4 and didynamous in Petunia, the fifth being smaller or obsolete); anthers 2-celled apically or longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary entire, 3-5-celled, usually 2-celled ; ovules numerous on the axillary placenta? ; style slender, simple ; stigma ter- minal. Fruit a berry or capsule. Fruit a pulpy berry. Anthers not connivent: fruiting-calyx inflated. 1. Physalis. Anthers connivent; calyx not becoming inflated. 2. Solaku.m. Fruit a nearly dry berry ; shrubby. 3. Lycicm. Fruit a capsule. Capsule prickly ; flowers large, showy. 4. Datura. Capsule not prickly. Flowers paniculate or racemose. 5. Nicotiana. Flowers solitary. 6 Petunia. 1. PHYSALIS L. Ground-cherry. Annual or perennial herbs with entire or sinuately toothed leaves. Peduncles in ours solitary from the axils of the leaves. Calyx campanulate, 5-toothed, in fruit enlarged and bladdery-inflated, membranous, 5-angled 350 Solanaceae or prominently 10-ribbed and reticulate, wholly inclos- ing the pulpy berry, its teeth mostly connivent. Co- rolla open-eampanulate, or rarely nearly rotate, plicate in the hud. Stamens inserted near the base of the co- rolla : anthers oblong, opening by a longitudinal slit. Style slender; stigma minutely 2-cleft. Seeds numer- ous, reniform, finely jutted. 1. P. ixocarpa Brot. Annual, at first erect, later widely spreading, much branched; stem angled, glabrous or the young parts sparingly hairy ; leaves cordate to ovate, with a cuneate, somewhat oblique base, sinuately dentate or entire, 2.5-6 cm. long; peduncles 2-5 mm. long; calyx sparingly hairy, its lobes short, triangular; corolla bright yellow, with purple throat, 10-15 nun. broad; fruiting calyx round-ovoid, obscurely 10-angled; berry purple. (P. aequata Jacq. f.) Frequent in cultivated Qelds. June-September. 2. P. Greenei Rose. Annual, erect-spreading, the flexuose branches angular, 2-3 dm. long ; herbage viscid-pubescent through- out ; leaves ovate or rhombic, acutish, entire or with few shallow teeth, 2-3 cm. long, on slender petioles of about the same length ; corolla greenish yellow, 12-15 mm. broad; fruiting calyx 10-15 mm. long, pendulous on the slender peduncle, which exceeds it in length. (P. pedunculated Greene.) San Joaquin Hills, Orange County; Santa Margarita Ranch, San Diego County. First collected on Cedros Island. April-July. 2. SOLANUM L. Nightshade. Herbs or shrubs, often stellate-pubescent. Flowers Cymose, paniculate or racemose, white, blue, purple or yellow. Calyx campanulate or rotate, mostly 5-toothed or 5-cleft. Corolla rotate, the Limb plaited in the hud. 5-angled or 5-lobed. Stamens inserted on the throat of the corolla; filaments short ; anthers linear or oblong, acute or acuminate, connate or connivenl into a cone ; the anther-sacs dehiscent by a terminal pore or by a short introrse terminal slit, or longitudinally. Ovary Potato Family 351 usually 2-celled ; stigma small. Fruit a several-sen led berry. 1. S. villosum Lam. Rather low and mostly spreading annual,- villous and more or less viscid; leaves conspicuously angulate- dentate; filaments somewhat pubescent; berries yellow. 2. S. Douglasii Dunal. Usually somewhat woody, 1-2 m, high ; stems angular, the angles somewhat denticulate-scabrous, otherwise more or less puberulent; leaves variously angular- dentate, or some nearly entire; umbels nearly opposite the leaves, several-flowered ; Mowers white or pale purplish, 8-14 mm. broad, pubescent without, deeply 5-parted, the lobes lanceolate; anthers yellow, 4-5 mm. long; filaments about 1 mm. long, stout, hairy, nearly equaling the slender style; fruit black. A common plant both in the valleys and mountains at lower altitudes. Often appearing as an introduced plant along roadsides and in waste places. 3. S. Xanti Gray. Stems woody, 3-10 dm. high, the younger- angled, moderately villous with many-celled unbranched, mostly gland-tipped hairs ; leaves ovate, ovate-oblong to oblong-lanceo- late, the largest 4-6 cm. long, acute or obtuse at the base, the margins entire; corolla 1-2 cm. broad, usually deep violet, angu- lately 5-lobed; berry greenish. Occasional in the San Gabriel Mountains. 4. S. Xanti intermedium. Parish. Stems woody, lax, 2 m. high or less, viscid; leaves cordate to oblong, at least obtuse at base, often with lateral lobes near the base, 3-15 cm. long ; corolla 2-4 cm. broad. Common in all our low hills and in the mountains. 5. S. Xanti glabrescens Parish. Stems woody, slender, 10-15 dm. high, glabrate or above hirsutulous with short, mostiy 1-celled hairs ; leaves oblong, elliptic or lanceolate, mostly atten- uate or acute at the base, 2-6 cm. long; corolla 2 cm. broad. Occasional in the valleys and foothills, mostly in dry and rather exposed places. 6. S. Wallacei (Gray) Parish. Stems woody, about 1 m. high, densely tawny with long many-celled glandular, mostly simple hairs; leaves thickish, usually smoother than the stems, crenate, the lower ample, cordate, the upper ovate, rounded or subcordate at base; calyx narrowly funnelform, deeply cleft or 352 Solanaceae less so and broader; corolla 2-4 cm. broad, deep violet; style glabra te or villous below ; fruit dark purple. Santa Catalina Island. 7. S. rostratum Dunal. Annual, erect, branching, 1-3 dm. high, pubescent with long yellowish stellate hairs and armed with long straight prickles; leaves pinnatilid; calyx densely prickly, its lobes narrow, nearly half the length of tbe corolla and enclosing tbe fruit; corolla about 2 cm. broad, yellow; anthers lineardanceolate, the lowest much longer and larger, with an incurved beak. Occasional in waste places and along roadsides. Inglewood: Soldiers Home: Santa Monica. Native of Texas. 3. LYCIUM L. Box-thorn. Shrubby, often spiny plants, with small alternate entire leaves, and white, greenish or purple axillary or terminal solitary or clustered flowers. Calyx campanu- late. .">— Vlobed or 3-5-toothed, not enlarged in fruit, per- sistent at the base of the berry. Corolla funnelform, salver-shaped or campanulate, the Limb 5-lobed, the lobes obtuse. Stamens 5 ; filaments filiform, sometimes dilated at the base ; anther-sacs longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary 2-celled ; style filiform; stigma capitate or 2-lobed. Berry globose to oblong. 1. Li. Californicum Xutt. Glabrous; stems slender, much branched, about <>-12 dm. high; leaves thickish, 2-6 mm. long, obovate or spatulate to nearly linear; pedicels often nearly obso- lete; corolla white, its tube about 3 mm. long, included in the campanulate 4-toothed calyx, its limb rotate, 4-parted, scarcely 4 nun. broad. On bluffs near the sea. Redondo; Long Beach; Laguna. First oollected by Nuttall at San Uiego. 2. L. Richii Gray. Stem slender ; leaves narrowly spatulate. 2-4 cm. lom:; flowers short-pedicelled, 8-10 mm. long; calyx- teeth lanceolate, nearly or quite equaling the COrolla-tube ; COrolla- lobes oval, slightly exceeding the tube. A Mexloan species reported from S;mt:i Catalina Island. Potato Family 3. L. Parishii Gray. Puberulent, branches slender; Leaves spatulate and lanceolate, about <> mm. long; pedicels 4-(> nun. long; calyx about 3 nun. long, its limb shortly 5-lobed ; corolla narrowly funnelform, about 10 mm. long, its lobes i' mm. long, ovate, obtuse, at length equaled by the stamens. Dry mesas in the San Bernardino Valley, Parish. 4. DATURA L. Thorn-apple. Annual or perennial erect branching narcotic herbs, with alternate petioled entire or sinuate-dentate Leaves, and large showy solitary short-peduncled flowers. Ca 1 yx elongated-tubular or prismatic, 5-cleft or spathe-like, cireumscissile near the base. Corolla funnelform, the limb plaited, o-lobed, the lobes broad, aeuniinate. Sta- mens inserted at or below the middle of the corolla ; fila- ments filiform, elongated. Ovary 2-celled or falsely 4-celled; style filiform; stigma slightly 2-lobed. Cap- sule 4-valved from the top or bursting irregularly, ovoid or globose, prickly. 1. D. Stramonium L. (Stramonium or Jamestown-weed.) Annual, green, glabrous, 3-10 dm. high; leaves sinuately and laciniately angled and toothed; calyx prismatic; corolla white, about 8 cm. long; capsule erect, thickly armed with short stout prickles. Introduced at Ballona, Davidson. 2. D. meteiloides DC. Prunose-glaucescent, erect, branching, 6-10 dm. high from a perennial root ; leaves unequally ovate, more or less coarsely repandodentate or nearly entire; calyx cylindric, about 8 cm. long; corolla white or tinged with violet, 15-20 cm. long, the limb about 10 cm. broad, with 5 slender subulate teeth ; capsule drooping in fruit, 5 cm. in diameter, densely prickly. Frequent in sandy soil throughout our range. July-September. 5. NICOTIANA L. Tobacco. Annual or perennial viscid-pubescent or rarely gla- brous narcotic herbs, shrubs or small trees, with alternate entire or slightly undulate leaves, and medium-sized 354 Solanaceae often yellowish or greenish flowers, in terminal often bracted racemes or panicles. Calyx tubular-campanu- late or ovoid, 5-cleft. Corolla funnelform, salver-shaped or nearly tubular, the tube usually elongated, the limb 5-lobed, spreading. Stamens 5, inserted on the tube of the corolla ; filaments filiform ; anthers 4-celled, style slender ; stigma capitate. Capsule 2-valved or some- times 4-valved at the summit, smooth. Seeds numerous, small. * Herbs. 1. N. Cleveland! Gray. Viscid-pubescent or the stem villous, 2-6 dm. high; leaves ovate or the upper ovate-lanceolate, 5-8 cm. long, the lower obtuse and with margined petiole not dilated at base, the upper subsessile and gradually narrowing from a broad and rounded or truncate base into an acuminate apex; bracts lanceolate ; flowers paniculate-racemose ; calyx-lobes linear, unequal ; the longer fully twice the length of the tube, more than half the length of the corolla; corolla greenish-white, tinged with violet, almost glabrous, 2.5 cm. long, salver-shaped, the somewhat 5-lobed limb 1 cm. broad ; filaments slender, equally inserted low down on the tube of the corolla. Sand-dunes along tbe seashore near Port Ballona. 2. N. Bigelovii Wats. Viscid-pubescent; stems 3-(i dm. high ; leaves oblong-lanceolate, sessile or nearly so, the lower 12-18 cm. long, with tapering base, the upper 4-8 cm. long, more acuminate, with acute or some with broader and clasping base ; inflorescence loosely racemiform ; the upper flowers bractless; calyx-teeth unequal, linear-subulate, about equaling the tube; corolla white, its tube 3-5 cm. long, narrow, with a gradually expanded throat, tlie limb 5-angulate-lobed, 15-25 mm. broad ; filaments somewhat unequally inserted high up on the corolla-tube. Occasional in dry washes about Los Angeles ** Trees. 3. N. glauca Graham. Arborescent, 3-6 in. high, glaucous and glabrous; leaves long-petioled, ovate, subcordate; flowers loosely paniculate; corolla greenish-yellow, 3-"> cm. Long, tubular, contracted at the throat, its limb erect, 5-Crenate. A well-established introduced plant; rather common aloni' streams. Flowering all the year. Scrophulariaceae 355 6. PETUNIA Juss. Petunia. Viscid-pubescent annual or perennial branching herbs, with entire leaves and axillary or terminal solitary Mown---. Calyx deeply 5-clef1 or 5-parted, the segments narrow. Corolla funnelform or salver-shaped, its limb plicate spreading, slightly irregular. Stamens 5, inserted on the throat of the corolla, 1 of them didynamous, per- fect, the fifth smaller, obsolete : filaments slender. < >vary 2-celled; style filiform; stigma 2-lamellate. Capsule 2-celled, 2-valved. 1. P. parviflora (Lehm.) Juss. Small, prostrate or diffusely spreading, more or less pubescent, annual; leaves oblong-linear or spatulate, ratber fleshy, nearly sessile, 12 cm. long or less; peduncles very short; calyx-lobes resembling the smaller leaves; corolla purple, the tube pale or yellowish, 8 mm. long, funnel- form, its lobes short, retuse, slightly unequal; capsule small, ovoid. Occasional on margins of ponds and along streams, especially in subsaline places. June-August. Family 86. SCROPHULARIACEAE. Fig wort Family. Herbs or shrubs with opposite or alternate exstipu- late leaves and perfect irregular flowers. Calyx per- sistent, 4-5-toothed or 4-5-divided. Corolla 2-lipped or nearly regular. Stamens 2, 4 or 5, didynamous or marly equal, inserted on the corolla and alternate with its lobes ; anthers 2-celled or continently 1-eelled, longitudinally dehiscent. Ovary superior, 2-celled or rarely 1-eelled ; ovules mostly numerous, borne on the axillary placentae ; style simple ; stigma entire or 2-lobed. Fruit mostly capsular and septicidally or locu- licidallv dehiscent. Seeds often reticulated or striate. 356 Scrophulariaceae Leaves alternate. Anther-bearing stamens 5. 1. Verbascum. Anther-bearing stamens 4. Calyx-tubular, 2-cleft, the segments entire or toothed. 11. Castilleja. Calyx tubular or campanulate, 4-cleft. 12. Okthocarpus. Calyx spathe-like, of 2 distinct bract-like divisions, or the anterior division wanting. 13. Auenostegia. Calyx narrowly campanulate, 2-5-toothed; leaves pinnately divided. 14. Pedicularis. Leaves opposite or the upper sometimes alternate. Corolla-tube with a sac at the base. 3. Antirrhinum. Corolla-tube with a spur at the base. 2. Linaria. Coralla-tube without a sac or spur at the base. Stamens with anthers 4, the fifth represented by a scale adnate to the upper side of the corolla. 4. Scrophularia. Stamens with anthers 4, the fifth represented by a sterile filament. 5. Pentstemon. Stamens with anthers 4, the fifth represented by a gland at the base of the corolla. 6. Collinsia. Stamens with anthers 4, the fifth stamen wholly wanting. Shrubs; calyx prismatic. 7. Diplacus. Herbs; calyx prismatic. 8. Mimulus. Stamens 4, 2 sterile. 9. Mimetanthe. Stamens 2; corolla nearly regular. 10. Veronica. 1. VERBASCUM L. Mullen. liicniiiiil or rarely perennial, mostly tall and erect herbs, with alternate leaves and rather large showy flowers in terminal spikes, racemes or panicles. Calyx 5-parted. Corolla rotate, 5-lobed, the lobes slightly un- equal. Stamens 5, inserted on the base of the corolla, unequal; filaments of the 3 upper or of all pilose ; anther-sacs confluent into 1. Ovules numerous; styles dilated and tlattened at the summit. Capsule globose to oblong, septicidally 2-valved ; the valves usually 2-cleft at the apex. Seeds numerous, rugose. l. V. virgatum With. Stems about lm. high, stout, pubescent ui nl glandular throughout; lowest leaves 1-2 dm. long, oblong-ovate or ohlong-lanceolate, crenate, the upper similar but smaller and decurrent on the stems ; raceme narrow, spike-like, 5 dm. long <>r more; Mowers somewhat clustered or solitary in the axils of the much reduced bract-like leaves, nearly sessile or short-pedicelled : Figwort Family 357 calyx ovate, 5-6 mm. long; corolla yellow, about 15 mm. broad; filaments all bearded with violet woolly hairs; capsule subglo- bose, about 6 nun. in diameter. Frequent along roadsides and in waste places, especially in the interior valleys. San Gabriel; El Monte; Lordsburg; Pomona. May-August. 2. LINARIA Juss. Herbs with alternate leaves or the lower opposite or verticillate, and regular flowers in terminal bracted racemes or spikes. Calyx 5-parted, the segments imbri- cated. Corolla spurred at the base or the spur rarely obsolete, 2-lipped, the upper lip erect, 2-lobed, the lower spreading, 3-lobed, its base produced into a palate often nearly closing the throat. Stamens 4, didynamous, ascending, included ; filaments and style filiform. Cap- sule ovoid or globose, opening by usually 3-toothed pores or slits below the summit. Seeds numerous, rugose, angled or sometimes winged. 1. Li. Canadensis (L.) Dumont. (Wild Toad-flax.) Bien- nial or annual, glabrous; flowering stem erect or ascending, very slender, simple or branched, 2-7 dm. high, the sterile shoots spreading or procumbent leafy; leaves linear or linear-oblong, 1-5 cm. long, entire, sessile ; flowers 6-8 mm. long in slender long racemes ; pedicels 4-6 mm. long, erect and appressed in fruit, minutely bracted at the base ; calyx-lobes lanceolate, about equaling the capsule; spur of the corolla filiform, curved, as long as the tube or longer; palate white, corolla otherwise blue. Occasional in cultivated fields, especially in sandy soil. 3. ANTIRRHINUM L. Snap-dragon. Annual or perennial herbs, with alternate leaves or the lowTer opposite, and mostly rather large flowers in terminal racemes or solitary in the upper axils. Calyx 5-parted. Corolla irregular gibbous or saccate at the base, 2-lipped, the upper lip erect, 2-lobed, the lower spreading, 3-lobed, its base produced into a palate nearly ;'».")S Scrophulariaceae or quite closing the throat. Stamens 4. didynamious, in- cluded : filaments filiform or dilated above. Style fili- form. Capsule obovoid or globose, opening by chink- or pores below the summit. Seeds numerous. 1. A. glandulosum Lindl. Stems stout, erect, 1-1.5 m. high, glandular-pubescent and viscid throughout, destitute (if prehen- sile brandies, leafy; leaves lanceolate, mostly sessile above. gradually passing into bracts of the leafy dense spike or raceme; sepals oblong-lanceolate, unequal, the longer equaling the cap- sule; corolla rose-colored; filaments somewhat dilated above. Occasional in the San Gabriel Mountains in the chaparral belt. 2. A. Nuttallianum Benth. Stems branched from the base, the branches mostly procumbent, 5-10 dm. long, glandular- pubescent throughout; leaves ovate or subcordate, the largest about 2.5 cm. long, nearly all distinctly petioled ; peduncles, at least the lowest ones, longer than the Mowers, sometimes disposed to be tortile; sepals shorter than the tube of the violet corolla; corolla about 8 mm. long, the lobes nearly equal; palate very prominent; seeds almost alately costate. Occasional in sandy soil, especially toward the coast. 3. A. subsessile Gray. Similar to the preceding but less dif- fuse and erect, strongly glandular-pilose; leaves ovate, all sessile or nearly so ; pedicels shorter than the somewhat larger Mowers ; lower lip of the corolla larger in proportion. Reported from Santa Catalina Island. Rather frequent on the mainland about San Diego. 4. A. Coulterianum Benth. Stem 5-10 dm. high, erect, or •raining support by its filiform tortile branches acting as tendrils, glabrous, except the inMorescence which is villous-pubescent with viscid and often glandular hairs ; leaves distant, linear to oval; spike virgate, 5-20 cm. long; pedicels shorter than the calyx; sepals linear or lanceolate, obtuse, all shorter than t lie oval or ovate-oblong glandular-pubescent capsule; corolla violet- purple or usually white with yellowish palate, the lower lip Large, the tube about 6 mm. long. Frequent in the lower portions of the chaparral belt of all our mountains and occurring on the fans at the base of the mountains. 5. A. strictum (H. & A.) (bay. Erect, nearly simple, 3-6 dm. high, the tortile branches none; lowest leaves ovate-lanceolate, Figwort Family -•">'» tlie upper ones linear or the floral filiform, much shorter than the tortile racemose peduncles; corolla violet-purple, about 1 cm. long, with hairy palate and gibbous base; capsule crustaceous, globose, strongly exceeding the calyx, tipped with the straight style of equal length. Occasional at lower altitudes in all our mountains and foothills. 4. SCROPHULARIA L. Figwort. Perennial strong-smelling herbs, with mostly opposite Large leaves, and small flowers in terminal panicled cymes or thyrses. Calyx 5-parted, the lobes mostly obtuse. Corolla irregular, the tube globose or oblong, not gibbous or spurred at the base, the limb 5-lobed, the 2 upper lobes longer erect, the lateral ones ascending, the lower spreading or reflexed. Stamens 5, 4 of them anther- bearing, didynamous, declined, the fifth sterile and re- duced to a scale on the roof of the corolla-tube ; anther- sacs confluent into 1. Style filiform ; stigma capitate or truncate. Capsule ovoid, septicidally dehiscent. Seeds rugose. 1. S. Californica Cham. Stems erect, 1-2 m. high, glabrous below, above finely glandular-pubescent; leaves ovate, cordate at base, serrate or incised-serrate,-6-18 cm. long; flowers about 8 mm. long; corolla dull red. Frequent in the foothills and mountains below the pine belt. March- June. 5. PENTSTEMON Soland. Perennial herbs or suffrutescent plants, with opposite or rarely verticillate leaves, and large showy flowers in terminal racemes, panicles or cymes. Calyx 5-parted. Corolla irregular, tubular and often inflated, the limb 2-lipped, the upper lip 2-lobed, the lower lip 3-lobed. Stamens 5, included, 4 antheriferous and didynamous, the fifth sterile, as long or shorter than the others; anther- sacs divergent or connivent. Style filiform ; stigma 300 Scrophulariaceae capitate. Capsule septicidally dehiscent. Seeds numer- ous, mostly angled. * Anther-cells dehiscent for tlieir xcliole lengtli or nearly so. -*- Corolla-tube not dilated. 1. P. cordifolius Benth. Somewhat scandent over shrubs by long sarnientose branches, very leafy, scabrous-puberulent and the inflorescence somewhat glandular ; leaves subcordate or ovate with truncate base, acutely serrate or dentate, 2.5 cm. long or less; thyrsus short and leafy ; peduncles several-flowered ; sepals ovate-lanceolate ; corolla scarlet, the tube about 2.5 cm. long, the lips about 15 mm. long, the upper lip erect, the lower more or less spreading; sterile tilament bearded down one side; anthers dehiscent through the apex. Common in the chaparral belt of all our mountains. April-July. 2. P. ternatus Torr. Glabrous and the long virgate flowering branches glaucous, 1-2 m. high; leaves linear-lanceolate, rigid, 15-35 mm. long, acutely serrate or denticulate witli salient teeth, the upper ternately verticillate ; flowers in a long racemiform thyrsus; sepals ovate-acuminate; corolla pale scarlet, 2.5 cm. long, the lobes about 6 mm. long; stamens as in the last. Occasional in the San Gabriel, San Bernardino and Santa Ana Mountains. May-August. 3. P. labrosus Hook. f. Glabrous; stems herbaceous, slen- der, erect, simple, 4-5 dm. high ; leaves all entire, the lowest oblanceolate, 5-6 cm. long, about 1 cm. broad, the upper linear- lanceolate, reduced ; bracts minute ; flowers in a simple raceme; pedicels 1-2 cm. long; calyx-lobes ovate, acuminate, 4 mm. long; corolla scarlet, 2.5-3 mm. long, destitute of beard ; tube narrow ; upper lip erect, the 3 lobes of the lower one equaling the upper one in length, reflexed, about two-thirds the lengtli of the tube; sterile filament glabrous; anthers closed toward the apex. Frequent in the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains in open places among the pines. June-August. 4. P. centranthifolius Benth. Glaucous, strict and virgate, 4-8 dm. high; leaves all entire, the lower lanceolate, the upper clasping, ovate-lanceolate; panicle narrow, usually 3 dm. Long or more ; pedicels slender ; corolla deep scarlet, narrow, tubular and obscurely bilabiate; the short oblong lobes alike, except that the Figwort Family 361 posterior are united higher; anthers opening widely, splitting through the apex. Common in the foothills and mountains mostly below the pine belt throughout our range. April-July. ■*- Corolla-tube dilated. 5. P. spectabilis Thurher. Pale or glaucescent and glabrous throughout, 6-12 dm. high; leaves thinnish-coriaceous, ovate or ovate-lanceolate or the lower oblong, acute, the upper pairs acu- minate and their broad bases connate-perfoliate, spinulosely den- tate or denticulate; thyrsus many-flowered, elongated pyramidal or sometimes virgate, 3-6 dm. long; peduncles and pedicels slen- der; corolla rose-purple or lilac with the ample limb blue, 2.5 cm. long; the narrow proper tube twice the length of the short ovate calyx-lobes, then abruptly dilated into the campanulate-ventricose or broadly funnelform throat, somewhat bilabiate, the oval or roundish lobes 6-8 mm. long; sterile filament glabrous; anthers dehiscent from the base toward but not to the apex. Frequent on dry hillsides. May-July. 6. P. Parishii Gray. Size and habit of the last ; leaves entire or minutely denticulate ; upper clasping by subcordate base but not connate; corolla red, more dilated. Not known within our limits. Cucamonga ; San Bernardino. 7. P. Palmeri Gray. Stems 6-9 dm. high; glabrous except inflorescence, that glandular or primose-puberulent; leaves cori- aceous, glaucous, ovate or oblong-lanceolate, from sharply dentate to nearly entire, upper from closely sessile to completely con- nate-perfoliate ; thyrsus elongated pyramidal, racemiform : corolla cream-white, suffused with pink; the short narrow proper tube hardly surpassing the ovate appressed sepals, very abruptly dilated into the ventricose-campanulate throat, about 2 cm. long and as broad at orifice; the lips broad, the upper erect, 2-lobed, lower 3-lobed, widely spreading, sparingly bearded at base ; sterile filament densely bearded above with long yellowish hairs. Occasional above 5000 feet in the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Moun- tains. ** Anther-cells remaining closed below and saccate. 8. P. heterophyllus Lindl. Green, seldom glaucescent, gla- brous throughout or rarely primose-puberulent ; stems or branches .",»',•_! Scrophulariaceae slender, 6-15 dm. high, from a woody base; leaves lanceolate or linear or the lower oblong-lanceolate, mostly narrowed at base; thyrsus virgate, loose, usually elongated; sepals ovate; corolla 2.5 cm. long or more, the narrow tube rose-colored or pink, some- times changing to violet, ventricose funnelform ; the bud often yellowish : sterile filament glabrous. Occasional in the chaparral belt. Santa Monica Mountains; Verdugo Hills: Santa Anita Canyon. 6. COLLINSIA Nutt. Annuals with simple verticillate or opposite leaves, and irregular flowers in whorls forming racemes, or soli- tary in the axils. Calyx campanulate, 5-cleft. Corolla declined, the proper tube very short, the abruptly ex- panded and gibbous throat forming an angle with it. deeply bilabiate, the upper Lip erect, 2-cleft ; the Lower lip larger, 3-lobed, the lateral lobes spreading or droop- ing, flat, the middle one conduplicate, keel-like, enclosing the 4 declined stamens and the filiform style. Stamens didynamous ; filaments filiform; anther-sacs confluent at the apex. The fifth stamen represented by a () Scrophulariaceae somewhat unequal, about half the length of the tube; corolla yellow, 1.5 cm. long; capsule ovate, acute. Occasional along streams about Los Angeles. May-July. M. moschatus sessilifoi.il's Gray. Stems ascending, corolla 2."> cm. long; otherwise as in the type. Frequent in all the mountains in the pine belt and often extending along the streams down into the chaparral belt. 6. M. floribundus Dougl. Annual, slender, diffuse, 1-3 dm. high, villous and very slimy, musk-scented; leaves ovate, 1-1*. 5 tin. long, dentate, short-petioled ; pedicels mostly longer than the leaves; calyx narrowly campanulate, 4-6 mm. lr without a large purple blotch on the lower lip. Common along streams in the mountains and foothills below the pine belt. April-August. 10. M. microphyllus Benth. Annual, glabrous below, some- what pubescent above; stems terete, slender, with ascending branches or commonly simple, 1-3 dm. high; flowers in short racemes or in depauperate forms, solitary ; leaves ovate to orbicu- lar, often cordate at the base, denticulate or coarsely toothed : peduncles slender; calyx often dotted, oblique at the orifice; the teeth obscure or prominent, the upper one largest; corolla 1-2 cm. long, throat rather narrow, the limb broad, usually without purple dots. Occasional along streams in the pine belt of all our mountains. June,- August. 9. MIMETANTHE (ireene. Erect branching annual, with long villous white hairs, opposite leaves, and small yellow flowers. Calyx short- campanulate, deeply 5-cleft, its tube slightly 5-sulcate, nut prismatic angled. Corolla obscurely bilabiate, its lobes plane. Stamens 4, 2-fertile. Capsule pointed, loculicidal. dehiscent the whole length of tin- upper side and on the lower side along the apical attenuation. 1. M. pilosa (Benth.) Greene. At length much branched, leafy, flowering from near the base, 1-3 dm. high, herbage glan- dular-viscid ; leaves lanceolate or narrowly oblong-ovate, entire, sessile ; flowers on slender pedicels ; the upper tooth of calyx much longer than the others, equaling the tube; corolla yellow, the lower lobes usually with brown spots, slightly exceeding the calyx, 6-8 mm. long; capsule oblong-ovate, attenuate. {Mimulus ea ill* Durand.) Frequent along streams in the valleys and in the mountains. May- August. 10. VERONICA L. Speedwell. Annual or perennial herbs, with opposite and alter- nate, rarelv verticillate leaves, and mostlv small terminal 368 Scrophulariaceae or axillary racemose spicate or solitary flowers. Calyx mostly 4-parted, sometimes 5-parted. Corolla rotate, its Lobes very short, deeply and more or less unequally 4-lobed or rarely 5-lobed. Stamens 2, divergent, insert- ed on either side at the base of the upper corolla-lobe. Anther-sacs confluent at the apex. Ovary 2-celled ; style slender ; stigma capitate. Capsule more or less compressed, emarginate, obcordate or 2-lobed, loculicid- ally dehiscent. 1. V. peregrina L. Annual, glabrous or somewhat glandular- puberulent; stems erect or ascending, simple or branched, 1-3 dm. high; leaves oblong, oval, linear or slightly spatulate, 6-20 nun. lung, the lowest opposite, short-petioled or sessile, broader than the upper and mostly entire, each with a short-pedicelled flower in its axil ; flowers nearly white, about 2 mm. broad ; cap- sule nearly orbicular, obcordate, 2-3 mm. high. Occasional along the margins of streams and in the dry beds of winter pools. April-July. 2. V. Byzantina (S. & S.) B. S. B. Annual, pubescent; stems diffusely branched, spreading or ascending, 1.5-4 dm. long; leaves ovate oroval,short-petioled,crenate-dentate or somewhat incised, 8-24 mm. long, the lowest opposite, the upper alternate, each with a slender-peduncled flower in its axil; pedicels filiform, equaling or exceeding the leaves; corolla 6-8 mm. broad, blue; capsule 6 mm. broad, half as high, shallowly and broadly emar- ginate. ( V. Buxbaumii Tenore.) Occasional about Los Angeles, Davidson. 11. CASTILLEJA Mutis. Herbs or suffrutescent plants with alternate sessile Leaves and red or yellow flowers in terminal Leafy- bracted spikes, the bracts and calyx often brightly colored. Calyx tubular, cleft in front or behind or commonly both, the lobes entire or 2-toothed. Corolla very irregular, its tube about equaling the calyx, the Limb 2-lipped ; the upper lip (galea) arched, elongated, Figworl Family MH) concave or keeled, laterally compressed, entire, enclosing the 4 didynamous stamens ; lower lip short, 3-lobed. Anther-sacs oblong or linear, unequal, the outer one attached to the filament by its middle, the inner one pendulous from its apex. Style filiform ; stigma entire or 2-lobed. Capsule ovoid or oblong, loeulicidally dehis- cent, many-seeded. Seeds reticulated. * Annuals. 1. C. stenanthe Gray. Steins mostly simple, erect, 3-6 dm. high, pubescent and somewhat viscid throughout; leaves linear- lanceolate, entire, the upper with red linear tips wdiich become spirally coiled ; flowers scattered in a loose raceme, short-pedi- celled ; calyx wholly green, about equally cleft before and behind to near the middle; the segments lanceolate and acute or acutely 2-cleft at the apex ; corolla about 3 cm. long; galea usually red- dish, slightly falcate, a half longer than the tube; capsule oblong. Frequent in all our mountains along streams in moist places. May- August. ** Perennials. 2. C. Martini Abrams. Stem rather slender, branching from near the somewhat woody base, decumbent at base, the branches ascending, villous and viscid throughout ; lower leaves linear or broadlydinear, 2.5-3 cm. long, the upper mostly somewhat broader, divided to near the middle into 3 lobes, the 2 lateral lobes spreading, narrower than the middle one; bracts similarly lobed, somewhat dilated, scarlet-tipped; racemes narrow and rather loose, 1-2 dm. long; calyx 14-16 mm. long, cleft nearly to the middle behind, scarcely as deep in front, the segments broadly lanceolate, 2-toothed, the teeth less than 2 mm. long, the ante- rior one much the shorter; galea reddish in front, 1 cm. long, equaling or slightly exceeding the tube ; capsule acute, 1 cm. long. Common on dry ridges and slopes in all our mountains, confined mostly to the chaparral belt. April-August. 3. C. Californica Abrams. Stems slender, fragile, branched from a scarcely woody base, erect, more or less branched above, 4-5 dm. high, sparsely and minutely puberulent; upper cauline 370 Scrophulariaceae leaves linear, remotely and obscurely denticulate or entire. 2-4 cm. long, 2-3 mm. broad, obtuse, with Bhort Blender leafy branch- Lets in their axils; inflorescence at first viscid-pubescent, becom- ing nearly glabrous, 1-2 dm. long; bracts red <>r red-tipped, about 2 cm. long, 3-4 mm. broad, entire or rarely with 1 or 2 very short lateral teeth toward the apex ; calyx about 2.5cm. long, cleft about equally before and behind, the lobes 1 cm. long, cleft at the apex, the teeth lanceolate, 3-4 mm. long, acute; corolla 2.5-3 cm. long, galea about three-fourths the length of the tube, green on the back, the face bright red, the tube greenish-yellow. Occasional in dry washes and fans in the interior valleys. 4. C. foliolosa II. & A. Suffrutescent with many stems from the base, 3-4 dm. high, white woolly throughout ; leaves linear and entire, rather crowded below and fascicled in the lower axils, 3 cm. long or less; the uppermost and bracts 3-parted into linear lobes; bracts with lobes spatulate-dilated at apex, the middle lobe largest, shallowly 3-lobed ; spikes rather dense ; flowers about 18 mm. long, galea only slightly exceeding the calyx, shorter than or as long as the tube ; calyx-lobes truncate or retuse ; capsule about 1.5 cm. long. Frequent on dry hillsides in the foothills. 12. ORTHOCARPUS Nutt. Annual or rarely perennial herbs, mostly with alter- nate leaves, and yellow white or purple flowers in bracted usually dense spikes, the bracts sometimes brightly colored. Calyx tubular, 4-rleft or sometimes split down both sides. Corolla very irregular, the tube slender, the limb 2-lipped ; upper lip but Little exceeding the inflated 3-plaited or 3-saccate Lower one. otherwise as in Castil- leja. * Filaments pubescent; galea bearded on tlie back. 1. O. purpurascens Benth. (OwL-CLOVER.) Annual, erect, rather stout, al len-th much branched from the base, 1.5-5 dm. high, villous-pubescent ; leaves with lanceolate base or body, and laciniately L-2-pinnately parted into narrow linear or filiform Figworl Family .'171 Lobes, or the upper palmately cleft ; spike thick and dense ; bracts equaling the flowers, somewhat dilated, their lobes crimson- colored, as are also the calyx and corolla; corolla 2.5-3 cm. long, tin' lip moderately saccate, white-tipped, with yellow and purple markings; galea densely purple-bearded on the back, incurved at tip; filaments hairy. Common in sandy soils in the valleys and hills. v • Filaments glabrous; galea not bearded. 2. O. densiflorus Benth. Annual, erect, simple or branched from the base, 1-3 dm. high, soft-pubescent above; leaves linear or linear-lanceolate, entire or with a few slender lobes; spike dense, the lowest flowers sometimes distant; bracts about equal- in- the flowers, 3-cleft into linear purple lobes ; corolla 18-20 nun. long, purple ; lip moderately ventricose and somewhat 3-saccate for its whole length, the teeth or lobes conspicuous, erect, oblong- linear; galea narrow, puberulent or nearly smooth. Hills near Los Angelo>. '. ata. 3. O. Parishii Gray. Annual, nearly glabrous, about 2 dm. high ; leaves 3-5-cleft into linear-filiform divisions, or the lower entire; floral ones similar, the lobes purple-tipped; spikes dense ami short; calyx-lobes lanceolate, obtuse, half the length of the tube; corolla rose-purple, little pubescent in the throat; lip con- spicuously 3-saccate ; the sacs as broad as long, the teeth very short; galea lanceolate, obtuse, puberulent. Near Garvanza, Davidson. 13. ADENOSTEGIA Benth. Annuals with alternate narrow entire or 3— 5-parted leaves, and irregular flowers scattered along tie- usually many branches or in terminal clusters or heads. Bracts and calyx never colored. Calyx spathe-like, consisting of an anterior and a posterior leaf-like division or the anterior division wanting. Corolla tubular, somewhat enlarged above ; its lips about equal in length, the lower obtusely 3-toothed. Stamens 4 of 2, anther-cells 372 Scrophulariaceae unequal, ciliate or minutely bearded. Capsule flattened : seeds with a loose eoat. pointed at one end. 1. A. filifolia (Nutt.). Stems erect, branched, 3-0 dm. high; leaves all filiform, 3-parted to near the base; herbage pubescent with short reflexed hairs intermingled with scattered spreading hispid hairs; heads several-flowered, terminating the branches; bracts 3-lobed to near the base, the entire portion about 1 mm. broad, strongly 3-nerved ; the lobes all filiform and usually nearly equal, the outer surface very hispid with stout spreading hairs rising from postulate bases, the inner surface concave, pubescent, slightly elongated at the apex and tipped with a blackish, more or less retuse gland; corolla purplish, 12-15 mm. long. (Cordy- lanthua filifolius Nutt.) Common on dry ridges in the chaparral belt of all the mountains. Aden- os/egia rigida Benth., to which our southern plants have been referred, has broader leaves and bracts which are less hispid. 2. A. maritima (Nutt.) Greene. Cory mbosely branched, 1-3 dm. high ; herbage glaucous and more or less hoary-pubescent, often tinged with purple; leaves linear to linear-lanceolate, about 2 cm. long, entire; flowers in short spikes ; bracts oblong-lanceo- late, entire or commonly 3- toothed, the 2 lateral teeth much the smaller; flowers purple, equaling or slightly exceeding the bracts. Occasional in salt marshes near the sea. June-September. 14. PEDICULARIS L. Perennial herbs with alternate opposite or rarely verticillate pinnately Lobed cleft or pinnatifid Leaves, and irregular flowers in terminal spikes or spike-like racemes. Calyx 2-5-cleft, corolla tubular, strongly bilabiate ; galea arched and compressed ; lower lip of -"> small rounded lobes or teeth. Stamens 1 : anthers approximate in pairs, their sacs transverse, equal. Cap- sule flattened, oblique at apex, loculicidally 2-valved. 1. P. densiflora Benth. Steins simple, erect, 2-3 dm. high, commonly several from the scaly caudex ; herbage nearly gla- brous or somewhat Bof t-pu Descent ; leaves pinnately divided nr Orobanchaceae 373 parted, the segments oblong, doubly serrate-toothed or incised ; spike terminal, dense or at length loose; bracts linear, ciliate or serrulate toward the apex, mostly shorter than the flowers ; calyx 5-angled, equally or unequally 5-toothed, 6-8 mm. long; corolla crimson, 2.5 cm. long or more; galea large, somewhat broader above, strongly arched, lower lip small, of 3 rounded teeth ; li la- ments glabrous. Laurel Canyon, Santa Monica Mountains, Davidson. February. L'. P. semibarbata (iray. Nearly acaulescent, depressed, more or less pubescent ; leaves in a basal tuft, 15-20 cm. long, on petioles mostly exceeding the irregular sessile spikes, 2-pinnately parted or nearly so, the oblong lobes laciniately few-toothed ; corolla yellowish, tinged with purple, pubescent without, about 2 cm. long; galea nearly straight; filaments villous above. Frequent on dry ridges in the open pine forests of all our mountains. May-July. Family 87. OROBANCHACEAE. Broom-rape Family. Erect simple or branched, brown, yellow, purplish or nearly white root-parasites. Leaves reduced to alternate appressed scales. Flowers perfect, irregular, sessile in terminal bracted spikes, or solitary and peduncled in the axils of the scales. Calyx 4-5-toothed or 4-5-cleft, or split on one or both sides nearly or quite to the base. Corolla more or less oblique, the limb 2-lipped, 5-lobed. Stamens 4, didynamous, inserted in the tube of the corolla alternate with the lobes, a fifth rudimentary one sometimes present. Ovary superior, 1-celled, with 4 parietal placentae ; ovules numerous ; style slender ; stigma discoid, 2-lobed or 4-lobed. Capsule 1-celled, 2-valved. Flowers bractless, nearly regular. 1. Thalesia. Flowers bracteate, strongly 2-lipped. 2. Orobanche. 37 1 < >robanchaceae 1. THALESIA Raf. Glandular or viscid-pubescenl simple-stemmed herbs, parasitic on the roots of various plants, with scattered scales, and Long-peduncled yellowish, white or violel per- fect bractless flowers. Calyx campanulate or hemi- spheric, nearly equally 5-cleft, the lobes acute or acumi- nate. Corolla oblique ; the tube elongated, curved ; the limb slightly 2-lipped ; the upper lip erect-spreading, 2-lobed ; the lower spreading, 3-lobed, the lobes all nearly equal. Stamens included ; anther-sacs mucro- nate at the base. Ovary ovoid ; style slender, decidu- ous ; stigma peltate or slightly 2-lobed. 1. T. fasciculata (Nutt.) Britton. Stem erect, 5-10 cm. high, densely glandular-pubescent, bearing several scales and 3-15 naked L-flowered peduncles, 2.5-10 cm. long; calyx broadly campanu- late, 6-10 nun. long, its lobes triangular-lanceolate or triangular- ovate, acute, equaling or shorter tban the tube; corolla about 2 cm. long, purplish-yellow, puberulent within; the curved tube 3 times as long as the limb; the lobes oblong, obtuse. (Aphyllon fasciculatum < J ray.) Occasional in rather dry ground in the San Gabriel and Santa Ana Moun- tains: growing on the roots of various shrubs. May-July. 2. OROBANCHE L. Glandular-pubescent, erect, simple or branched herbs, parasitic on the roots of various plants, with scattered scales, and spicate or racemose perfect bracted and some- times bracteolate flowers. Calyx split both above and below, nearly or quite to the base, the divisions 2-cleft or rarely entire, or more or less unequally _— 5-toothed. Corolla oblique, Btrongly 2-lipped ; upper lip erect, emar- ginate or 2-lobed ; lower lip spreading, 3-lobed. Stamens included ; anther-sacs mostly mucronate at the base. Plantaginaeeae 375 ( >vary ovoid ; style Blender, commonly persist* nt : stigma peltate to funnelformj entire 6t slightly 2-lobed. 1. 0. Califomicum ('. & S. Viscid-pubescent; stems stout, usually simple, 5-15 cm. high; Bowers crowded in a dense raceme; pedicels L'-4 or the lower sometimes 10 cm. long; brace- lets close to the calyx; calyx-segments linear-lanceolate, about equaling the yellowish or purplish corolla, this 2-2.5 cm. long; anthers ulabrous or slightly hairy. Klysian Park, Davidson. 2. O. tuberosa (Gray) Heller. Pruinose-puberulent ; stems stout, with a thickened tuber-like base, 15 cm. high or less; spikes dense, corymbose-glomerate at the summit of the thickened stem ; flowers subsessile or on short pedicels ; calyx-lobes lanceo- late, equaling the corolla-tube; corolla yellowish, about 10-15 mm. long; anthers glabrous. Echo Mountain among shrubs, McClatch.it . Family 88. PLANTAGINACEAE. Plantain Family. Annual or perennial mostly aeaulescent rarely stolon- iferous herbs, with basal, in the caulescent species oppo- site or alternate, leaves, and small perfect, polygamous or monoecious flowers hraeteolate in dense terminal long-scaped spikes or heads, or rarely solitary. Calyx persistent, 4-parted. Corolla hypogynous, scarious or membranous, mostly marcescent, 4-lobed. Stamens 4 or 2, inserted on the corolla-tube or throat ; filaments fili- form : anthers versatile. 2-celled, longitudinally dehis- cent. Ovary superior, 1-2-celled or falsely 3-4-celled. Style filiform, simple, mostly longitudinally stigmatic. Ovules 1-several in each cell. Fruit a membranous or coriaceous capsule, cireumscissile at or below the middle. Seeds peltate. 376 Plantaginaceae 1. PLANTAGO L. Plantain. Characters of the family. * Corolla closed over the mature capsule, forming a beak. 1. P. hirtella H. B. K. Perennial from a thick root, hirsute, especially the scape and leaves; leaves oblong-oblanceolate to narrowly oblong, 5 dm. long or less, tapering helow to a short petiole, sparsely dentate ; scape usually longer than the leaves, stout, erect; spike 15-30 cm. long, dense, except at hase ; corolla persistent, its lobes closed over the capsule; seeds 3. Occasional in low ground in the coast valleys. ** Corolla remaining expanded over the mature capsule. •*- Perennials. 2. P. lanceolata L. More or less villous with tufts of brown- ish hairs at the base of the leaves; leaves erect or spreading, oblong-lanceolate, tapering at base into a slender petiole, strongly 3-5-ribbed, 3 dm. long or less, entire; scapes exceeding the leaves, channeled, slender; spike very dense, becoming cylindric, 10 cm. long or less; sepals ovate, with green midrib and scarious margins; pyxis oblong; ovary obtuse, 2-seeded, circumscissile at about the middle. Common in low ground throughout our range. 3. P. major L. Glabrous or sometimes sparsely pubescent; leaves spreading, long-petioled, mostly ovate, narrowed or round- ed at base, entire or coarsely dentate, 2 dm. long or less; scapes exceeding the leaves, erect, 3 dm. long or less; spikes 2 dm. long or less; pyxis ovoid, circumscissile at about the middle, 5-16- Beeded. Frequent in low ground. ■+- +■ Annuals. 4. P. erecta Morris. Annual, silky pubescent, cm. high ; leaves erect, narrowly linear to narrowly oblanceolate, about t\v<>- thirds the length of the scapes or nearly equaling the short crones; scapes 1 or few ; spikes few-many-flowered, capitate or oblong, 15 cm. long or usually less; calyx-lobes obtuse, scarious-margined Rubiaceae :577 with brownish midrib; pyxis ovate, truncate, purplish above j circumscissile at the lower third; seeds 2. Very common on dry plains and in the foothills throughout our range. 5. P. erecta obversa (Morris). A more robust form ; leaves with few to several callous denticulations; scapes usually numerous; spikes 15-40 cm. long; capsule circumscissile near the middle. (P. obvi rsa .Morris.) Occasional in sandy soil toward the coast, also on Catalina Island. In our opinion not a good species and scarcely worthy of varietal distinction. fi. P. Bigelovii Gray. Very slender, annual, 1 dm. high or ess; leaves very narrowly linear or filiform, glabrous; scapes very -lender, slightly pubescent above; spikes slender, about 15 mm. long and 4 nun. broad, often much shorter and reduced to 4-5 flowers; calyx broadly scarious-margined ; pyxis oblong-ovate, much exceeding the calyx, circumscissile at the lower third. Known within our limits only from Inglewood, where it occurs in low ex- siccated places. Family 89. RUBIACEAE. Madder Family. Herbs or woody plants with simple, opposite or verti- cillate, mostly stipulate leaves, and perfect, often dimor- phous or trimorphous regular flowers. Calyx-tube adnate to the ovary, its limb various. Corolla 4-5-lobed, often pubescent within. Stamens as many as the lobes of the corolla and alternate with them, inserted on its tube or throat ; anthers versatile, 2-celled, longitudinally dehis- cent. Ovary inferior, 2-o-celled ; style simple or lobed ; ovules 1— many in each cell. Fruit a capsule or berry. Seeds various. 1. GALIUM L. Bedstraw. Annual or perennial herbs or rarely suffrutescent, with 4-angled slender stems and branches, apparently verticillate leaves, and small white green yellow or purple flowers, mostly in axillary or terminal cymes or panicles. Flowers perfect or rarely dioecious. Calyx- ."»,* Rubiaceae tube ovoid or globose, the limb minutely toothed 01 wanting. (Vrolla rotate, 4-lohe> 1000 feel altitude. 1. G. siccatum Wight. Somewhat auffrutescenl below, branched and busby, sometimes reclining, the whole plant ciner- eous-puberulent ; leaves linear, 8-16 nun. long, not rigid, barely Madder Family 379 mucronulate ; inflorescence cymose-paniculate ; flowers polyga- mous, greenish-yellow; fruit 2 mm.; broad, .-densely hispid with straight hairs. Wilson's Peak, McClatchie; Santa Monica Mountains. ■«-■«--*- Fruit fleshy <-lol>ed. Sta- mens 1-4, inserted on the corolla and alternate with its lobes. Ovary inferior, 1-3-celled, 1 of the cells containing a single suspended ovule, the others empty. Fruit indehiscent, dry, containing a single suspended seed. 1. PLECTRITIS DC. Annual herbs with simple or rarely with very slen- der branches and usually entire leaves, the cauline commonly sessile. Flowers small, borne in glomerules at the end of the stem or branches, or the glomerules in interrupted or dense spikes. Calyx-limb obsolete. Corolla usually pink, more or less bilabiate, spurred or gibbous at base. Wings of the fruit commonly in- curved ami forming a circular hollow or cavity on the side. 1. P. minor (Hook.). Slender, 1-2 dm. high; loaves linear or narrowly oblong ; corolla about 2 mm. long ; the spur longer than the tube ; fruit more or less hispid, dorsal ly carinate : the carina 2-grooved ; lateral winga broad, each with a more or less obvious lobe at apex, spreading or incurved. (Valerianella macrocera Gray; P. congesta minor Hook.) Occasional on shads hillsides. March. Dipsaceae 383 Family 92. DIPSACEAE. Teasel Family. Serbs with opposite or verticillate exstipulate leaves. Flowers perfect, borne on an elongated or globose recep- tacle, bracted and involucrate. Calyx-tube adnate to the ovary, its limb cup-shaped or disk-shaped, or divided into spreading bristles. Corolla epigynous, the Limb 2-5-lobed. Stamens 2-4, inserted on the tube of the corolla and alternate with its lobes; filaments distinct. Ovary inferior, 1 -celled ; style filiform; stigma undi- vided, terminal or lateral ; ovule 1, pendulous. Fruit an achene, its apex crowned with the persistent calyx- lobes. 1. DIPSACUS L. Rough-hairy or prickly, tall erect biennial or peren- nial herbs, with opposite dentate or pinnatifid, usu- ally large leaves, and blue or lilac flowers in dense terminal peduncled oblong heads. Bracts of the invo- lucre and scales of the receptacle rigid or spiny-toothed. Calyx-limb cup-shaped, 4-toothed or 4-lobed. Corolla oblique or 2-lipped, 4-lobed. Stamens 4. Stigmas oblique or lateral. Achene free or adnate to the in- volucel. 1. D. fullonum L. (Fuller's-teasel.) Biennial, stout, with numerous short prickles on the stem, branches, midribs of the leaves and involucre, otherwise glabrous or nearly so, 1-2 m. high ; leaves sessile or the upper ones connate-perfoliate, lanceo- late or oblong, entire, the lower obtuse, crenate; leaves of the involucre spreading or reflexed, shorter than the head; heads ovoid, becoming cylindric, 6-10 cm. long; scales of the receptacle with hooked tips, about equaling the flowers; flowers lilac, 8-12 mm. long. Occasional in moist places about Los Angeles. Native of Europe. 384 Cucurbitaceae Family 93. CUCURBITACEAE. Gourd Family. Herbaceous vines, climbing or trailing by means of tendrils, with alternate petioled leaves, and solitary or racemose monoecious or dioecious ilowers. Calyx-tube adnate to the ovary, its Limb usually 5-lobed. Petals usually 5, inserted on the limb of the calyx, separate or united. Stamens mostly 3, 2 of them with 2-celled anthers, the other with a 1-celled anther ; filaments short, often somewhat united. Ovary 1-3-celled j style simple or lobed ; ovules few or numerous. Fruit a pepo, Indehiscent or rarely dehiscent at the summit, or burst- ing irregularly. Seeds usually flat. Flowers yellow, large; fruit Indehiscent, smooth. 1. Cucdkbita. Flowers white or greenish, small; fruit dehiscent at summit, prickly. 2. MlCRAMPELIS. 1. CUCURBITA L. Rough prostrate vines, rooting at the nodes, with branched tendrils, usually lobed leaves which are often cordate at the base, and large yellow axillary monoecious Ilowers. Calyx-tube campanulate, usually 5-lobed. Co- rolla campanulate, 5-lobed to about the middle, the lobes recurving. Staminate flowers with 3 stamens, the anthers linear, more or less united. Pistillate flowers with 1 pistil ; ovary oblong, with 3-5 many-ovuled pla- centae ; style short, thick; stigmas 3-5, each 2-lobed, papillose ; staminodia 3. Fruit large fleshy, with a thick rind, many-seeded, indehiscent. 1. C. foetidissima II. B. K. (Calabaziu,a or Mock-ORANGB.) Steins stout, rough, hirsute, trailing to a length of 2-5 in.; root very large, carrot-shaped ; leaves ovate-triangular, cordate or truncate at the base, acute at the apex, 1-3 dm. long, denticulate, usually slightly 3-5-lobed, rough above, canescent beneath, on stout, petioles, S- 1 5 cm. long; peduncles l>. 5-5 em. long; flowers mostly solitary ; corolla 7-10 cm. long; pepo globose, 5-10 cm. in diameter, smooth. Frequent on dry sanss Campanulaceae 2. N. ramosissimus pinnatifidus (Greene) Gray. Much re- sembling the last; basal leaves linear-lanceolate, 1-2-pinnatifid, the cauline toothed; capsule 15-25-seeded ; seeds short-oblong. San Gabriel Mountains, Allen. 4. LOBELIA L. Herbs with alternate or basal leaves, and racemose, spicate or paniculate, often leafy-bracted flowers. Calyx- tube adnate to the ovary. Corolla-tube straight, oblique or incurved, divided to the base on 1 side, 2-lobed ; the lobe on each side of the cleft erect or recurved, turned away from the other 3, which are somewhat united. Stamens free from the corolla-tube, monadelphous at least above ; 2 or all the 5 anthers with a tuft of hairs at the tip, all united. Ovary 2-celled ; the 2 parietal placenta? many-ov tiled ; stigma 2-lobed or 2-cleft. Cap- sule loculicidally 2-valved. 1. L. splendens Willd. Glabrous or nearly so; stems erect, commonly simple, 4-8 dm. high; leaves lanceolate or almost linear, glandular-denticulate, all but the lower sessile, 10 cm. long or less; flowers in a rather close often elongated raceme; calyx-tube hemispheric, 4 mm. long, the lobes linear-lanceolate, 8 mm. long; corolla bright red, 2 cm. long, the tube narrow, the lobes about 8 mm. long; seeds oblong, somewhat rugose-tubercu- late. Along streams in wet places in the upper portions of the chaparral belt of the San Bernardino and Cuyamaca Mountains. 5. PALMERELLA Gray. Slender erect or spreading herbs, glabrous or nearly so, with mostly lanceolate entire or serrate leaves, and blue flowers in short terminal racemes. Calyx-tube tur- binate, the lobes slender. Corolla-tube elongated, linear and straight, not at all dilated at the throat ; the short limb abruptly spreading ; 2 lobes small, spatulate-linear and recurving, the 3 larger obovate or oblong, slightly united at the base. Filaments more or less adnate to Compositae .">*<) the corolla up to near the throat, then monadelphous ami free, or adnate on 1 side only; anthers oblong, the ."> larger naked, the 2 shorter tipped with a tuft of very short bristles. Ovary and capsule as in Lobelia. 1. L. debilis serrata Gray. Stems simple or rarely branched above, 2-6 dm. high, very leafy, glabrous except the inflorescence, this puberulent; cauline leaves lanceolate-linear or lanceolate, the lower broader, spatulate to obovate, all sharply serrate, the uppermost passing into slender bracts; racemes few-many- flowered; pedicels slender ; calyx-lobes narrowly-subulate, twice the length of the tube, and nearly equaling the corolla; corolla- tube slender, 2 cm. long, in age splitting up from the base as in Lobelia, pale blue; the larger lobes deep violet, 6-8 mm. long. Frequent in moist places in the canyons of the San Gabriel and Santa Ana Mountains. Family 0."). COMPOSITAE. Sunflower Family. Annual or perennial herbs or shrubs with alternate or opposite leaves. Flowers in heads, borne on the enlarged summit of the peduncle (receptacle) and surrounded by the bracts of the involucre. Receptacle naked or with bracts subtending the flowers or with bristles among the flowers. Calyx-tube united with the ovary, the limb when present called pappus, and consisting of awns, hairs, bristles, scales or paleae. Corolla tubular and 5-toothed or 5-lobed, or the limb strap-shaped (ligulate) and toothed or entire at the apex, those of a head all tubular, all ligulate or of both kinds. When both kinds are present the marginal ones are ligulate and are called ray-flowers, .the inner are tubular and are called disk- flowers. Stamens 5 ; filaments free ; anthers united and forming a tube, or nearly or quite free in Ambrosiae and the filaments more or less cohering. Styles 2-lobed, the lobes stigmatic on the inner surface. Ovary 1-celled, becoming an achene in fruit. Pappus commonly per- sistent. 390 Eupatorieae KEY TO THE TRIBES. - all alike, composed of both ray- anil disk-flowers orof disk-flowers only. I tiers not caudate at base. Receptacle naked. Hi acts of the involucre well-imbricated. Style-branches stigmatic only below the middle; flowers never yellow; rays none. l. Eopatobieae Style-branches of the perfect flowers stigmatic to or above the midclk-, the upper sterile portion forming a flattened ap- pendage. '.'. AsTEKKAE Style-branches stigmatic up to the truncate apex. Bracts herbaceous; herbage not aromatic. T. Hki.knieae. Bracts with soarlous margins; herbage aromatic or strong- scented. 8. ANTHEMIDEAB. Bracts usually in 1 series: pappus generally capillary. 'J. Sl'.NF.CIOXKAE. Receptacle fimbrillate. 7. Hei.enieak. Receptacle chaffy. Bracts of the involucre not scarious. Bracts of the involucre in a single series, more or less enclosing tin' ray achenes. 6. Madieae. Bracts of the involucre in 2 or more series not enfolding the ray- aohenes. 5. Helianthb w. Bracts of the involucre scarious, at least on the margins. 8. ANTHEMIDEAE. Anthers caudate at base. Anthers not appendaged at apex: involucre usually scarious. 3. INULEAE. Anthers appendaged at apex; bracts usually spinescent. Corollas regular, all tubular. 10, iynareae. Corollas Slipped: rays wanting. 11. Mi'tisieae. Heads of 2 kinds: staminate heads clustered above the pistillate, anthers more or less free ; pistillate heads few-flowered, flowers completely enclosed in tin- prickly involucre. -1. AUBROS1EAB. II- ads all alike, composed of ligulate flowers only. 12. ClCBOBIEAE. Tribe 1. EUPATORIEAE. Eupatoey Tribe. Ours herbs or suffrutesceni plants with white or flesh- colored perfect disk-flowers and no rays. Receptacle naked. Anthers not caudate at base. Style-branches si igmatic only below the middle. Achene L'EUPATOBIUM. s H>-ribbed. 2. Coj.eosanthus. 1. EUPATORIUM L. Erecl mostly branching perennial herbs, with opposite verticillate or alternate often punctate leaves, and cymose-paniculate discoid heads of white blue or purple Eupatory Tribe 391 flowers. Envblucre oblong to hemispheric, its bracts im- bricated in 2-several series. Receptacle flat, convex or conic, naked. Corolla regular, its Lobes Blender, 5-lobed or 5-toothed. Style-branches flattened above, stigmatic at the base Achenes 5-angled, truncate. Pappus of numerous capillary usually scabrous bristles, arranged in a single i'"\\ . 1. E. Pasadense Parish. Stems slender ami apparently her- baceous, glandular-puberulent ; upper leaves opposite, short- petioled, ovate-deltoid, acute at apex, cordate at base, serrate, thin, minutely atomiferous beneath; cymes rather compact, on dichotomous peduncles longer than the leaves; pedicels 1 cm. long, with 2-3 linear bracts ; heads 20-30-flowered ; involucral bracts lanceolate, firm, 4 mm. long, prominently 2-ribbed, the acute tips softer; corolla 4-5 mm. long, glabrous, white, the fili- form tube twice the length of the abrubtly expanded throat; pappus scabrous, equaling the corolla, early deciduous; achenes smooth, 5-angled, slightly arcuate, 1.5 mm. long; receptacle somewhat rounded. Wet bank of a pool in a canyon south of Pasadena, McClatchie. 2. COLEOSANTHUS Cass. Herbaceous perennial or partly shrubby plants, with opposite or alternate leaves and discoid heads of whitish or pink flowers in panicles or cymes. Involucral bracts well-imbricated in several series, striate. Receptacle flat or convex. Achenes 10-striate or -ribbed. Pappus a single mw of numerous rough or serrate bristles. 1. C. Californicus (T. & G.) Kuntze. Shrubby at base, 6-9 dm. high, paniculately branched; herbage somewhat glandular- puberulent; leaves alternate, ovate, somewhat triangular or slightly cordate, obtuse, irregularly crenate-toothed, 3-ribbed from the base, veiny, roughish, 2-4 cm. long, short-petioled ; heads spicate or racemose along leafy branches, about 1 cm. high, 10-15-flowered ; involucral bracts with thinnish, mostly obtuse straight tips. (Brickellia Californica Gray.) Occasional in the canyons of the San Gabriel and Santa Ana Mountains. 392 Astm-ac 2. C. Nevinii (Gray) Kuntze. Herbage white-woolly ; leaves repandodentate ; heads 30-40-tiowered ; otherwise as in the last. Newhall, Ni sin. Tribe 2. ASTEREAE. Asteb Tribe. Animal or perennial herbs or rarely shrubs, with usu- ally scentless herbage and alternate leaves. Receptacle naked. Bracts of the involucre commonly well-imbri- cated. Disk-flowers commonly yellow. Hays presenl oi wanting. Anthers not caudate. Pappus of bristles or awns. Pollen grains echinate. Pappus of several caducous awns: heads large. 3. Ghindki.ia. Pappus of several short scales; heads small. 4. GtTTIERREZIA. Pappus of a few persistent slender bristles. 5. Pentachaeta. Pappus of many persistent slender bristles. Rays present, yellow. Rays without pappus. 6. HETEROTHECA. Rays with pappus like that of disk-flowers. Pappus of 2 kinds, the outer short and scale-like. T. Chkysopsis. Pappus of 1 kind only. Perennial glabrous or pubescent herbs. Heads small, in scorpioid racemes. 8. SOLIDAGO. Heads small in corymbose panicles. 9. Euthamia. Evergreen woody plants with punctate, flat or terete leaves. 10. Chrtsom \ Rays present, not yellow. Pappus rusty-brown; anthers with slender appendages at apex. 14. COKETHKoGYNE. Pappus dull white. Bracts in more than 2 series. 15. Aster. Bracts in 1-2 series. Rays exceeding the disk. 16. ERIGERON. Rays inconspicuous, shorter than the disk. IT. Leptilon. Rays none. Outer flowers enlarged and more deeply cleft on the inner side. 13 Lessingia. Outer flowers not enlarged. Flowers yellow. Herbage glandular and glutinous. 12, Hazardia, Mi-rbai.'"- pubi-scent. 11. ISOCOHA. Flowers not yellow Outer flowers pistillate, truncate; inner hermaphrodite. 18. OONY/.A. Dioecious shruiis or perennial herbs. 19. Baooharib, Aster Tribe 393 3. GRINDELIA Willd. Coarse perennial herbs or suffrutescent plants with sessile rigid mostly serrate leaves and rather large hemi- spheric heads terminating corymbose branches. Invo- lucral bracts with usually narrow herbaceous Bquarrose- recurved tips. Flowers of both ray and disk many, permanently yellow. Style-appendages lanceolate or linear. Achenes short, thick, compressed or turgid, truncate, glabrous. Pappus of 2-8 deciduous stout awns or bristles. 1. G. camporum Greene. Herbaceous; stems white and shin- ing, tufted from a perennial root, about 6 dm. high, glabrous, very leafy up to the loosely corymbose heads, even the branches of the corymb conspicuously leafy-bracted ; basal leaves almost wanting; stem leaves oblanceolate-spatulate, sessile and clasping, 5 cm. long, saliently serrate-toothed ; bracts of flowering branches nearly entire, spreading; involucre 12-20 mm. wide, its bracts with long linear recurved tips; ray-achenes obscurely 3-sided with 3 or more pappus awns; disk-achenes compressed, obliquely biauriculate or unidentate at the summit. Adobe mesas near Wiseburn. June-August. 2. G. robusta Xutt. Stems herbaceous, stout, ascending from a perennial root, about 5 dm. high ; leaves broadly cordate-oblong, obtuse, coarsely serrate, about 3.5 cm. long, often 2.5 cm. broad, subcoriaceous, pubescent on the margins, otherwise glabrous; heads very few, large, corymbosely disposed; outer bracts of involucre rather leafy, the others narrow and squarrose; pappus awns 2. Open grounds about Los Angeles and toward the coast. First collected at San Pedro by Nuttall. May-July. 3. G. cuneifolia Nutt. Bushy and suffrutescent, 6-12 dm. high, glabrous; leaves thickish and rather fleshy, 7-10 cm. long, cuneate-spatulate to linear-oblong, entire or sparsely dentate, clasping at the broad base; involucre about 12 mm. high, glutin- ous, its bracts all with squarrose green tips ; pappus awns usually several, compressed barbellulate. Borders of salt marshes along the coast. September-November. ."'.'I Astereae 4. GUTIERREZIA Lag. Herbaceous or suffrutescent3 freely branching, some- what resiniferous, nearly glabrous plants, with alternate linear entire leaves, and numerous small heads corym- bosely arranged at the ends of the branches, [nvolucral bracts coriaceous, the outer successively shorter. Ray- and disk-flowers yellow. Achenes angled or striate, mostly silky. Pappus paleaceous. 1. G. divergens Greene. Suffrutescent, 4-7 dm. high, gla- brous or merely granular-scaberulous, the panicled branches nearly destitute of foliage at flowering time; involucres ti mm. high, obovate-turbinate, their obovate obtuse bracts well-imbri- cated and with blunt green tips ; disk-flowers 5-7 ; rays about 5; palese of the pappus 9-12, very unequal, narrow and acute. Commou on the interior plains and foothills, especially common on the fans at the base of the mountains. July-August. 5. PENTACHAETA Nutt. Small slender nearly glabrous annuals, with alternate linear entire leaves, and mostly small heads solitary or somewhat clustered at the ends of more or less naked branches. Involucre hemispheric or campanulate, its bracts in 2 series, scarious-margined, appressed, mucro- aate. Ray-flowers white, yellow or wanting. Disk-flowers yellow, very slender. Style-appendages filiform-subulate, hispid. Achenes pubescent. Pappus of 3-5 slender bristles. 1. P. aurea Nutt. Diffusely branching, 1-3 dm. high, sonie- wliu! bilious-pubescent; heads about 10-15 mm. broad, many- flowered; flowers all yellow; rays obtuse, 20 or more; involucral bracts broadly lanceolate, setaceously acuminate, with green middle portion and scarious margins; achenes somewhat villous- pubescenl ; pappus bristles 5-8. Arroyo s^cn, David on Frequent In the Santa Ana Mountains and com- mon throughout the coast slope of San I tiego ' "imty. Aster Tribe 395 2. P. Lyoni r short peduncle; in- volucre hirsute ; its bracts linear-lanceolate and of nearly equal length,green, with narrow scarious margins; pappus-bristles 9-1 1 or commonly 12. San Pedro; Santa Catalina Island, Lyon. Not seen by us. The above is a copy of the original descript Ion. 6. HETEROTHECA Nutt. Annual or biennial hirsute herbs, with alternate Leaves and a terminal corymbose panicle of middle-sized heads, [nvolucre ovate, its bracts closely imbricated in many series, withoui spreading tips. Flowers yellow, those of the ray pistillate, of the disk perfect. Style-appendages of the disk-flowers ovate or lanceolate. Achenes com- pressed, pubescent, those of the ray thin-triquetrous, with caducous pappus or none. Pappus of disk-achenes of an outer series of sparse short bristles and an inner series of copious longer ones. 1. H. grandifolia Nutt. Annual or biennial, 1-2 in. high, hirsute, the inflorescence viscid and strong-scented; stem leaves oval or oblong, coarsely toothed, partly vertical by a twist in tbe petiole, this bearing at base 2 stipuliform lobes; involucre about 1 cm. high ; ray-achenes without pappus; those of the disk with but faint traces of the outer and shorter bristles. Frequent in waste places in sandy soil. June-November, or in favored places flowering throughout the year. 7. CHRYSOPSIS Ell. Low perennial herbs or somewhat suffrutescent, with sessile usually entire leaves, and middle-sized heads ter- minating corymbose or fastigiate branches. Involucre ovate or broader, its bracts narrow, regularly imbricated in several series. Flowers yellow. Style-appendages linear-filiform to slender-subulate. Achenes compressed, obovate to linear-fusiform. Pappus brownish, of many • ''•,|'' Astereae capillary scabrous bristles, with or without an outer series of short bristles of paleae. 1. C. sessilifolia Nutt. Slender, sparsely pilose-hispid, viscid- glandular ; leaves oblanceolate, sharply pointed, the longest often 3-4 cm. long; corymbose branches ending in about 3 subsessile heads; these about 12 mm. high, leafy-bracted at base; involu- cral bracts viscid-glandular; achenes slender-fusiform, silky- pubescent; outer pappus slenderly squamellate* Along the coast, Davidson. 2. C. fastigiata Greene. Stems several, ascending, 3-0 dm. high, rigid and brittle, densely clothed with small ascending, erect leaves; these strongly crisped, 12 mm. long or less, sessile, acute, densely silky-tomentose on both sides; heads narrow, numerous, in a fastigiate corymb at the ends of the branches ; bracts of the narrow turbinate involucre rather softly strigose-pubescent; rays few, short and inconspicuous; achenes silky-villous ; outer series of pappus wanting. Frequent on dry plains and in the lower portions of the chaparral belt. 8. SOLIDAGO Vail. Goldexrod. Strict simple-stemmed perennial herbs, with alternate more or less serrate leaves, and many small heads in ter- minal clusters which are usually in scorpioid racemes and forming a panicle. Involucre narrow, its bracts in 2 or more series, neither herbaceous-tipped nor glutinous. Flowers all permanently yellow, the outer and ligulate shorter, the inner narrow-funnelform. Style-appendages lanceolate. Achenes terete or prismatic, 5-10-nerved, glabrous or pubescent. Pappus a series of unequal sca- brous permanently white bristles. 1. S. confinis Gray. Glabrous, or the inflorescence some- times minutely pubescent, 4-9 dm. high ; leaves lanceolate, the stem leaves shorter, about 5-8 cm. long, the basal often oblanceo- late or obovate, heads about 4 mm. long, crowded in a dense oblong panicle, not secund ; rays not surpassing the disk-flowers ; achenes canescently pubescent. Occasional in low marshy places. Clenega; San Bernardino. July-Octo- ber. Aster Tribe 397 L'. S. Californica Nutt. Roughish with an almost cinereous short pubescence, 6-9 dm. high; leaves larger and more numer- ous below, passing from obovate to oblong-lanceolate, and from obtuse to acute, the lower and broader more or less serrate; panicle virgate, rather loose, the racemiform clusters secund; heads (i mm. high ; bracts lanceolate-oblong or oblong-linear, obtusish; rays 7-12; achenes pubescent. Frequent in open places in the lower portions of the chaparral belt in the San < labriel and Santa Ana Ranges. June-October. 9. EUTHAMIA Cass. Erect glabrous perennial very leafy more or less dis- tinctly corymbose branched herbs, with narrow entire pellucid-punctate leaves, and small heads clustered at the ends of the branches. Involucral bracts firm, im- bricated, glutinous. Ray-flowers about twice as many as disk-flowers, all permanently yellow. Achenes short, turbinate, villbus-pubescent. 1. E. occidentalis Nutt. Somewhat paniculately branching, 1-2 m.high; leaves lanceolate-linear, obscurely 3-nerved ; involu- cral bracts linear-lanceolate, acute ; rays 10-30 ; disk-flowers 8-14, their style-tips obtuse. Frequent in low ground and along streams in our valleys and foothills. August-November. 10. CHEYSOMA Nutt. Low evergreen shrubs with mostly narrow Bubterete punctate leaves and terminal cymose or corymbose clusters of small heads. Involucre turbinate, its bracts mostly lanceolate, very regularly imbricated, margins subscarious. Flowers permanently yellow. Disk-flowers slender with subcampanulate throat and deeply clefl limb. Style-appendages filiform, acuminate, hirsutulous. Achenes more or less distinctly prismatic. Pappus of scabrous slender bristles, dull-white or yellowish, becom- ing reddish. 398 A-stereae * Leave* lint. 1 . C. Parishii ( rreene, Arborescent, 2-4 m. high ; leaves lanceo- late, 3-5 cm. lung, 6-10 mm. wide, acute, subcoriaceous, strongly punctate, glutinous; heads numerous in crowded corymbs, termi- nating tbi' erect branches, small, 10-12-flowered ; involucre tur- binate; the bracts few, irregularly imbricated, lanceolate, acute, with a green midrib; achenes turbinate, minutely silky. (Bige- Imitt Parishii Greene.) Occasional in the lower portions of the chaparral belt of the San Gabriel, San Bernardino and Santa Ana Ranges. August-October. 2. C. cuneata (Gray) Greene. Freely branching and spread- ing, about .'5 dm. high; leaves coriaceous, cuneate-obovate or spatulate-obovate, often retuse, 10-14 mm. long, resinous-punctate, glutinous; heads about 12 mm. high, in a terminal fasciculate corymb; bracts lanceolate or linear, obtusish ; rays 1-5 or none; achenes pubescent. (Aplopappus cuneatus Gray.) On rocky ledges in the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains ** Leaves very narrow and subterete. 3. C. ericoides (Less.) Greene. Diffusely branching, 8 dm. high or less, the branches fastigiate-corymbose, very leafy through- out; leaves linear, terete, those of the branches about 1 cm. long, derlexed, bearing in their axils very short branehlets bidden by 2-ranked closely imbricated shorter ones; involucres turbinate, about (> mm. high ; bracts tomentose-ciliate, all erect, the outer successively shorter, becoming greenish and passing into the very short leaves; rays about 3-5, short; achenes glabrous. {Ericameria microphylla Nutt.) Frequent on bluffs and saod-dunes along the seashore. 4. C. Palmeri (Gray) Greene. Paniculately much branched, about 1 m. high or less; leaves all filiform terete, those of the branches about 2 cm. long; lower bracts of the involucre green- ish-tipped; rays 3-4; achenes pubescent. (Aplopappus Palmeri Gray.) Occasional in the foothills about Los Angeles and San Diego. 5. C. pinifolia (Gray) Greene. Rather stout, with rigid, erecl branches, 15 dm. higb or less; stem-leaves filiform, 2.5 cm. r more, mucronate ; heads rather few in a contracted panicle, or scattered, campanulate; proper bracts of the involucre broadly Aster Tribe 399 lanceolate and with a greenish midrib, the loose outer ones subu- late, shorter than the inner and passing into the small leaves of the flowering branchlets; rays usually <>-i0; achenes glabrous or nearly so. (Aplopappus pinifolius Gray.) Frequent in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains in the lower alti tudes of the chaparral belt. August-Xovember. 11. ISOCOMA Nutt. Rather rigid tufted erect suffrutescenl plants, with thick leaves and a corymbose terminal cluster of rather small rayless heads. Involucral bracts coriaceous, closely imbricated, the tips herbaceous, appressed; Corollas permanently yellow; tube slender; limb ventricose, its segments more or less connivent about the style. Style- appendages ovate or somewhat narrower, pubescent. Achenes short, compressed or subterete, silky-pubescent. Pappus-bristles numerous, unequal, the inner longest and often flattened and awn-like, faintly scabrous. 1. I. vernonioides Nutt. Glabrous or commonly loosely pubescent, 6-12 dm. high, erect; leaves oblanceolate, more or less serrate, 2-4 cm. long, often with many fascicled ones in their axils; heads 8 mm. high, campanulate; bracts of the involucre obtusish ; pappus-bristles stout, none very perceptibly flattened. (Bigelovia veneta Gray.) Common on dry hillsides and plains. Santa Monica; Los Angeles; Santa Ana Mountains; San Joaquin Hills. July-November. 12. HAZARDIA Greene. Low shrubs or stiff rutescent plants, with subcoriaceous more or less persistent toothed or serrate leaves, and spicate or somewhat thyrsoidly congested heads. Invo- lucre oblong or obconic, its numerous bracts in many series, often with squarrose-spreading tips. Heads 20-40- flowered. Rays yellow or none. Disk-corollas narrow. merely 5-toothed, yellow, changing to red or brown. Style-tips linear-subulate. Achenes fusiform, slightly compressed, few-nerved. Pappus reddish. 400 Astereae 1. H. squarrosa (H. & A.) Greene. Suffrutescent, erect, 6-10 dm. high, glandular and glutinous; leaves oblong, about 2 cm. long, spinuloae-dentate ; heads many, spicately thyreoid toward tbe summit of the branches, 1 cm. long; bracts of the involucre rigid, appressed, in many series, their tips abruptly spreading; rays none; achenes sparsely pubescent. (Aplopappu* squarrosM H. & A.) Occasional on dry hillsides throughout our range. November. 13. LESSINGIA Cham. More or less floccose-woolly and sometimes glandular annuals, wit li alternate more or less serrate leaves, and small cymosely panicled Beads. Flowers yellow or often whitish or purplish, all perfeet. Corollas with slender tube and long narrow lobes, the outer ones more deeply cleft on one side and imitating a palmatifid ligule. In- volucre campanulate or turbinate, its bracts much imbri- cated, appressed, herbaceous tipped. Anthers with slender subulate appendages. Style-appendages obtuse or truncate, densely hispid, often with a setiform cusp among th<' hairs. Achenes turbinate or cuneiform, silky-villous. Pappus-bristles rigid, scabrous, red or brownish. 1. L. glandulifera Gray. Stems diffusely branched from a sbort erect stem, 1.5-2.5 dm. long, glabrous or glabrate above; basal leaves oblanceolate, pinnatifid, the lower stem leaves spiuulose-dentate, those of the branches 5 mm. long or less, thick and rigid, ovate-lanceolate or oblong, the margins commonly beset with yellowish tack-shaped glands; involucre campanulate or turbinate, its bracts appressed, some or all gland uliferous ; flowers yellow. Common on the dry interior plains of our region. June-September. 14. CORETHROGYNE DC. Perennial herbs covered with a white woolly torn en turn at Leasl when young. Inflorescence glandular. Leaves alternate entire or serrate, heads middle-sized, solitary, Aster Tribe tOl corymbose or panicled. [nvolucre hemispheric to turbi- nate, its bracts much imbricated, scarious excepl the herbaceous tips. Receptacle pitted. Ray-flowers sterile. Anthers appendaged at the apex. Style-appendages comose or \\ Lth a bearded tuft. 1. C. virgata Benth. Stems erect, often 1 m. high; herbage iluccuse-woolly ; leaves narrowly obovate to oblanceolate, serrate- toothed above; inllorescence a large virgate panicle, viscid with short-stalked glands, usually bearing many heads; involucre turbinate-campanulate, LO-12 mm. broad. ; bracts rather broadly linear, their tips usually somewhat reflexed. Common ill sandy soil near the coast. June-August. i'. C. virgata Bernardina. Stems erect or ascending, 6-8 dm. high; herbage densely floccose-woolly ; leaves oblanceolate <>r oblong, serrate-toothed above; inflorescence somewhat virgate- branched; heads not numerous, only the involucres and the uppermost portion of the peduncles glandular ; involucres turbi- nate-campanulate, 6-8 mm. broad; bracts narrowly linear, their tips somewhat recurved. Common on the dry plains of the interior valleys, especially in the San Bernardino Valley. The type of this variety is the author's no. 2931, collected at Mentone. 15. ASTER L. Leafy stemmed autumnal perennial or rarely annual herbs with alternate leaves and panicled or somewhat corymbose heads. Involucre hemispheric to campanu- la!-, its bracts imbricated in several series, tips herbace- ous. Ray-flowers many, commonly bluish or pinkish, pistillate. Disk-flowers perfect, yellow changing to red- purple ; corolla-tube slender ; limb funnelform. Style- branches flattened, their appendages subulate, lanceo- late or ovate, acute. Pappus-bristles slender, numerous, scabrous, usually in 1 series, dull white. * Perennials. 1. A. Menziesii Lindl. Strictly erect, about 4-6 dm. high, usually simple and very leafy up to the mostly simply racemose or 402 Astereae racemose-paniculate inflorescence, the whole plant cinereously and roughly pubescent; leaves oblong-lanceolate, acute, 5-7.5 cm. long, remotely and faintly serrate; heads numerous in an ample cymose panicle; involucres nearly hemispheric, about 6 mm. high; bracts in rather few series, spatulate-linear, very obtuse, wholly green-herbaceous; rays dull pale purplish. Occasional on dry wooded hills about Los Angeles and eastward. L'. A. hesperius Gray. Stems paniculately branched, 6-10 dm. high, varying from nearly glabrous to scabrous-pubescent ; leaves lanceolate, entire or the larger with a few denticulations, 5-10 cm. long, 6-15 mm. wide; heads crowded, 8-10 mm. high : involucre of narrowly linear or more attenuate acute or gradually acuminate erect bracts, either unequal and imbricated or with some loose and slender herbaceous exterior ones which equal the inner; rays either white or violet, 6-8 mm. long. Cienega, near Los Angeles, and in low ground about San Bernardino. 3. A. Greatae Parish. Stems erect or assurgent, '4—17 dm. high, glabrous or above sparsely hirtellous; leaves thin, ovate, oblong-lanceolate or lanceolate, 6-15 cm. long, the scabrid mar- gins few-toothed or entire, the base clasping; the uppermost usually reduced to linear or linear-lanceolate bracts; heads 5 mm. high, in an ample panicle; involucral bracts loosely imbri- cated in a few series, lanceolate, green, minutely ciliate; rays 30-40, light purple, narrow, acute, 5-10 mm. long; achenes hir- sute. Occasional in the canyons of the San Gabriel Mountains, mostly in the upper portions of the chaparral belt. ** Annuals. 4. A. exilis Ell. Stem erect, 6-12 dm. high, rather stout be- low, paniculately branched above into numerous slender branches ; lower leaves lanceolate, the upper linear, mostly entire; heads small, numerous, about" mm. high, narrow; brads of the invo- lucre linear-subulate ; rays 15-40, bluish-purple or pinkish. i requenl in low subsaline places, especially along the ooast, A October. L6. ERIGERON L. Branching or scapose herbs, with alternate or basal leaves and corymbose, paniculate or solitary heads of both tubular and radiate flowers, [nvolucre hemispheric Aster Tribe 103 or campanulate, its bracts narrow, nearly equal, usu- ally imbricated in but 1 or - scries. Receptacle nearly flat, usually naked. Ray-flowers purplish or whitish. pistillate. Disk-flowers yellow, tubular, perfect, 5-lobed. Style-appendages short, mostly rounded or obtuse. Aehenes flattened, mostly 2-nerved. Pappus-bristles scabrous, in 1 series or with an outer shorter series. 1. E. Philadelphicus L. Perennial by stolons, soft-pubescent or sometimes nearly glabrous; stems slender, mostly branched above, 3-6 dm. high; lower leaves spatulate or obovate, obtuse, dentate, 2.5-7 cm. lorjg, narrowed into a short petiole; upper leaves clasping, often cordate at base, entire or dentate; heads several or many, corymbose-paniculate, 1-2 cm. broad ; peduncles slender, thickened at the summit; involucre depressed hemi- spheric : its bracts linear, usually scarious-margined ; rays 100-150, 4-s mm. long, light rose-purple; pappus simple; aehenes puberu- lent. Occasional in low moist ground. 2. E. foliosus Nutt. Scabrous and somewhat strigose-pubes- cent, 4-8 dm. high, leafy throughout ; leaves narrowly oblanceolate, entire, about 4 mm. broad, 3-6 cm. long, those of the branches reduced; heads hemispheric, 12-14 mm. broad; rays about 30, narrow, purple; aehenes with a few coarse bristly short hairs. Frequent in sandy soil toward the coast. 4. E. fragilis Greene. Stems erect, rigid, -5-7 dm. high, minutely scabrous, leafy; leaves linear-filiform, 3-5 cm. long, rigid, rough with minute incurved hairs; heads usually 10-15, arranged in a loose corymbose panicle on spreading branches; involucre campanulate, its bracts in about 3 series; rays 30-40, very narrow, deep violet; aehenes nearly glabrous. Frequent on the dry plains and foothills away from the coast. 17. LEPTILON Raf. Annual or biennial herbs with small racemose or panicled heads of white flowers. Involucre mostly cam- panulate, its narrow bracts in 2 or 3 series. Kays small, usually shorter than the diameter of the disk, pistillate, or none. Disk-flowers perfect, usually 4-toothed or 404 Astereae 4-lobed. Style-branches short. Achenes flattened. Pap- pus-bristles in 1 series. 1. L. Canadense (L.) Britton. Stem hispid-pubescent or gla- brate, 2 in. high or less, paniculate, much branched ; leaves usually pubescent or ciliate, the lower spatulate, dentate or entire, 5-10 cm. long, the upper linear and mainly entire; heads very numer- ous, about4 mm. broad ; involucre 2-3 nun. high ; its bract- linear, acute, glabrate, the outer shorter; rays numerous, white, shorter than the pappus and mostly shorter than their tubes. [Erigeron Canadense L.) A common weed iu waste places and cultivated fields. 18. CONYZA L. Ours a viscid pubescenl branching annual, with alter- nate leaves, and small many-flowered heads in a crowded thyrsoid leafy panicle. Involucre campanulate, its bracts narrow, appendiculate, in 2-3 series. Pistillate flowers much more numerous than the hermaphrodite, their filiform or slender corollas shorter than the disk and style, truncate or 2-4-toothed. Achenes small, com- pressed. Pappus a single series of soft capillary bristles. sometimes with an outer series of shorter ones. 1. C. Coulteri Gray, stems simple below, branching above, about 1 m. high or less, viscid-pubescent or hirsute, with many- jointed hairs; stemdeaves linear-oblong, the lower spatulate- oblong and with partly clasping base, dentate to laciniate-pinnat- ifid, 2.5-5 cm. long; involucre 3-4 mm. high, hirsute with soft spreading hairs ; flowers whitish ; corolla-tube of pistillate (lowers truncate, half the length of the style; hermaphrodite llowers only 5-7; achenes nearly glabrous; pappus bristles several, sca- brous. Occasional in BUbsaline places. July-September. 19. BACCHARIS L. Dioecious perennial herbs or shrubs, with alternate leaves and small paniculate or corymbose heads of tubu- lar flower.-. Involucre of scale-like imbricated bracts. Receptacle flat, naked. Corolla of the pistillate flowers Aster Tribe 405 slender, truncate or minutely toothed, thai of the stami- nate tubular, 5-lobed. Style-branches of the fertile flowers smooth exserted, those of the sterile flowers rudimentary, tipped with an ovate pubescent appendage. Achenes more or less compressed, ribbed. Pappus of the pistillate flowers copious, capillary, very fine and soft, becoming elongated in fruit, that of the staminate flowers shorter. * Achenes 10-nerved. 1. B. pilularis DC. Compactly branched evergreen shrub, 2-4 ni. high or lower and depressed when growing along the sea- shore; branchlets angular from the leaf-bases; leaves subcori- aceous. glutinous, 2 cm. long or less, cuneate-obovate, coarsely toothed or some entire; involucre nearly hemispheric, 4 mm. long, its bracts oval or oblong, all but the innermost very obtuse; flowers white; fertile pappus not over 8 mm. long. Near Santa Monica, Davidson. 2. B. Emoryi Gray. Erect with slender branches, 1-5 m. high ; leaves mostly oblong, or the lower broader, with attenuate or cuneate base and the larger somewhat petioled, more or less 3-nerved, often 2-4-toothed, pale ; those of the branches oblanceo- late-linear, mostly entire, 1-nerved ; involucre campanulate or oblong, 6-8 mm. long; bracts firm-coriaceous, the outermost oval obtusish, the innermost thin, bearded toward the tip; pappus of the pistillate 12 mm. long in fruit. In low ground toward the coast. Redondo; San Pedro: Santa Ana: San Bernardino. ** Aclienes 5-nerved (rarely 4-nerved . 3. B. Plummerae Gray. Loosely pubescent throughout, not at all glutinous; stems herbaceous from a woody base, 6-12 dm. high, somewhat branched; leaves linear-oblong, obtuse, irregu- larly and acutely serrate, 5 cm. long or less, obscurely 3-nerved ; heads 8 mm. long; involucral bracts linear; achenes somewhat compressed, puberulent, obscurely 5-nerved; pappus in fruit 8 mm. long. Topango Canyon. Davidson. 4. B. Douglasii DC. Glabrous and somewhat glutinous; stems herbaceous nearly or quite to the ground, erect, 12 dm. high or less, simple up to the terminal corymb ; leaves glutinous, Kit; Inuleae ovate-lanceolate, either entire or serrulate, 3-nerved from aear the base, 7-14 cm. long; heads about 6 mm. high; involucral bracts erose-ciliate, thin and pale with a greenish center; pappus of pistillate (lowers scarious, 4 mm. long, soft, of staminate clav- ellate and barbellate at the summit. Occasional along streams in our coast region. Ballona Creek; Los Angeles River. August-October. 5. B. glutinosa Pers. Stems herbaceous above, woody below, 1-3 m. high; branches striate-angled ; leaves very glutinous, lanceolate, acute, denticulate or repandodentate, 5-7 cm. long; heads in ample cymose panicles at the ends of simple slender branches, mostly 6 mm. high; involucre stramineous, destitute of green center or distinct costa. Occasional on borders of marshes. August-November. 6. B. viminea DC. Shrubby and willow-like, producing short lateral flowering branches, these terete and minutely striate; leaves narrowly lanceolate, entire or sparingly denticulate, ob- scurely 3-nerved, 5-7 cm. lon<_r; beads about 1 mm. high, hemi- spheric, in small cymose clusters; involucre tawny, destitute of green center or costa. Very common along all our streams throughout our range. April-July. Tribe 3. INULEAE. Everlasting Tribe. Annua] ot perennial mostly white-woolly plants, with alternate or opposite leaves and small dioecious heads, [nvolucral bracts often white or scarious, imbricated. Pistillate flowers mostly white, with filiform corollas. Anthers caudate at base, unappendaged at apex. Pappus capillary or none. Involucral bracts many; receptacle naked. Bracts dry, but not scarious. 80. Pluchba, Bracts scarious. 85. Ghaphalium. Involucral bracts few or none; receptacle chaffy. Bracts completely enclosing their achenes; pappus none. Achenes gibbous. 81. Uicbopus. Achenes Btraigbt or somewhat curved. Receptacle columnar. 82. BTTLOOLIHl Receptacle globose or ovoid. 88. PSILOCABPHTJS. ts of 2 kinds, the Lower completely enclosing their achenes; theothers chaff-like, surround ag a central duster of flowers. 84. PlLAQO Everlasting Tribe 407 20. PLUCHEA Cass. Herbs or shrubs with alternate leaves and small heads of tubular flowers in terminal cymose clusters, [nvolu- cra] bracts imbricated in several series, appressed, her- baceous. Receptacle flat. Outer flowers of the head pis- tillate, their corollas filiform, 3-clefl or dentate. Centra] flowers perfect, bu1 mostly sterile, their corollas 5-cleft. Achenes small. 4— 5-angled or sulcate. Pappus a -erics of capillary scabrous bristles. 1. P. sericea (Nutt.) Coville. (Abrowwood.) Shrub, 4 no. high or less, with suberect slender willowy branches, very leafy up to the cymose clusters of rather small heads; leaves silky- pubescent, 2.5-5 cm. long, linear-lanceolate, acute at both ends, entire : involucre campanulate ; outer bracts ovate, obtuse, tomen- tose; inner ones narrowly linear, deciduous; flowers whitish, tinged with purple or red; pappus copious, the bristles of the sterile flowers clavellate-dilated, of the fertile slender. (P. borealn Gray.) Rather common along the streams, especially in the interior valleys, May-July. 2. P. camphorata DC. Annual, stoutish, minutely and some- what viscid-pubescent, leafy, 6 dm. high; leaves oblong-ovate to oblong-lanceolate, acute at both ends, toothed or denticulate, the larger 7-12 cm. long, petioled ; beads short-pedicelled, dull purple, crowded in a corymbose cluster; bracts ovate to lanceolate, often colored. Occasional along streams and marshes about Los Angeles; Ballona Creek. 21. MICROPUS L. Low floccose annuals with alternate entire leaves and several-flowered scattered heads. Pistillate flowers in 1 or 2 series on a small receptacle, each enclosed in a con- duplicate bract which has a scarious, appendiculate lip. Hermaphrodite sterile flowers central, few, mostly naked. Involucre outside of the fruiting bracts scanty and scarious. Achenes gibbous, obovate, each enclosed in its bract and falling away with it. Pappus none. 408 [nuleae 1. M. Californicus F. iV M. Slender, erect. 1-:: dm. high; leaves mostly linear: fructiferous bracts 5-6, becoming firm-cori- aceous, Bomewhal semicordate or semiobovate in outline, straight anteriorly, the soon erect bract-like tip mostly scarious. Frequent on open hillsides in the Santa Monica Mountains and in the foothills about Los Angeles. 22. STYLOCLINE Nutt. Low and diffuse white-woolly annuals, with alternate leaves and terminal subglobose heads. Bracts of the involucre and of the receptacle deciduous with the mature fruit, those of the fertile flowers involute or sac- cate-conduplicate, embracing the obovate or oblong obcompressed achene : those of the sterile (lowers plane or concave. Pappus wanting in the fertile flowers, com- posed of a few caducous bristles in the sterile ones. 1. S. gnaphalioides Nutt. Stems 5-10 cm. long ; leaves linear or the upper oblong, obtuse; fruiting bract hyaline, broadly ovate, woolly on the hack. Occasional in open ground, on wooded slopes, and in the chaparral belt. April-June. 23. PSILOCARPHUS Xutt. Small, usually depressed and much branched floccose annual-, with opposite leaves and globose heads which are sessile in the axils or at the forks. Fruiting bracts numerous, crowded on the globular or oval receptacle, cucullate-saccate, semiobovate or semiohcordate, rounded at the tip. somewhat membranaceous, apex introrse, tin- ovate or oblong hyaline appendage indexed or erect. Achene loos,, within the bract, oblong or narrow, straight, slighl ly compressed. 1. P. globiferus Nutt. Branched from the base and spread- ing or prostrate ; leaves linear or narrowly spat ulate, the upper- most little surpassing the very woolly heads; achenes obovate- ohloni.', al'out 1 mm. long. Frequent on the plains and hills, especially In ex- located places April- May Everlasting Tribe 409 24. FILAGO L. Erect slender floccose-woolly annuals with alternate entire Leaves and small discoid heads in capitate lateral and terminal clusters. Bracts of the involucre few and scarious. Receptacle convex or Bubconic, chaffy, each chaff-scale subtending an achene. Outer flowers of the heads in several series, pistillate, their corollas filiform, minutely 2-4-dentate. Central flowers few, perfect, bu1 mainly sterile, their corollas tubular, 4-5-toothed. Achenes terete or slightly compressed. 1. F. Californica Nutt. Slender, erect, annual, 2 dm. high or usually less ; leaves linear or the lowest spatulate; heads ovate. slightly angular; pistillate Mowers 8-10-bracteate, their bracts broadly ovateand deeply boat-shaped, somewhat arcuate-incurved, very woolly, with broadish and obtuse hyaline tips; inner bracts oblong, concave, nearly glabrous; achenes narrowly oblong, minutely papillose-granular; pappus of the embraced none; of the others copious. Frequent on dry hillsides and plains, especially in sandy soil. April- June. 25. GNAPHALIUM L. Everlasting. Woolly erect or diffusely branched annual, biennial or perennial herbs with alternate leaves and discoid heads of pistillate and perfect flowers. Involucral bracts scarious. white or yellowish, imbricated. Recep- tacle flat, naked. Pistillate flowers in several series, their corollas filiform, minutely dentate or 3-4-lobed. Central flower- perfect, their corollas tubular, 5-toothed or 5-lobed. Achenes not ribbed. Pappus a single series of scabrous capillary bristles, sometimes thickened above. * Pappus-bristles not united at base. •*- More or less glandular-pubescent and heavy-scented. 1. G. ramosissimum Nutt. Biennial, erect, 6-15 dm. high, paniculately much branched above the middle ; the panicle often 410 Enuleae rather narrow and virgate; herbage glandular and very sweet- scented, only the stem slightly arachnoid : leaves green on hoth Bides, distinctly decurrent ; heads narrow, 4 mm. high, rose color; 1 Tacts ohlong-lanceolate, acutish. Occasional on wooded slopes about Pasadena and Los Angeles. 2. G. Californicum DC. Biennial, 6-10 dm. high, stoutish, corymbosely branched at the summit, hearing rather loose cymosely disposed clusters of broad heads; leaves lanceolate, gla- brate above, glandular and balsamic-scented, strongly adnate- decurrent; heads 5-7 mm. high, nearly as broad, white or yellow- ish ; outer bracts ovate or oblong, the inner acute. Rather common on the dry plains and foothills. April-July. 3. G. leucocephalum Gray. Perennial from a lignescentroot; Btems several, 4-6 dm. high, strict, mostly simple, very leafy; herbage white with close wool except the under sides of the leaves ; stem-leaves narrowly linear, attenuate, acute, erect, short- decurrent at the narrow base, viscid-glandular above; heads in a small close cyme; involucre broadly campanulate, much imbri- cated, pearly white; bracts ovate and oblong, obtuse. Occasional in dry washes. Santa Anita Wash, near Monrovia. *-■*- Not at all glandular or heavy-scented. 4. G. Chilense Spreng. Stems rather stout, from an annual or biennial root, 3-6 dm. high, loosely fioccose or the upper faces of the leaves often nearly glabrous; leaves lanceolate or the lower often spatulate or oblanceolate ; heads in close clusters at the ends of the corymbose branches ; involucre hemispheric, with a yellowish-green tinge; bracts oval or oblong, obtuse. Common along the seashore on the sand-dunes and frequent in our foot- hills and mountains, extending into the pine belt. •"). G. microcephalum Nutt. Biennial; stems slender with several erect branches, 5-8 dm. high, loosely corymbose-paniculate above, the whole herbage white with a persistenl wool, not at all glandular or heavy-scented; leaves linear or the Lower spatulate, slenderly decurrent; heads rather few or loose in the paniculately or cymosely disposed clusters; involucres ovate: bracts white, ovate or oblong, obtuse, except the inner. Frequenl In dry washes and In the ohaparral belt. June September. 1. G. palustre Nutt. bow, branching annual, 5-15 cm. high, fioccose with Long wool; leaves spatulate to oblong and lanceo- Ambrosiae 111 late; lieads glomerate, leafy-bracted ; involucres about - mm. high, embedded in loose wool; bracts linear, obtuse, brownish- green, tbe tips white. Occasional along river bottoms and on the margins of ponds. May- October. ** 1'appas united at the base, deciduous in a ring. •">. G. purpureum L. Biennial, simple or branching, erect or decumbent at tbe base, 2-3 dm. high, canescent with a dense close wool ; leaves spatulate, obtuse, usually becoming glabrate and green above; heads crowded in an elongated more or less interrupted spiciform inilorescence; involucre brownish ; achenes sparsely scabrous. Lincoln Park, Davidson. Tribe 4. AMBROSIAE. Ragweed Tribe. Herbs with mostly alternate leaves and greenish or white unisexual flowers. Staminate heads racemose or clustered above the few axillary pistillate ones. Pistil- late heads usually 2-flowered. destitute of pappus and corolla, completely enclosed by the more or less spiny involucre and becoming a bur in fruit. Staminate flowers many. Receptacle chaffy. Corolla present. Anthers distinct or scarcely coherent. Involucral bracts of staminate heads united. Involucres of pistillate heads armed near the apex with a single row of prickles. 36. Ambrosia. Involucre of pistillate heads armed with several rows of prickles. 27. Gaertneria. Involucral bracts of staminate heads distinct. 28. Xanthiu.m. 26. AMBROSIA L. Ragweed. Monoecious branching herbs or shrubs, with alternate or opposite, mostly lobed or divided leaves, and small heads of green flowers, the staminate spicate or racemose, the pistillate solitary or clustered in the upper axils. Involucre of the pistillate heads globose-ovoid, closed, 1-flowered, usually armed with 4-cS tubercles or spines; II "J Ambrosiae corolla none: pappus none, [nvolucre of the staminate heads hemispheric, 5-12-lobedj open, many-flowered ; corolla funnelform, 5-toothed ; anthers scarcely coherent, mucronate-tipped. 1 . A. psilostachya DC. Stems erect from horizontal root- stocks, 5-8 dm. high, with strigose pubescence and somewhat scabrous; leaves once or twice pinnatifid; fruit mostly solitary in the axils, turgid-ovoid, about 3 nun. long, obtusely short- pointed, rugose-reticulate, either unarmed or with 4 short or Bharp tubercles. A common weed in low ground, especially in our coast valleys. June- September. 27. GAERTNERIA Med. 1 1 is] iid or tomentose branching herbs, sometimes woody at the base, with mostly alternate lobed or divided leaves, and small monoecious greenish heads of discoid flowers, the staminate in terminal spikes or racemes, the pistillate solitary or clustered in the upper axils. Invo- lucre of the pistillate heads ovoid or globose, closed, 1-4- celled, l-1-beaked, armed with several rows of spines and forming a burinfruit; corolla none; style-branches exserted : achenes obovoid, thick, solitary in the cells ; pappus none. Staminate heads sessile or short-ped- uncled, their involucres broadly hemispheric, open 5-12- lobed ; receptacle chaffy ; corolla, regular, with short tul"' and 5-lobed limb ; anthers scarcely coherent, mucronate-tipped. 1. G. tenuifolia (Gray) Kuntze. Perennial, erect, 4-15 dm, high, leafy throughout, hispid or varying to glabrate; leaves mostly 2-3-pinnately parted or dissected into narrow oblong or linear lobes, the narrow rachis often with a few interposed small lobes, the terminal elongated ; staminate racemes elongated and paniculate; pistillate beads in numerous ^lomerules below, in fruit minutely glandular, about 2 mm. long, armed with (1-18 Bhorl and stout incurving spines, their tips usually hooked and Kagweed Tribe II:'. with an excavated cartilaginously bordered areola about each. Franteria tenuifolia Gray.) Rather common about Cahuenga Pass. 2. G. acanthicarpa (Hook.) Britton. Annual, diffuse, hir- sute or hispid; the stems and branches 3-10 dm. long; leaves ovate "i" roundish in outline, 2.5-7 cm. broad, bipinnatifid ; sterile racemes numerous, short; fruiting involucre 6-8 mm. high, with Hat lanceolate-subulate spines. (Franseria acanthicarpa Hook.) Not uncommon on the dry plains of the interior valleys. July-September. 3. G. bipinnatifida (Nutt.) Kuntze. Perennial, procumbent ; stems 6-10 dm. long, hirsute; leaves ovate in outline, 2.5-5 cm. long, 2-3-pinnately parted, with oblong lobes, canescent with soft tomentum or finely hirsute ; staminate spikes or racemes dense ; fruiting involucre ovate-fusiform, 6-8 mm. long, armed with rather short and thick llattish spines, their acute tips somewhat incurved. (Franseri" bipinnatifida Nutt.) Common along the seashore on beach sands and on the sand-dunes. Flowering nearly throughout the year. 28. XANTHIUM L. Cockle-bur. Monoecious annual branching coarse rough or spiny herbs, with alternate lobed or dentate leaves, and rather small heads of greenish flowers, the staminate ones capi- tate-clustered at the ends of the branches, the pistillate axillary. Involucre of the staminate heads with short distinct bracts in 1-3 scries; receptacle chaffy; corolla tubular, 5-toothed ; anthers not coherent, mucronate at apex ; filaments united. Involucre of pistillate heads ovoid or oblong, closed, covered with hooked Bpines, 1-2- beaked, 2-celled, each cell containing 1 ovoid or oblong achene ; corolla none ; pappus none. 1. X. spinosum L. Widely branching from the base, about 6 dm. high; leaves ovate-lanceolate, more or less lobed or pinna- tifid, glabrate and green above, white-tomentose beneath ; axils each with a short-stalked sponged yellow spine about 2 cm. long; burs about 10 mm. long, armed with short weak prickles. Frequent along roadsides and in waste places. August-October. 414 Heliantheae 2. X. Canadense Mill. Stems stout, branched above ; leaves broad-ovoid, slightly lobed, rough-scabrous; Imrs about '2 cm. long, densely beset with stoutish hooked prickles and strongly 2-horned at the apex. Rather common in low ground, especially in sandy soil. July-October. Tribe 5. HELIANTHEAE. Sunflower Tribe. Herbs or somewhat shrubby plants with opposite or basal leaves, and commonly balsamic-resinous juice. Rays present, usually showy. Involucral bracts her- baceous or foliaceous. Receptacle chaffy ; chaff sub- tending each flower. Pappus paleaceous, of rigid awns or cup-like, or rarely of rather stout plumose bristles. Rays usually present. Rays usually present; pappus paleaceous. Involucral bracts imbricated in several series. Rays sterile. Achenes quadrangular-compressed, glabrous. 29. HELIANTHUS. Achenes flattened, villous, cilate on the margins. 30. Encelia. Rays fertile 31. Verbesina. Involucral bracts of 2 dissimilar series. Rays present, fertile. 38. LEPTOSYNE. Rays sterile or none. 33. BlDENS. Rays wanting; pappus of plumose bristles. 3-1. BEBBTA. 29. HELIANTHUS L. SUNFLOWER. Im-cc1 annual or perennial herbs, with opposite or alternate simple leaves, and large peduncled corymbose or military heads of both tubular and ray-flowers, the rays yellow, the disk yellow brown or purple, [nvolu- cre hemispheric or depressed, its bracts imbricated in several series. Receptacle Hat, convex or conic, chaffy, the chaff subentire. Ray-flowers sterile. Disk-flowers perfect, with short tube and 5-lobed Limb. Style-branches tipped with hirsute appendages. Achenes thick, oblong or obovate, compressed or somewh.it 4-angled. Pappus of 2 scales or awns, or sometimes with "J-l additional shorter ones, deciduous. Sunflower Tribe 415 1. H. annuus L. Robust, hispid or scabrous; stems often 2.5 cm. high, thick, mottled or spotted with purple; leaves all but t lie lowest alternate, acute or acuminate, more or less regu- larly dentate or denticulate, 10-25 cm. Long, petiolate; involu- cral bracts broadly ovate to oblong, aristiform-acuminate ; disk 2 cm. broad or more, dark purple or brown; rays often 5 cm. long. A common weed in all the valleys. 2. H. Oliveri Gray. Rather stout, 2-4 m. high, leafy through- out, soft-villous and somewhat tomentose, not at all roughened ; haves all alternate, lanceolate, 10-17 cm. long, tapering to an acute point, and at base into a short-margined petiole, nearly entire, obscurely 3-nerved near the base; involucre villous, its bracts linear-subulate, not surpassing the disk; rays 2.5 cm. long; palea of pappus subulate from broad base. Cienega; East Los Angeles. 3. H. Parishii Gray. Stems slender, 2-5 m. high, simple or branched above; leaves elongated-lanceolate, softly cinereous- puberulent or canescent beneath, scabrous above; heads 10-15 mm. high ; rays 20-35 mm. long; involucral bracts linear-subulate, longer than the disk, villous toward the base; disk-corollas with a silky-villous ring or 2 tufts above the short proper tube ; palea? of the pappus slender-subulate. Oak Knoll. Grant. Rather frequent in the San Bernardino Valley. 30. ENCELIA Adans. Herbs or low shrubs with alternate or opposite leaves, and usually with large peduncled heads of both ray- and disk-flowers, the rays neutral yellow, the disk yellow or brownish, perfect. Receptacle flat, convex or conic, chaffy ; chaff usually soft and mainly scarious. Achenes flattened, thin-edged, often villous. Pappus none or an awn or its rudiment to each margin of the wingless achene. 1. E. Californica Nutt. Woody at base, branched above, 6-12 dm. high, strong-scented, minutely pubescent; leaves ovate to oblong-lanceolate, rarely denticulate or toothed, about 5 cm. long, green and glabrate; heads commonly solitary, the disk about 2 cm. broad, brownish or purplish; involucre white- villous ; rays Hi; Eeliantheae 16-20, 2.5 cm. 1 < m lt or more, golden-yellow ; achenefl obovate with very shallow notch and no pappus, the margins very long villous. Very common in the lower portions of the chaparral bell of all the moun- also nil the low hills about Los Angeles and along the coast. Rang- ing lii 'in Mi mi liny to San Diego. In the San Bernardino and Riverside Valleys and eastward it is replaced by E.farinosa Gray, which has the leaves cov- ered with a silvery tomentum. 31. VERBESINA L. Perennial or annual, pubesceni or scabrous herbs with alternate or opposite leaves, often decurrent, and corym- bose or solitary heads of both ray- and disk-flowers, or the rays sometimes wanting. Envolucral bracts imbri- cated in few series. Receptacle convex or conic, chaffy. the chaff embracing the disk-ilowcrs. Hay-flowers pistil- late or sterile. Disk-flowers perfect, mostly fertile. Aehenes flattened or those of the rays 3-sided, their margins winged or wingless. Pappus of 1-3, usually 2, subulate awns, sometimes with 2-3 intermediate scales. 1. V. encelioides (Cav.) Gray. Annual; stems densely puberu- lent, much hranched or rarely simple, 3-6 dm. high; leaves deltoid-ovate or deltoid-lanceolate, 5-10 cm. long, coarsely den- tate, green and minutely pubescent above, pale and densely canes- cenl beneath, all alternate or the lowest opposite, narrowed at the base to a margined petiole, these often with dilated append- ages at the base, heads several or many, 2.5-5 cm. bmad: involu- cral bracts lanceolate, canescent; rays 12-15, golden-yellow, 3-toothed; aehenes of the disk-llowers obovate, winged ; pappus of 2 subulate awns, those of the rays rugose, thickened, often wingless. Occasional in moist alluvial soils along our valley streams. Los Angeles; San Fernando Valley. April-June. 32. LEPTOSYNE DC. Glabrous annual or perennial herbs or rarely shrubby. with dissected Leaves, and usually long scapiform erect peduncles, bearing rather large heads of yellow flowers, [nvolucral bracts in 2 series, the outer of narrow Eoliace- Sunflower Tribe 117 ous spreading bracts, the inner of broad membranous crcci ones. Rays broad, pistillate and often fertile, sometimes neutral. Chaff of receptacle linear, thin, scarious, deciduous with the fruit. Achenes flal or somewhat concavo-convex, margined. Pappus a minute callous cup or a pair of paleae. 1. L. Douglasii DC. Annual, 3 dm. high; leaveemostly basal, 2-3-parted into filiform divisions ; rays 10-15 cm. long; the ring of the disk-corollas distinctly bearded; acbenes sparsely beset with capitate rigid bristles, the margin becoming corky; cup- like ring in place of pappus entire. Common on dry plains and in open places in the lower portions of the chaparral belt. March-May. 2. L. gigantea Kell. Perennial; stems stout, fleshy, 0-20 dm. high, bearing at the summit an ample tuft of leaves and stoul peduncles of corymbosely arranged heads; leaves 3-pinnately divided into Aliform segments ; achenes oblong or ovoid, obscurely 3-5-nerved, narrowly callous-winged ; pappus a slight coroniform cup. Bluffs along the sea near Santa Monica. Common on the islands. 33. BIDENS L. Annual or perennial herbs with opposite serrate or usually lolied or dissected leaves, or the upper mostly alternate, and usually rather large heads of both tubular and radiate flowers or the ray- none. Involucral bracts in 2 series, distinct or somewhat united at base, the outer often foliaceous and much longer than the inner. Receptacle flat or nearly so, chaffy, the chaff subtending the disk-flowers. Rays when present neutral, usually yellow. Disk-flowers perfect. Achenes flat, quadrangu- lar or nearly terete. Pappus of 2-6 teeth or subulate awns, barbed or hispid. 1. B. speciosa Parish. Aquatic, perennial by stolons, gla- brous throughout; stems erect or ascending, stout, 10-25 dm. high, branched at the nodes; leaves lanceolate, 1-2 dm. long, 418 Madieae toothed, narrowed to the connate base; heads on peduncles 4-8 cm. long, erect, nodding in fruit; outer involucral bracts 4-8, foliaceous, reflexed; the inner bracts 8, membranous, acutely oval; rays golden-yellow, ovate-oblong, 2 cm. long; chaff linear, equaling the disk-flowers; achenes black, flat, 5 mm. long; awns 2, 3 mm. long, or with a third half as long, awns and edges of the achene retrorsely barbed. Frequent in shallow streams about San Bernardino, apparently less com- mon toward the coast. August-November. 2. B. pilosa L. Annual ; stems erect, usually branched from the base, 4-0 dm. high, glabrous or sparsely pilose-pubescent; leaves pinnate, pilose-pubescent; leaflets 3-5, irregularly serrate or incised, 15-25 mm. long; heads scattered, few, 10-12 mm. broad; rays none; achenes narrow, linear, about 1 cm. long. Frequent along streets and irrigating ditches. Native of tropical America. 34. BEBBIA Greene. Much branched suffrutescenl plants with few mostly opposite narrow leaves, and scattered discoid heads. Involucre campanulate, its bracts imbricated in 3—4 series, the inner somewhat scarious and striate. Recep- tacle chaffy; the chaffy bracts persistent, lanceolate, partly embracing the achenes, nearly equaling those of the involucre. Corollas tubular, yellow. Achenes tur- binate, slightly obcompressed. Pappus consisting of 1 series of long rather stout plumose bristle-. 1. B. juncea (Benth.) Greene. Much branched from a woody base, 10-15 dm. high ; flowering branches rush-like, nearly leaf- less, pale green and glabrous or minutely and sparsely scabrous; leaves mainly opposite, linear; heads scattered, terminating the branchlets, 1 cm. high; pappus-bristles equaling the Blender corollas; achenes appressed-pubescent. Occasional in dry washes. Santiago Canyon, Santa Ana Mountains, '■- iaj Highlands. Tribe b. MADIEAE. Tarweed Tribe. Annual or perennial herbs, with usually glandular viscid or heavy-scented herbage. Leaves alternate or Tarweed Tribe 1 1'.) opposite, [nvolucral bracts in 1 scries, each partly or wholly enclosing an achene. Bracts of tin- receptacle commonly in a single series between ray- and disk- flowers. Kays always present and fertile, destitute of pappus. hisk-tlowers sterile or fertile, their pappus paleaceous, awn-like or none. Ray-achenes laterally compressed, completely enfolded by the involucral bract. Rays inconspicuous. Disk-flowers several. .35. Madia. Disk-flowers 1-4. 40. Harpaecarpus. Rays showy. 36. Madaria. Ray-achenes somewhat obcompressed, half enclosed by the bracts. Leaves spiny; flowers yellow. 37. Centromadia. Leaves not spiny. Herbage somewhat glandular; flowers yellow. 38. Deinandra. Herbage not glandular; flowers white or rose color. 39. Calycadenia. Ray-achenes obcompressed or clavate, completely enfolded by their bracts. Bracts 5; herbage canescent. 41. Lagophylla. Bracts more than 5. Rays showy, yellow or white. 42. Blepharipappus. R ays inconspicuous; pappus becoming showy. 43. Achyrachaena. 35. MADIA Mol. Tarweed. Glandular and viscid heavy-scented herbs with at leasl the upper leaves alternate entire or toothed. Heads axillary and terminal. Involucre angled by the salient carinate backs of the uniserial involucral bracts, these usually completely enclosing the ray-achenes. their tips herbaceous. Receptacle flat or convex, bearing a single series of chaff united and forming a cup between the ray- and disk-flowers, the inner portion naked or fimbril- late. Ray-flowers yellow, rather short, 3-lobed, fertile. Disk-flowers sterile. Pappus none. Achenes laterally compressed, smooth, beakless. 1. M. sativa Mol. Stem simple with a few short ascending branches above, erect, stout, 3-9 dm. high, pubescent with slen- der hairs and beset with stalked very viscid glands ; leaves lance- olate, nearly entire, glandular-pubescent; heads 12 mm. high, 420 Madieae short-peduBcled or sessile in the upper axils and at the ends of the short branches; cup of receptacle broadly campanulate, enclosing many disk-Mowers ; disk-achenes cuneate-oblong, 4-angled; ray-achenes falcate-obovate. Frequent on the plains and grassy hills. July-September. 2. M. dissitiflora (Nutt.) T. &G. Slender, loosely branching, 5-7 dm. high, viscid; heads scattered, broad-ovate, about 6 nun. high; cup of receptacle ovoid, not closed; achenes thin, nol an- gular. On wooded slopes in the Santa Monica Mountains. May-July. 36. MADARIA DC. Ered glandular pilose or somewhat hispid annuals, with lanceolate usually entire leaves, and corymbosely panicled lends of showy yellow flowers. Involucral bracts wholly enclosing the ray-achenes. Receptacle convex densely fimbrillate-hirsute and with a circle of bracts between ray- and disk-flowers. Disk-flowers sterile. Ray-flowers fertile, showy, their achenes laterally com- pressed, smooth, not incurved. Pappus none. 1. M. elegans (Don.) DC. Stems rather stout, 8-15 dm. high; Leaves scattered, lanceolate, entire or serrate, sessile by a broad base ; whole herbage viscid with stalked glands, the peduncles and involucres hirsute with long white hairs; heads numerous in an ample corymbose panicle; rays 12-15, about 2 cm. lung, yellow, often with dark red base; achenes rather thin and Hat, dark brown or blackish. .War Fairmont, Davidson; Trabuco Canyon, Santa Ana Mountains. June- September. 37. CENTROMADIA Greene. Rigid corymbosely or diffusely branching annuals, with alternate pinnatifid or entire spinescent leaves. Herbage more or less resiniferous or glandular through- out, tnvolucra] bracts subulate, pungent, half enclosing the ray-achenes, persistent. Kay-flowers L5-40, yellow. small, fertile. Disk-flowers sterile. Receptacle convex. Tarweed Tribe bil chaffy throughout, the chaff distinct and persistent. Aehenes triangular, the inner angles terminated by a short apiculation, nearly smooth or faintly rugose-tuber- culate. Pappus none. 1. C. pungens (II. ^ A.) Greene. Stout with rather rigid ascending or spreading branches, 4-8 dm. high, hirsute or hispid, scarcely viscid, nearly or quite scentless; lower leaves 2-pinnati- fid, the upper 1-pinnatifid, the lobes pungent-tipped; chaff of receptacle rigid-pungent; disk-achenes destitute of pappus ; ray- achenes nearly black, about 2 mm. long, the ventral angle cari- nate, the plane sides and rounded back faintly tuberculate- rugose. Common in the plains in heavy, rather moist soil. July-November. 2. C. Parryi Greene. Widely branching, 3-6 dm. high, sparsely hirsute, minutely resinous-glandular, aromatic; lowest leaves pinnatilid, the cauline linear, entire, sharply pungent, spreading, the uppermost pilose-ciliate toward the base ; heads scattered ; ray- achenes dull black, 1.5 mm. long, somewhat compressed, smooth on the sides, with a few coarse tuberculations on the back ; disk- achenes with 3 or more palepe exceeding the corollas; chaff of the receptacle not pungent. BracUish flats toward the coast. June-August. 38. DEINANDRA Greene. Erect, rigid and brittle, balsamic-viscid annuals, with mostly small few-flowered panicled heads, and entire or serrate leaves. Involucral bracts few, half enclosing their aehenes, their tips short, rigid and erect. Rays usually 5, broad, 3-toothed, diurnal. Receptacle chaffy only next the rays. Raj^-achenes gibbous, tuberculate- rugose, the terminal areola raised upon a distinct curved beak from the angle of the ventral face of the achene ; disk-achenes mostly sterile, with or without a paleaceous crown. 1. D. fasciculata (DC.) Greene. Hirsute or hispid below, glabrous and viscid-glandular above, 2-5 dm. high ; heads small, 422 Madieae Bubsessile, usually fasciculate-clustered; involucral bracts gla- brous or glandular-hiapidulous ; bracts of the receptacle slightly united; pappus of the disk-achenes of 6-10 linear palese. II, m- izonia fasciculata T. & G.) Very common and general on the plains and lower hills. June-September. 2. D. Wrightii (Gray) Greene. Slender, diffusely and widely branching; the filiform branchlets terminating in a single head; lower leaves laciniate-pinnatifid ; pappus of disk-achenes com- posed of 8-9 firm distinct palere, laciniate at apex. Frequent in the interior valleys beyond our range. San Bernardino; Riverside; Elsinore. It has also been reported from Catalina Island. 3. D. Kelloggii (ireene. Closely resembling the last in habit; heads solitary, terminating the slender paniculate branches; pappus of the tubular dowers united to near the lacerate sum- mit. Apparently rare in southern California: known only from near Pasadena, where it was recently collected in an old field by Joseph Grinnell. 39. CALYCADENIA DC. Ereci virgate or diffusely branching, more or less hir- sute or liispnl annuals, witli narrowly linear entire Leaves, all but tin' lowest alternate. Floral leaves usu- ally subulate and often ending in a saucer-shaped gland. Receptacle flat, the chaff herbaceous and only enclosing the disk-flowers. Ray-flowers 1-5, white or yellow, ves- pertine, palmately 3-lobed or parted. Ray-achenes obovoid-triangular, the terminal areola low, nearly cen- tral. Disk-achenes turbinate-quadrangular, the outer fertile. Pappus chaffy. l. C. tenella (Nutt.) T. & G. Slender, paniculately diffusely branched above, 1-5 dm. high, sparsely hirsute-pubescent; the filiform branchlets minutely viscid-glandular ; leaves almost fili- form, the mar-ins involute, destitute of glands; heads scattered ; involucre cylindraceous-campanulate ; ray-flowers 8-5, 3-parted to the slender tube, white or often tinged with rose; ray-achenes riijo-'-. -hnrt-stipitate and abruptly rostellate-apiculate ; disk- flowers 5, white, clefl into oblong-linear lobes; their pappus of 4-5 lanceolate palese tapering into BtOUl rough awns and as many Tarweed Tribe 123 intermediate short lanceolate truncate ones. {Hernizonia tenella I }ray. Common on dry barren places in our interior valleys and in open places in the chaparral belt. June-August. 40. HARPAECARPUS Xutt. Small slender viscid-glandular sweet-scented annuals with entire narrow mostly alternate Leaves, and numer- ous pedicellate small few-flowered heads. Ray-flowers fertile, 4-8, minute Disk-flowers 1-4. Bracts of the receptacle united and forming a cup which encloses the disk-flowers, receptacle otherwise naked. Achenes slender compressed or obcompressed. Pappus none. 1. H. exiguus Gray. Slender, 8-15 cm. high, hirsute, glan- dular above, paniculately branched ; the small heads on long filiform naked peduncles; leaves linear, alternate; involucral bracts 5-8, lunate, almost destitute of free tips, hispid-glandular; cup of receptacle prismatic and very narrow, enclosing a single straight obliquely obovate laterally compressed achene ; ray- achenes obovate-lunate, pointed by a small disk. Frequent on wooded hillsides in open places. May-August. 2. H. minimus (Gray) Greene. Stems branching, only about 2.5 cm. high; leaves mostly opposite, the lowest oval or oblong, the others linear, about (3 mm. long; achenes of the ray broadly obcompressed, rounded at the summit, beakless. (Hemizonia minima Gray.) Wilson*s Peak, Davidson. 41. L.AGOPHYLLA Nutt. Slender, villous or hirsute, rigid and brittle, panicu- lately branched annuals, with mostly alternate com- monly entire leaves, and many small heads of pale salmon-colored or yellow vespertine flowers, subtended by foliaceous bracts. Bracts of the involucre 5, thin, herbaceous, flat on the back, completely enclosing its obcompressed achene and deciduous with it. Rays cuneate, palmately 3-cleft, their achenes obovate-oblong, [24 Madieae smooth, nearly straight, pointless. Receptacle flat ; chaff a single row of distinct bracts surrounding aboul 5 perfed bul sterile disk-flowers. Pappus none. 1. L. ramosissima Nutt. Canescent with a loose silky pubes- cence, 2-8 dm. high , diffusely paniculate ; lowest leaves spatulate- obovate, stem-leaves lanceolate to linear, all entire; heads 6 nun. high, 12 mm. broad, including the expanded rays: achenes 3 nun. long. Frequent in open places in the foothills and in t he chaparral belt of the mountains. May-September. 42. BLEPHARIPAPPUS Hook. Vernal annuals with alternate leaves or the Lowest opposite, and usually showy heads of white or yellow flowers terminating the branches. Bracts of the invo- lucre flattened on the back, more or less completely enfolding their obcompressed achenes. Kays 8—20 3-lobed ; their achenes obovate or narrower, destitute of pappus. Disk-flowers with cylindraceous funnelform 5-lobed corollas ; their achenes linear-cuneiform, usually with a pappus of bristles or awns. Receptacle flat, bear- ing a series of chaffy bracts between the ray- and disk- flowers. (Layia.) *Pappus-bristle8 villous below the middle. 1. B. hispidus Greene. Diffusely branched from the base or simple, .'! dm. high or less, hispid throughout with spreading hairs and with a few small dark -stalked glands on the upper si leaves and involucres; leaves all narrow and entire; rays white, about 1 cm. long; pappus bright white, the bristles densely vil- lous below the middle. Frequent In dry washes in the interior valleys. Big Tejunga; La Canada ; Arroyo Seco. 2. B. elegans (Nutt.) Greene. Habit of the last but taller, I v hirsute and mere or less stipitate-glandular throughout ; lower leaves pinnatejy toothed, the upper entire; rays yellow, Belenieae 425 about l cm. long; pappus white, bristles densely villous below tlic middle. Frequent on our dry Interior plains. Sun Fernando Valley; Pasadena; Santa Ana Mountains. *•■ Pappus-bristles naked. :;. B. platyglossus (F. & M.) (ireene. Stems usually about 3 dm. high and sparingly branched, hirsute and stipitate-glan- dular; lower leaves pinnatifid into linear lobes ; rays LO-15 mm. long, yellow with cream-colored tips ; disk-achenes silky-hirsute; pappus of L5-20 scabrous tawny bristles. Frequent in sandy soil, especially along the coast. 4:1. ACHYRACHAENA Schauer. S.oft-pubesceni sparingly branched annual, with nar- row leaves, all but the lowest alternate, and rather large oblong-campanulate heads terminating pedunculiform branches. Involucral bracts lanceolate, herbaceous, each enfolding a ray-achene. Bracts of the low convex recep- tacle membranous in a single row between ray- and disk-flowers. Ray-flowers 6-8, very short, 3-cleft ; their achenes slightly obcompressed, destitute of pappus. Disk-flowers mostly fertile, elavate, 10 striate, bearing a showy pappus of 10 elongated-oblong obtuse silverv- scarious palese. 1. A. mollis Schauer. Erect, 2-4 dm. high; leaves linear, entire or serrulate ; heads 2.5 cm. long or less in flower ; rays very short and involute, yellow, changing to reddish-brown ; heads ex- panded in fruit, forming a globose cluster ; pappus becoming very showy. Occasional in the coast valleys, on grassy plains or in grain fields. Ex- tending south to San Diego. Tribe 7. HELENIEAE. Sneezeweed Tribe. Herbs or suffrutescent plants with alternate or oppo- site leaves. Receptacle naked or with a few fimbrillae. Involucral bracts in 1-2 series or rarely in 3 series. Pappus of palere, awns or bristles, or wanting. 1-2(5 Helenieae Leaves opposite. Involucral bracts in more than 1 series. 44. JAUMEA. Involucral bracts in 1 series. Braots distinct. 47. Baeria. Bracts united into a toothed cup. 48. Lasthesia. Leaves alternate. Kays present. Raj s with toothed appendages opposite the ligules. Rays unappendaged. Bracts of the involucre erect. Herbage pubescent and viscid-glandular. Bracts equal, in 1-2 series. Bracts imbricated, in 2-3 series. Herbage more or less floccose-woolly. Perennial or suffrutescent plants. Low annuals. Outer bracts foliaceous, spreading. Bracts reflexed. Rays warn ing. Bracts 5-8; herbage viscid: heads small. Bracts more numerous; heads middle sized. 19, MoNOLOPIA. 40. Perityle. 54. HfLSEA. 50. ERiopnyi.LtM. 51. ACTINOLEPIS. 45. VENEGAS1 \. 55. Hi i i num. 52. Amblyopappus. 53. ' II \l NACTIS. 44. JAUMEA Pers. Succulent and glabrous perennial herbs, with opposite entire subterete fleshy leaves, and solitary terminal short-pedunoled middle-sized heads of yellow flowers. Involucre cy lindraceous-canipanulat e. its bracts broad and imbricated, the outermost short and fleshy. Rays pistillate, fertile. Receptacle naked, conical. Disk- flowers yellow. Style-branches papillose or hairy. Achenes 10-nerved. Pappus none. 1. J. carnosa (Less.) Gray. Stems rather slender, prostrate, many from fleshy crown of the tap-root, mostly simple, 1-2 dm. long, rooting at the nodes; leaves 1.5-2.5 cm. lomr; heads ahout l cm. high; rays about 6, linear, not surpassing the disk; achenes glabrous. Common in salt marshes along the coast. April-October. 45. VENEGASIA DC. Stout perennial leafy branching herbs with scattered large and showy heads of yellow flowers. [nvolucre Sncr/, 'weed Tribe 1-7 hemispheric, broad, the round-ovate bracts imbricated in several -'Tics, the outer somewhat foliaceous, the innermost narrow and scarious. Receptacle flat, naked. Hay-flowers many, Long, narrow, entire or 3-toothed. Disk-flowers glandular-bearded especially at the base of tie: tube, 5-angled and many-nerved. Pappus none. 1. V. carpesioides DC. Stems widely branching, 1.5 m. high or loss, iilal irons ; leaves thin,ovate-deltoid or ovate-cordate, acute, crenate, 7-10 cm. long, petioled, resinons-dotted beneath; heads terminal and from the upper axils, short-peduncled, about 2 cm. broad : rays aboul 15, and about 2.5 cm. long. Frequent in the Santa Monica, San Gabriel and Santa Ana Mountains. 4(1. PERITYLE Benth. Mostly annuals with dentate or palmately Lobed leaves, all but the lower alternate, and small or middle- sized heads terminating the branches. Involucre hemi- spheric, its bracts distinct, more or less overlapping, cari- nate-concave and partly embracing the outer achenes. Receptacle flat or concave. Ray-flowers yellow or white, pistillate or none. Disk-flowers yellow, narrow, 4-toothed. Achenes flat, cartilaginous-margined, usually strongly filiate. Pappus a squamellate or cupulate crown and commonly a slender awn from one or both of the angles. 1. P. Californica nuda (Torr.) Gray. Somewhat pubescent and viscid-glandular ; leaves roundish-cordate, about! cm. broad, incisely lobed, the lobes coarsely dentate ; heads narrowly oblong ; achenes oblong, densely hispid-villous on the margins ; pappus none. Bluffs along the sea at Santa Monica, Hasse. 47. BAEPvIA F. & M. Low mostly slender annuals, commonly pubescent, with opposite linear entire or laciniate-pinnatifid leaves, and middle-sized heads of vellow flowers on slender I-S Helenieae peduncles. Involucre campanulate, its bracts usually in 1 series, distinct, usually carinate below. Ray-flowers few or many, often short. Achenes clavate, linear or linear-cuneiform. Pappus of few awns or palese or both or rarely none. * Leaves entire. 1. B. chrysostoma F. A: M. Stems slender, freely branching, 2 dm. high or less, hirsute-pubescent; leaves narrowly linear, entire; heads 6-8 mm. high ; bracts of the involucre 7-12; rays 7-12, 6-8 mm. long; achenes clavate-linear, slightly contracted at the summit, glabrous; pappus none. Rather common in open places in our coast valleys and foothills. Port Ballona; Santa Monica Mountains. April-May. 2. B. gracilis (DC.) Gray. Closely resembling the last ; stems slender, usually about 1 dm. high ; leaves narrowly linear ; bracts and rays 10-12 or sometimes less; rays 4-6 mm. long; achenes linear-cuneate, broad at the summit, commonly canescent ; pap- pus of white, lanceolate or ovate, slender, awned palese or the paleaj sometimes almost obsolete. Common on dry hillsides throughout our range. April-May. ** Leaves dissected. 3. B. affinis (Nutt.) Gray. Erect, sparingly branched, 10-15 cm. high, minutely pubescent, obscurely or not at all glandular ; leaves with filiform divisions ; rays 6-8, oblong, short ; involucral bracts ovate-oval; pappus of 8-10 oblong or lanceolate palese with laciniate-setulose margins, fully equaling the corolla-tube, some or most of them produced into an awn almost equaling the disk-flowers, or in the rays blunt and awnless. Occasional in dry sandy places in our interior valleys. ChatBWOrtb Park; Verdugo Hills; Arroyo Seco. 4. B. tenella (Nutt.) Gray. Closely resembling the last ami associated with it, hut pappus of 6-10 slmrt ami firm quadrate or broadly cuneate palese with the truncate muticous summit den- ticulate or nearly entire, not surpassing the tube of the corolla. Sycamore Grove, Oreata. 5. B. mutica (Nutt.) Gray. Stems slender, erect, branching, 1-2 dm. high, glandular-pubescent ; rays 10-15, elongated-ohlong; Sneezeweed Tribe I-'1 pappus of 6-8 quadrate-oblong palese with obtuse or truncate erose summits. In sandy soil along the coast near Port Ballona: common about San Diego. April-May. 48. L ASTHENIA Cass. Low slender glabrous and usually succulenl annuals, with Opposite Linear or narrowly lanceolate mostly entire leaves, their sessile bases connate around the stem. Heads middle-sized on peduncles terminating the stem and branches, composed of yellow flowers. Invo- lucral bracts a single series connate by their edges into a 5-15-toothed glabrous green cup. Kays usually pres- ent. Disk-flowers all fertile, 4-5-lobed. Achenes linear or narrowly oblong, compressed, sometimes slightly 2-3- nerved. Pappus of 5-10 firm subulate-tipped palese or none. 1. L. glabrata Coulteri Gray. Somewhat fleshy, rarely slightly pubescent; stems erect, branching, 2 dm. high or less; peduncles somewhat enlarged under the erect heads; involucre hemispheric; rays 5-10 mm. long; achenes narrowly obovate- oblong, with obtuse edges and with minute scattered rough points or glands. Common in saline marshes, especially along the coast. 49. MONOLOPIA DC. White-woolly annuals with alternate entire or den- ticulate leaves and large peduncled heads of yellow- flowers. Involucre hemispheric, its bracts united into a cup with broad triangular teeth or distinct to the base. Receptacle conical, naked. Ray-flowers 3-4-toothed. bearing at the base of the ligule an oblong or roundish denticulate appendage. Disk-corollas somewhat hairy on the lobes. Achenes angular, black. Pappus none. 1. M. major DC. Stoutish, nearly simple or with several pedunculiform naked monocephalous branches, about 5 dm. high ; 430 Helenieae heads about 3 cm. broad; bracts of the involucre joined into a broad campanulate-toothed cup ; achenes 4 nun. long. Occasional on grassy hills mostly toward the coast, especially on hear; soils. Santa .Monica Mountains, north slope; San Pedro Hills. 50. ERIOPHYLLUM Lag. Annual or perennial floccose herbs or suffrutescenl plants, with entire or divided alternate Leaves, arid mostly middle-sized heads of yellow flowers, [nvolucre oblong to hemispheric, its bracts of firm texture and per- manently erect. Rays usually few, short and broad. Disk-flowers with slender tube, commonly glandular and hairy. Style-branches truncate or obtuse. A.chenes clavate-linear to cuneate-oblong, mostly t-angled. Pappus of firm pointless palese. 1. E. confertiflorum (DC.) Gray. Stems Buffrutescent, 4-6 dm. high, usually branched from the woody base, with a close dense, at length deciduous tomentum ; flowering branches leafy ; leaves 1-4 cm. long, ternately or pinnately 3-7-parted into nar- rowly linear divisions; heads many in compact terminal clusters, 3-4 mm. high ; involucre obovoid-oblong, its bracts about 5, ovate ; rays 4-5, •'!-! mm. long; paleye 8-10, nearly equal, about half as long as the achene. Common throughout the lower altitudes of the chaparral bell in all our mountains and hills. March-August. 51. ACTINOLEPIS DC. Small rloccose-woolly simple or freely branching annuals, with small heads of yellow (lowers. Involucre obovate or oblong, its bracts few, thinnish, sometimes concave and partly embracing the achenes. Receptacle convex or nearly flat. Ray-flowers few, broad and usu- ally short. Achenes oblong subclavate and 4-angled. Pappus composed of Beveral scarious or somewhal opaque paleaceoue aca les. l. A. Wallacei Gray. Diffusely branched or, when dwarfed, Bimple, 1-8 cm. high, densely white- tomentose ; Leaves alternate, Sneezeweed Tribe !•">! obovate or spatulate, entire; heads short-peduncled ; bracts of tlic involucre about 8, becoming somewhat carinate-concave, with scarious margins embracing the ray-achenes; ray-flowers short and broad, yellow ; achenes glahrous; paleje 10, very short, obtuse. Dry washes in the Interior valleys. La Canada; San Fernando Valley. April-May. 52. AMBLYOPAPPUS H. & A. Rigidly erect panicled small maritime annual with gummy sweet-scented very bitter herbage, narrow entire alternate leaves, and small discoid heads of yellow flowers, [nvolucral bracts 5-6, broadly obovate, their middle part becoming somewhat carinate-concave. Re- ceptacle small conical. Corollas all short, tubular, those of the pistillate flowers minutely 2-8-toothed, of the perfect 5-toothed ; the teeth soon connivent. Achenes obpyramidal, pubescent. Pappus of 8—12 oblong obtuse palese about equaling the corollas. 1. A. pusillus H. & A. Somewhat corymhosely much branch- ed, 10-25 cm. high, the lowest leaves pinnately 3-5-parted and opposite, their segments narrowly linear; involucre 4 mm. high. Occasional on bluffs overhanging the sea. Port Los Angeles; Play a del Rey. June-August. 53. CHAENACTIS DC. Annual herbs, often more or less woolly, with com- pound leaves and discoid heads mostly solitary and peduncled. Involucre campanulate, the linear bracts equal, uniserial, herbaceous. Receptacle flat, naked. Corollas with short tube, long narrow throat and short teeth, those of the outer row sometimes more ample and resembling rays. Achenes slender, smooth. Pappus of hyaline nerveless palese. * Corollas yellou:, the outer somewhat enlarged and unequally lobed. 1. C. lanosa DC. Stems short, branching, bearing few- many long naked peduncles, 1-2 dm. high, the earlier scapiform ; !-"."J Helenieae herbage tloccose-woolly when young; leaves thickish, simply pin- nately-parted into few narrowly linear lobes, or the uppermost entire: heads about 12 mm. high; the outer flowers only moder- ately enlarged, not surpassing the disk ; involucral bracts nearly linear: pappus of 4 equal long paleee. Comnu'ii .in plains and foothills, especially in sandy soil. '2. C. glabriuscula DC. Taller and more caulescent, branch- ing above, 2-3 dm. high, herbage thinly lloccose, becoming gla- brate; peduncles "long, stout; beads L5-20 mm. high; involucral bracts glabrate, broader, thickish, obtuse; marginal flowers ample, much exceeding the others; pappus of 4 equal narrowly oblong acutish palete. Common on sandy soil or rocky ground in the lower hills and along the coast. ** Corollas whitish or at least not yellow. 3. C. santolinoides ( ireene. Subacaulescent perennial ; leaves all crowded on short tufted shoot- from a Bligbtly ligneous crown, white-tomentose, linear in outline with broad rachis, thickly beset with small oblong obtusely few-lobed crispate divisions ; peduncles scapiform, LO-15 cm. long, simple or once or twice forked, glan- dular and viscid; heads 12 mm. high, rather narrow; outer flowers scarcely or not at all enlarged; pappus of 8-10 linear- ligulate palese a little shorter than the flowers. In the higher altitudes of the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mount a ins, in open pine woods. June-August . 4. C. artemisiaefolia Gray. Stems paniculately branched or nearly simple, 3-8 dm. high, lurfuraceous-pubescent, somewhat viscid, above glandular-hirsute; leaves 2-3-pinnately divided or parted Into Bhort linear or oblong lobes; beads loosely cymose- paniculate, about L2-15 mm. high; involucral bracts lanceolate, acute; (lowers all alike; acbenes clavate, flattened; pappus a small minutely annular disk. Common in the chaparral belt of all our mountains. April-June. 54. HULSEA T. & G. Viscid or floccose-woolly leafy herbs with alternate entire toothed or pinnatifid leaves, sessile or nearly so. Sneezeweed Tribe 133 and large solitary or scattered heads, [nvolucral bracts thin, herbaceous, linear to oblong, in 2-3 series. Recep- tacle flat. Ray-flowers yellow or purplish. Disk-flowers with long narrow throal and 5 short lobes. A.chenes linear-clavate or cuneate-oblong, villous. Pappus of 4—") hyaline palea% cither erose or lacerate at the sum- mit or dissected into capillary bristles. 1. H. heterochroma Gray. Annual, stout, 6 dm. high or more; leaves oblong, saliently dentate; involucre about - cm. high, its bracts linear-lanceolate, attenuate-acute; ray-flowers many, 6-8 mm. long, rose-purple, occasionally reduced or obso- lete; paleae oblong, the 2 over the angles of the achenes longer than the others, the shorter truncate-lacerate. Occasional in the San Gabriel Mountains in the upper portions of the chaparral belt. Mount Lowe, Dudley: Wilson's Peak. 55. HELENIUM L. Sneezeweed. Erect perennial resinous-dotted herbs, with alternate leaves sessile except the lowest and often decurrent on the stem. Heads solitary or corymbose, borne on long naked peduncles. Flowers yellow, those of the ray several, usually small and drooping, those of the disk numerous, minute, often brownish. Bracts of the invo- lucre linear, rerlexed. Receptacle globose or hemi- spheric, naked. Achenes turbinate, ribbed, visually more or less pubescent. Pappus of 5-12 thin or hyaline paleae. 1. H. puberulum DC. Puberulent, paniculately branched, 6-12 dm. high, the branches ending in slender peduncles; leaves lanceolate or narrowly linear or the longest oblong, sessile and strongly decurrent on the stem ; heads globose, 10—15 mm. broad ; ray-flowers and bracts of the involucre rerlexed, short and incon- spicuous; disk-ttowers brownish; pappus-scales ovate, with a short slender awn ; achenes about 1 mm. long. Frequent along mountain streams, especially in the chaparral belt. 434 Anthemideae Tribe 8. ANTHEMIDEAE. Mayweed Tribe. Strong-scented or aromatic herbs, with alternate, mostly dissected, pinnately parted or pinnatifid leaves. [nvolucral bracts imbricated, commonly dry and scari- ous or with scarious margins. Receptacle naked or with chaff-like bracts. Rays present or none. Pappus none or a slmrt scarious crown. Receptacle chaffy; rays present. Heads solitary: rays 14-20. 56. ANTBEMIS Heads in a terminal corymb: rays -1-5. 57. Achillea. Receptacle naked; rays none. Marginal flowers destitute of corollas. 59. COTULA. Marginal flowers not apetalous. Heads solitary, terminating leafy branches. 58. MATRICARIA Heads small, in panicled raoemes or spikes. 60. Artemisia. 56. ANTHEMIS L. Annua] or perennial ill-scented branching herbs, with finely dissected alternate Leaves, and radiate heads soli- tary on terminal peduncles. Involucre hemispheric, its bracts imbricated in several series, scarious-margined, ajipressed, the outer shorter. Receptacle convex or conical, chaffy at least toward the summit : the chaff subtending the disk-flowers. Ray-flowers pistillate, fer- tile or neutral, white or yellow. Disk-flowers perfect, yellow, the limb 5-cleft. Achenes oblong, ribbed or striate. Pappus none. 1. A. Cotula L. (Mayweed.) Annual, glabrous or some- times pubescent above, glandular, much branched, 2-6 dm. high ; leaves mostly Bessile, finely 1-3-pinnately dissected into narrow acute lobes; heads about 2 cm. broad, including the rays; these 10-18, white, neutral, mostly 3-toothed ; receptacle conic, its chaff bristly, subtending the central (lowers; achenee LO-ribbed, rugose or glandular-tuberculate. Common In moist places in all our valleys. Native ; pappus line, concealed by the long wool of the achene. Dry washes of the interior valleys, perhaps not within our region but found as far westward as Cuoamonga. July-August. 63. SENECIO L. Annual or perennial herbs or shrubs, with alternate or basal leaves, and solitary corymbose or paniculate many-flowered heads of both tubular and ray-flowers or only tubular, in ours yellow. Involucre cylindric or campanulate, its principal bracts in 1 series, distinct or united at the base, usually with some shorter outer ones. Receptacle flat or somewhat convex, mostly naked. Kays when present pistillate. Disk-flowers perfect, 5-toothed. Achenes terete or those of the marginal flowers so ewhat compressed, 5-10-ribbed, papillose or canescent and usually emitting a pair of spiral threads after wretting. Pappus copious, of white scabrous or smooth capillary bristles. 1. S. vulgaris L. Annual, puberulent or glabrate ; stems slightly fleshy, 1-3 dm. high, more or less branched; leaves clasp- ing at the base, pinnatifid, the lobes and sinuses sharply toothed ; heads 7-9 mm. high; bracts black-tipped; rays none; achenes slightly canescent. Common in neglected gardens and yards. Flowering throughout the year. Native of Europe. 2. S. Californicus DC. Annual, glabrous or becoming so, slender 1.5-4 dm. high ; leaves lanceolate in outline, varying from denticulate to pinnatifid, the lobes short and obtuse, all but the lowest sessile and auriculate-clasping, 2.5-5 cm. long; involucre 6-8 mm. high, its bracts narrow; rays oblong, 6-8 mm. long, light yellow ; achenes canescent. Common in sandy soil in dry places in our interior valleys and foothills, and on the sand-dunes along the seashore. February-May. 3. S. ilicetorum Davidson. Stems erect, from a biennial or perennial root, 5-10 dm. high, very floccose-woolly, at length 1 lo Cynareae glabrate above; basal leaves thin, 2-3 dm. high, elliptic-oblong, acute at both ends, coarsely dentate, the teeth spreading, triangu- lar, callous-tipped, the sinuses rounded and the larger denticulate, lower leaves resembling the basal, the uppermost narrow lanceo- late, entire or irregularly dentate; heads L-2 cm. broad, less than I cm. high, 6-10 in a close cluster at the ends of the peduncles ; rays none; flowers all fertile. Wilson's trail at 2500 feet altitude, Davidson. 4. S. Douglasii DC. Suffrutescent, usually about 1 m.high, branching from the base, whitish-tomentose or becoming gla- brate; lower leaves pinnately divided into about 5 narrowly linear lobes, the uppermost entire, all with revolute mar-ins: beads rather few, corymbose, 10-15 mm. high: rays light yel- low, in mm. long: achenes hoary with a short pubescence. Common on dry plains and foothills, mostly below 8000 teet altitude. July- November. Tribe 10. CYNAREAE. Thistle Tribe. Herbs with alternate prickly leaves and mostly large heads, [nvolucral bracts imbricated, usually spinescent. Receptacle bristly or hairy. Kays none. Corollas tubu- lar, deeply and narrowly lobed. Anthers caudate at the base and appendaged at the apex. Pappus bristly or plumose, rarely paleaceous. Pappus bristles plumose, deciduous in a ring. Pappus in 1 series. t'.i. ('ahi'ITs. Pappus in several series. 65 Cynara. Pappus bristles setose. 66. Centacrea. 64. CARDUUS L. Thistle. Erect, hrancliing or simple, prickly herbs, with alter- nate or basal sinuate dentate lobed or pinnatifid usu- ally spiny Leaves, and large many-flowered solitary or clustered discoid heads of crimson purple or white flowers, [nvolucre ovoid or globose, its bracts prickly- tipped or unarmed, imbricated in many series. Recep- tacle flal or convex, bristly. Flowers all tubular, per- Thistle Tribe 1 II feet and fertile or rarely dioecious, their corollas slender, with deeply 5-clef1 Limb. Filaments pilose or rarely glabrous. Achenes ohovate <>r oblong, compressed or obtusely t-angled, smooth or ribbed. Pappus of several scries of slender plumose minutely serrulate or simple brisl les. connate a1 base. 1. C. edulis (Nutt.) Greene. Stout, 1-2 m. high, pubescent, leafy up to the short panicle : leaves oblong or narrower, sinuate- pinnatifid, weakly prickly; heads 3-4 cm. high, depressed -glo- — . few in a terminal cluster, leafy-bracted at hase; involucre arachnoid when young; flowers deep purple, their segments shorter than the throat. Pasadena, McClatchie. 2. C. Californicus (Gray) Greene. Rather slender, 6-12 dm. high, canescently woolly; leaves sinuate-pinnatifid, moderately prickly; heads solitary on long peduncles, about 4 cm. high; involucres somewhat woolly; the lower bracts coriaceous-acerose, spreading and incurved, the others straight, all subulate-spines- cent at the tip ; flowers lilac-purplish or rose color ; lobes shorter than the throat. Occasional in open places in the Santa Monica, San Gabriel and Santa Ana Mountains. May-July. 3. C. occidentalis Xutt. Stout, 6-9 dm. high; leaves deeply pinnatifid, glabrate above, canescently tomentose beneath; heads solitary on stout peduncles ; involucre subglobose; bracts straight, subulate-lanceolate, with short spines, densely covered with cobwebby hairs ; flowers deep red-purple ; lobes longer than the throat. Common on sandy soil, especially toward the coast. May-July. 65. CYNARA L. Artichoke. Stout perennial prickly herbs, with pinnatifid sessile leaves, their lobes spin escently tipped, and large heads of purple tubular (lowers. Involucral bracts well-imbri- cated, coriaceous, spinescent. Receptacle fleshy, fimbril- late. Achenes ohovate, compressed and somewhat 4-angled. Pappus of many series of plumose bristles. 442 Mutisieae 1. C. Scolymus L. Stout and low, with very ample hoary- tomentose bipinnatifid leaves; involucral bracts ovate obtuse or emarginate. An occasional escape from gardens. June-July. 66. CENTAUREA L. Annual or perennial herbs, with alternate entire den- tate Hi' pinnatifid leaves, ami Large or middle-sized heads of variously colored flowers. Involucre ovoid or globose, its bracts imbricated in many series, tipped with a stout spine. Receptacle tiat. bristly. Corolla-tube slender, the limb .".-toothed or 5-cleft. Aehenes oblong or obovoid, compressed or somewhat 4-angled, obliquely or laterally attached to the receptacle. Pappus of many slender scabrous bristles or scales or rarely none. 1. C. Melitensis L. (Star-thistle.) Erect, branching, 5-8 dm. high, cinereous-pubescent or when young somewhat woolly; basal leaves lyrate-pinnatifid, those of the stem lanceolate, mostly entire, narrowly decurrent ; principal bracts with slender spines of about their own length, spines pectinate-spinulose at base, innermost with spinescent tips; flowers yellow; pappus of very unequal rather rigid hristles or squamellate. A common weed in waysides and fields. July-November. Native of southern Europe. Tribe 11. MUTISIEAE. Perezia Tribe. Ours perennial herbs with subcoriaceous setulose- ciliate alternate leaves. Involucral bracts imbricated. Corollas 2-lipped, the outer lip 3-lobed, the inner 2-lobed. Anther- caudate and with a long appendage at the apex. Represent Bevera) series, dry, chartaceous or coriaceous. Recep- tacle flat, naked, rarely pilose or fimbrillate. Corollas 5-lobed and somewhat bilabiate. Achenes narrowed at apex. Pappus of copious capillary scabrous rigid or soft bristles. 1. P. microcephala (Iray. Tall, branching above, 1.5-2 m. high, leafy; leaves oblong, the upper ovate, cordate-clasping, 8-12 cm. long, thin-coriaceous, minutely glandular-scabrous, veiny, closely spinulose-denticulate; heads corymbose at the summits of the paniculate branches, 12-15 mm. high; involucral bracts very acute, coriaceous; flowers 10-15 in a bead, their corollas 8-10 mm. long, rose-purple. Frequent on the dry interior plains and foothills. July-August. Tribe 12. CICHORIEAE. Chicory Tribe. Serbs with milky juice and alternate or basal leaves and perfect flowers with ligulate corollas. Receptacle naked or chaffy. Pappus paleaceous. Paleae not awned; flowers blue. 68. Cichoridm. Paleas with a slender awn or bristle. Paleas cleft at the apex, the bristle or awn proceeding from the cleft. 70. Uropappus. Paleaj not cleft at the apex. 69. Microseris. Pappus of rather rigid plumose bristles. Receptacle chaffy. 71. Hypochaehis. Receptacle naked. Achenes not beaked. 72. Ptiloria. Achenes, at least the inner, with a slender beak. Flowers white. 73. Nemoseris. Flowers purple; pappus brownish. 74. Tragopogon. Pappus of soft capillary scabrous bristles. Achenes beakless. Achenes not flattened. Pappus deciduous, or 1-2 outer bristles persistent. 75. Malacothrix. Pappus persistent. Pappus white. 80. Crepis. Pappus tawny. 81. Hieracicm. Achenes flattened. 77. Sonchus. Achenes beaked. Achenes flattened. 78. Lactuca. Achenes not flattened. 79. Agoseris. 1 1 1 Cichorieae 08. CICHORIUM I.. Erect branching herbs, with alternate and basal Leaves, and large heads of usually blue flowers ped- uncled or in sessile clusters along the branches. Envo- Lucral la-acts in 2 series, herbaceous, the outer somewhal spreading, the inner ereci and subtending or partly enclosing the outer achenes. Receptacle flat, naked or slightly fimbrillate. Rays truncate and 5-toothed at the apex. Anthers sagittate at the base. Style-branches slender, obtusish. Achenes 5-angled or 5-ribbed, trun- cate, beakless. Pappus of --'■) series of short Idunt sea les. 1. C. Intybus L. (Chicory.) Perennial from a long deep tap- root; stems slightly hispid, stiff, branched, 3-9 dm. high ; basal leaves spreading on the ground, runcinate-pinnatifid, spatulate in outline, 8-16 cm. long, narrowed into long petioles; upper leaves much smaller, lanceolate or oblong, lohed or entire, clasp- ing or auricled at the base; heads numerous, 25-40 nun. broad, 1-4 together in sessile clusters on the nearly naked or Uracted branches; flowers bright blue, rarely white. Occasional in waste places. Hyde Park; Shermans. 69. MICROSERIS I ten. Acaulescent glabrous or slightly puberulent annuals, with basa] tufted leaves ]>innatilid with mostly linear and often falcate Lobes or entire. Heads solitary in Ion-- leafless scape-like peduncles, tin se nodding in laid. becoming ered in fruit, [nvolucre narrowly oblong to ovoid or subglobose. Ligules short, yellow. Achenes slender-fusiform or cylindric, ribbed, mostly truncate. Pappus palese 5, mostly short, abruptly or gradually passing into the scabrous awn. 1. M. aphantocarpha tenella Gray. Scapes usually decum- l.ent at base, L5-35 cm. high; leaves entire or pinnatifid ; invo- lucre calyculate ; achenes slender, 3-4 nun. long, oblong clavate; ( Jhicory Tribe 1 15 palese ovate, scarcely l nun. long; bristles 6-8 nun. long, slender, fragile or deciduous. Near Santa Monica, David 2. M. cyclocarpha Gray. Scapes 2-4 dm. high ; leaves nar- row, 1-2 dm. long; heads about 1<» nun. broad; achenes oblong- turbinate, 5 nun. long, the outer ones white-villous; palea of the pappus ovate, 2-3 mm. long, about half the length of the slender persistent bristles. Occasional in open grassy places on the north slope of the Santa Monica Mountains. 70. UROPAPPUS Nutt. Nearly acaulescent annuals with pinnatifid or entire leaves and solitary heads on scape-like peduncles. Ihads erect, oblong. [nvolucral bracts about equal, with shorter ones at the base, all membranous. Ligules short, yellow. Achenes 10-12-ribbed. Pappus-palese 5, elongated, tipped with a very short awn or bristle which proceeds from the clefl summit. 1. XJ. linearifolius (DC.) Nutt. Stems or peduncles usually several from the base, erect, 2-4 dm. high, in robust plants thick- ened and fistulose under the oblong head; leaves linear, 7-15 cm. long; 2—4 mm. wide, with 2-several pairs of more or less serrate salient attenuate lobes; achenes attenuate above into a beak, 10 mm. long; pappus silvery-white, 12-14 mm. long; the awn deli- cate, about half the length of the deeply notched palea. Common on grassy hillsides in the foothills. March-May. 2. XJ. Lindleyi (DC.) Nutt. Stout, 2-4 dm. high ; peduncles scarcely thickened under the head ; leaves as in the last or some- what broader; achenes brownish, 10 mm. long, slightly narrowed above; pappus dull brown or sordid, 12-14 mm. long; awn nearly equaling the paleae, from a very shallow notch. Same range as the last, but not common. 71. HYPOCHAERIS L. Mostly perennial herbs, with scapose, often branched stems, mostly basal tufted leaves pinnatifid or entire, 1 16 Cichorieae and mostly large long-peduncled heads. Involucre oblong-cylindric to campanulate, its bracts herbaceous in several series. Receptacle flat, chaffy. Flowers yellow. Aeheiies oblong to linear, 10-ribbed, contracted above or the outer truncate. Pappus of 1 row of plu- mose bristles, sometimes with some shorter simple ones. 1. H. radicata L. Perennial; stems several, slender, :!-»; dm. high, branched or rarely simple; leaves spreading on the ground, oblanceolate to obovate, pinnatifid-lobed to dentate, 5-15 cm. long, hirsute; heads 2.5 cm. broad or more; achenes rough, all with slender, long beaks. Pasadena, McClatchu . 72. PTILORIA Raf. Annual or perennial, mostly glabrous, often glaucous herbs, with erect simple or branched usuallyrigid stems, alternate or basal entire or runcinate-pinnatifid leaves. those of the branches often small and scale-like, and small erect heads of usually pink flowers paniculate or solitary at the ends of the branches. Involucre cylin- dric or oblong, its principal bracts few, equal, searious- margined, slightly united at the base, with numerous short exterior ones. Flowers pinkish, opening in the morning. Receptacle flat, naked. Anthers sagittate nt base. Style-branches slender. A.chenes oblong or linear, terete, 5-ribbed, truncate or beaked at summit. Pappus of 1 series of rather rigid plumose bristles. 1. P. virgata (Benth.) Greene. Stems rigid, 3-10 dm. high, virgate, glabrous throughout and the herbage deep green ; leaves runcinate; heads fi-8 mm. high, subsessile along the naked upper part of the stem and brandies, t-x-Howered ; achenes subclavate or oblong, ribbed and with as many mostly closed grooves, rugose; pappus white, plumose almost throughout, rather persistent. Common on dry ground, especially toward the coast. July September 2. P. pleurocarpa Greene. Taller and stouter than the last, virgate-paniculate, glabrous and irlaucous; heads rather small, Chicory Tribe 1 17 few-flowered; achenea fusiform, rugose-tuberculate between the salient rib-like angles, intervening grooves wanting: pappus- bristles numerous, distinctly plumose to the base, bright white, Soft . early deciduous. Common in fields and along waysides about Pasadena and eastward tip San Bernardino. July-August. 3. P. cichoriacea (Gray) Greene. Perennial, 3-8 dm. high, rather stout, tomentulose at least when young; leaves lanceolate, sparsely denticulate to runcinate-laciniate ; heads sessile along naked branches; involucre 12 mm. high; mature achenes short- linear, smooth, Blightly and acutely 5-angled; pappus sordid, persistent. Frequem In rocky canyons of the San Gabriel Mountains. July-Septem- ber. 73. NEMOSERIS Raf. Glabrous and slightly succulent branching annuals with pinnatifid leaves and rather large heads of white or rose-tinged (lowers. Involucre conic or cylindric, of 7-15 linear acuminate equal bracts, somewhat fleshy at base, and a few loose calyculate outer ones. Achenes terete, somewhat fusiform, obscurely few-ribbed, attenu- ate into a slender beak. Pappus white, of 10-15 slender bristles, softly long-plumose from the base to near the tip. 1. N. Californica (Xutt.) Greene. Rather stout, glabrous; stems white, 6-9 dm. high; leaves oblong, pinnatifid, sessile and clasping, the upper reduced; heads many in a paniculate-corym- bose inflorescence, 1.5-2 cm. high; ligules rather short; outer achenes pubescent; beak slender, equaling the body; pappus dull white. (Rafinesquia Californica Nutt.) Common on rather shady slopes in the foothills and in the chaparral belt •of all the mountains. May-August. 74. TRAGOPOGON L. Biennial or perennial erect usually branched some- what succulent herbs, with slender fleshy tap-roots, alternate entire linear-lanceolate long-acuminate leaves ! 18 Cichorieae clasping at the base, and long-peduncled Large heads of purple or yellow Bowers, [nvolucre cylindric, its bractg in 1 Beries, acuminate, united at the base. Ligules trun- cate. r>-t( iot lied. Achenes lincaf, terete or 5-angled, 5-10- ribbed, with slender beaks or the outer beakless. Pappus bristles in 1 series, plumose, connate at the base. 1. T. porrifolius L. (Salsify.) Erect, somewhat branched, 5-8 dm. high, glabrous and somewhat succulent; peduncles thickened and hollow for some distance below the head : bracts exceeding the purple flowers; achenes often 4 mm. long, the outer ones with scale-like tubercles, especially on the ribs ; beak long, slender; pappus tawny. A Frequent escape from cultivation, especially in the coast valleys. 75. MALACOTHRIX DC. Annual or perennial herbs with alternate or basal mostly pinnatifid leaves and long-peduncled panicled or solitary heads of yellow rarely white (lowers. Involucre campanulate, its principal bracts in 1-2 series, equal or nearly so, with several series of short exterior ones. Receptacle Hat, naked or bristly. Rays truncate and 5-toothed at apex. Achenes oblong or linear, glabrous, 10-15-ribbed, truncate or margined and 4-o-toothed at the summit. Pappus bristles in 2 series, the inner naked or minutely serrulate, slender, coherent at the base and deciduOUS in a ring, the outer few. more persist- ent. 1. M. Californica DC. Annual, scapose, 3 dm. high uric--: leaves basal, tufted, laciniately 1-2-pinnatifid into narrow linear lobes, when young woolly with long, loose, soft hairs; heads mili- tary on naked scapes, large and showy,") cm. broad or less ; in- volucre broadly campanulate, about 2 cm. high; outer bracts slender-subulate; flowers pale yellow; achenes narrow, faintly atriate-costate ; outer pappus of -' persistent bristles, the inner capillary, deciduous. Common on sandy soil alonn l he coast and in the interior valleys. March May. Chicory Tribe I I'.i 2. M. Clevelandi Gray. Annual, paniculately branched, 5 dm. high or less; stems and branches rather naked ; only some of the basal leaves pinnatifid; heads numerous; involucre about 6 nun. high, narrow, few-flowered; bracts usually purplish- tipped; flowers yellow ; achenes oblong-linear, minutely striate- costate, 4-5 of the ribs more prominent; outer pappus of 1 persistent bristle and a conspicuous circle of narrow white Betu- lose teeth. Occasional in the San Gabriel Mountains. More common in the mountains and foothills of Riverside and San Diego Counties. May-July. 3. M. saxatilis tenuifolia (Xutt.) (iray. Somewhat suffru- tescent and leaf)', paniculately branching, perennial, minutely tomentose, soon becoming glabrate or glabrous, 6-12 dm. high; the long slender loosely-paniculate branches bearing slender pedunculate heads ; involucre broadly campanulate, about I cm. high ; the loose calyculate bracts numerous, subulate, passing into similar bractlets on the peduncle ; flowers white, changing to rose color; achenes narrowly oblong, 10-15 costate, becoming some- what 4-5-angled, apex slightly contracted, bearing a very short multidenticulate white border. Common in stony places in the foothills, especially toward the coast. April-May. 77. SONCHTJS L. Sow-thistle. Annual succulent herbs with alternate mostly auricu- late-clasping entire or pinnatifid prickly-margined leaves and yellow flowers in corymbose or paniculate heads. Involucre usually becoming thickened and more or less conic at base, its bracts imbricated in several series, the outer successively smaller. Receptacle flat, naked. Achenes flattened, 10-20-ribbcd, truncate. Pappus of copious soft white simple capillary bristles usually fall- ing away connected. 1. S. oleraceus L. Stoutish, 5-10 dm. high, sparingly leafy, glabrous or with a few glandular hairs on the pedicels and involucre, glaucescent; leaves obovoid or narrower, runcinate- pinnatitid, toothed but not prickly-margined, amplexicaul, the auricles straight, acute; achenes striate-nerved, transversely rugulose-scabrous. Common everywhere, flowering at all seasons. Native of Europe. 450 Cichorieae 2. S. asper (L.) All. Stouter than the last, the Btema distinctly angled, very leafy; leaves entire or pinnatifid, prickly-margined; the auricles helicoid and appresBed to the stem ; achenee 3-nerved mi each side, otherwise smooth. A less common weed than the last. Native of Europe. 78. LACTUCA L. Tall leafy herbs with small panicled heads, [nvolu- cre cylindric, its bracts imbricated in several series, the outer shorter. Receptacle Hat, naked. Achenes flat- tened, 6-10-ribbedj beaked. Pappus of copious white or brownish capillary bristles. 1. Li. Scariola L. Biennial, glaucous ; stems leafy, panicu- lately branched, hirsute at the base or glabrous throughout, li-18 dm. high; leaves oblong to oblong-lanceolate, spinulose-mar- gined, denticulate or pinnatifid, sessile or auriculate-clasping, midrib Bpinulose or hispid; heads 4-8 nun. broad, 6-12-flowered, very numerous, in an open panicle; involucre cylindric ; ligules yellow; achenes obovate-oblong, about equaling the filiform beak ; pappus white. Rather common in streets about Los Angeles. Native of Europe. 7'.). AGOSERIS Raf. Perennial or animal herbs, mostly acauleScent, with tufted basal leaves, and solitary heads of yellow or rarely purple Mowers at the ends of naked or bracted scapes, [nvolucre cainpanulate to oblong, its bracts imbricated in several series. Receptacle Hat, naked or faveolate. Achenes not flattened, 10-ribbed, beaked at the summit. Pappus of copious slender simple white bristles. 1. A. plebeia Greene. Robust, 4-li dm. high; leaves nar- rowly oblanceolate, pinnatifid into slender ascending lobes, apex usually entire ami slenderly acuminate ; ligules short, deep yel- low, scarcely or not at all surpassing the involucral brarts, these woolly at the base ; achenes 4-5 mm. lung; the beak 10—12 mm. long ; pappus soft, white. Occasional in (lie San Gabriel and Santa Ana Mountains May July, Chicory Tribe !•">! '_'. A. retrorsa (bentli.) (Ireene. Peduncles usually ahoul :'» <1 in . high; herbage woolly-pubescent, the wool more or less de- ciduous in age; leaves pinnately parted into narrowly linear or lanceolate retrorse segments ; miter involucral bracts broad, inner linear, narrowly acuminate, equaling the pappus; ligules sliort; achenes ■">-»; nun. long, beak slender, 18-20 nun. long. Sinniiiii of Santiago Peak. May-July. 80. CREPIS L. Perennial or annual herbs, "with alternate or basal mostly toothed or pinnatifid leaves, and small or middle- sized beads, usually paniculate-corymbose, of yellow flowers. Involucre cylindric or campanulate, its princi- pal bracts in 1 series, equal, with a number of exterior smaller ones. L0-20-ribbed or -nerved, not transversely rugose, beakless. Pappus copious, of very slender white bristles. 1. C. biennis L. Annual or biennial, pubescent or hirsute, leafy at least below, branched above, 6-9 dm. high; leaves run- cinate-pinnatifid, oblong or spatulate, at least the upper clasp- ing; beads several, subcorymbose, 2.5-4 cm. high; involucre canescent or pubescent, 8-12 mm. high, its principal bracts linear- lanceolate, downy within; achenes glabrous, 13-striate. Occasional along streets in Los Angeles and Pasadena. 81. HIERACIUM L. Perennial hispid or villous herbs, with alternate or basal leaves, and solitary corymbose or paniculate, small or middle-sized heads of usually yellow flowers. Invo- lucre with its principal bracts in 1-3 series, the outer gradually smaller or abruptly much smaller. Recep- tacle flat, naked or short fimbrillate. Achenes terete or 4-5-angled, 10-15-ribbed, beakless. Pappus copious, of 1—2 rows of simple rather stiff persistent brownish bristles. 1. H. Parishii Gray. Puberulent above with no glandular hairs, leafy up into the narrowly oblong panicle, 3-0 dm. higb ; 452 Appendix lower leaves Bhaggy-hirsute, lanceolate, 13-18 cm. long, tapering to the base or margined petiole, with 5-8 salient teeth to each margin ; upper leaves linear-lanceolate, entire; peduncles seldom much longer and often shorter than the heads; involucre pale, granulose-puberulent, oblong-campanulate, of rather numerous narrow acute or acutish bracts; flowers 15-30, yellow; achenes columnar, about 3 mm. long; pappus sordid or dull white. Occasional in the Sun Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains. June- August. APPENDIX ONAGEACEAE. [This species should follow Onagra, page 209.] Anogra Californica (Wats.) Small. Stems decumbent from a running rootstock, 1-2 dm. long, branching; herbage hoary- pubescent and more or less villous ; leaves narrowly oblanceolate, sinuately toothed or pinnatifid, 0-8 cm. long; ovary and calyx villous; calyx-tube about 2 cm. long; petals white turning pink, lobed at apex, with a rounded sinus; capsule 4-6 cm. long. {CEnothera Californica Wats.) Occasional in sandy soil. Near Santa Ana, Geis; Cucamonga. CONVOLVULACEAE. [This species should precede Tpomoea, page 808.] Cressa Truxillensis II. P>. K. Perennial herb, much branched from the base, erect or ascending, 1-2 dm. high, silky-villous, leafy; leaves ovate-lanceolate, nearly sessile, 4-7 mm. long; (lowers sessile or nearly so in the upper axils; corolla deeply 5-cleft, campanulate, 4-5 mm. long, white, Bilky-pubescent with- out. Kreipii'iit in saline places throughout our range. June-October, GLOSSARY acaulescent, apparently stemless; the proper stem being very short or subterranean. /it, growing larger after flow- ering. decumbent, lying against, a thing. The cotyledons are accumbent when t hey lie with their edges against the caulicle. ac( rost . Deedle-shaped. itchene, a dry indehiseent 1-seeded fruit. acicular, needle-shaped, more slender than acerose. aculeate, armed with prickles. (icum > n tit, , taper-pointed. acute, ending in a point less than a right angle. adher< nf, sticking to, or growing fast to another body. adnate, born adherent. mstival, produced in summer. aestivation, the arrangement of parts in a flower-bud. alate, winged. ttllitit-, mis, with the odor of onions. alt, mate, one after another. alveolate, honeycomb-like. ament, the scaly spike of trees, like the alder and willow. amphitropous, attached by the middle and having the micropyle at one end and the chalaza at the other. tint it',, xicaul, clasping the stem by the base. anatropous, inverted, when the micro- pyle is at the same end as the hilum. ancipital, 2-edged. androgynous, having both staminate and pistillate flowers in the same cluster. annual, producing flowers and fruit tin' first year and then dying. anterior, in a flower, is the part next the bract. See •posterior. anther, the part of the stamen which bears the pollen. ant It, /•//, rous, anther-bearing. anthesis, the period of flowering. antrorse, directed upward. apetalous, destitute of petals. apical, belonging to the apex. apiculate, tipped with a small point. apophysis, any irregular swelling. aquatic, growing in water. arachnoid, cobwebby. arborescent, tree-like. arcuate, bent or curved. areolate, marked out into little spaces. aristatt , awned. aristulate, short-awned. articulated, jointed. ascending, rising obliquely upward. assurgent — see ascending. auriculate, with auricles or ear-like appendages. awl-shaped, sharp-pointed from a broader base. awn, a bristle or beard-like append- age. axillary, occurring in an axil. baccate, berry-like. barbate, bearded. berry, a fruit, pulpy or juicy through- out, as a grape. 454 Glossary biennial. Dowering and dying the second year. bifid, 'J Heft bo about the middle. bifurcaU , 8-forked. bilabiate, 2-lipped. bladdery, thin and Inflated. blade, tin- expanded portion of a leaf or petal. bloom, a whitish powder. brachiate, in pairs, each pair arrang- ed at right angles to the next. bract, t lie leaf of an inflorescence. bractlet, bracts thai occur on flower pedicels. Imlli, a leaf-bud with fleshy scales, usually subterranean. bullate, appearing as if blistered or bladdery. caducous, dropping off very early. caspitose, growing in tufts. cal/mi*, hardened. calyptra, a hood. calyx, the outer set of the perianth. campanulate, bell shaped. canescent, grayish-white, caused usu- ally by a covering of fine whitish hairs. capiiati , having a head. capsule, a dry dehiscent fruit formed from a compound pistil. i a rin ill, , keeled. carpel, a pistil-leaf or sporophyll. carunclt , an excrescence tit the hilum of some seeds. catkin, see ament. emulate, tailed. caudex, an upright stock. caudicle, the stalk of a pollen mass. caulescent, having an obvious stem. caullcle, rudimentary stem of a seed- ling. caulim , belonging to the stem. c, II, the cavity of an anther orovary. chaff, small membranous scales on the receptacle of Composita:. chaparral, a thick growth of shrubs, such as manzanita or scrub-oak chartaceous, of the texture of paper. dilate, beset on the margin with a fringe of hairs or bristle's clavatt , olub-shaped. claw, the stalk like base of some petals. cleistogamoiiK, fertilized in closed buds. cleft, cut into lobes. COmose, bearing a tuft of hairs. fiiiiiHtitisurt see page ;!?»'>. i-oniiati , united or grown together. cmi niri a/, converging. COtlVOlvte, rolled up lengthwise. cordatt , heart-shaped. coriaceous, Leathery In texture. cor/71, a solid bulb. • in n >ite, horned. COrOlla, the inner set Of perianth leaves. corona, a crown. corymb, a Bat or convex flower-olus- ter. corymbose, in corymbs. costa, a rib. cotyledons, the seed-leaves. creeping, growing flat on the ground and root ing. crenate, with rounded teeth. cruciate, cross-shaped. cuciillatc, hood-shaped or hooded. culm, the stem of grasses or sedges. cuneate, wedge-shaped. cuspidate, tipped with a sharp stiff point. cyme, a cluster of centrifugal Inflor- escence. cymose, with cymes. ./. ciduous, falling off. decompound, several times com- pound. decumbent, reclined on the ground, t he summit tending to rise. lb ,iirii ni , prolonged on the stem be Death the insertion. decussate, arranged In pairs, which successively cross each other. dehisa nee, the regular splitting "pen of a capsule or tint her. ,/, uliil, , toothed, the teeth point Ing out ward. diadelphous — see page 804. dichotomous, ■.'•forked. ( rlossary 455 diffuse, spreading widely and Irregu larly. digitate— leaflets are digitate when they arc all borne on the end of a petiole. dissected, cut deeply Into many lobes or divisions. dissepiments, the partitions in a com- pound ovary. diurnal, expanded during the day, closed at night. distichous, 2 ranked. distinct, free. divaricate, widely divergent. divided, cut into divisions down to the midrib. drupe, a fleshy fruit containing a stone, as the plum. i chinate, armed with prickles. elliptical, oval or oblong, with the ends regularly rounded. emarginate, notched at the summit. i an r«< '/, ra ised out of water. endocarp, the inner layer of a peri- carp. endosperm, the nutritive matter in a seed, surrounding the embryo. ephemeral, lasting for a day or less. epigynouS, upon the ovary. equitant, folded longitudinally, and each embracing the next within. erost , eroded as if gnawed. exocarp, outer layer of a pericarp. extrorse, turned outward. falcate, scythe-shaped. farinaceous, mealy in texture. fascicle, a close cluster. fastigiaU , close, parallel and upright favt olatt . favosi see alveolaU . ferruginous, resembling iron-rust. filament, the stock of a stamen. filiform, thread-like. fimbriate, fringed. fistulose, hollow and cylindric. flabelliform, fan-shaped. fiavescent, yellowish. fit cuous or flexuose, bending in op- posite directions, zig-zag. fioccose, woolly. foliate, ]>\o\ ided with leaves, follicle, a pod composed of a single carpel, opening down the Inner suture. fruit, the mature ovary and all that is connected with it. frutescent, somewhat shrubby. fugacious, soon perishing or falling off. fulvous, tawny. funiculus, the stock of an ovule or seed. furfuraceous, bran-like. fusiform, spindle-shaped. galea, a helmet-shaped body. geniculate, bent abruptly. gibbous, somewhat swollen or enlarg- ed. glabrate, becoming glabrous or al- most so. glabrous, smooth, not hairy. glands, small cellular organs which secrete certain substances, such as oil. glandular, with glands. i/lai/cescenf, slightly glaucous. glaucous, covered with a bloom. ijliiiin rate, closely aggregated in a dense head. glume, floral bracts in grasses. gramineous, grass-like. habit, the general aspect of a plant. habitat, the place where a plant grows. hairy, beset with rather long hairs. hastalt . halberd-shaped. herb, a plant that is not woody. hiliun, the scar of a seed, the place of attachment. hirsute, with stifflsh hairs. hirsutulous, minutely hirsute. hispid, beset with stiff hairs. hoary — see canescent. fior/i, a spur. hyaline, transparent or partly so. imbricate, overlapping one another, like shingles. immersed, growing wholly under wa- ter. 156 Glossary incised, cut rather deeply and irregu- larly. incumbent — the cotyledons are in cumbent when the back of one of them lies against the caulicle. inferior, growing below some other organ. inflorescence, the arrangement of the flowers on a stem. in.-; rlion, the place or mode of attach ment. introrxe, turned or facing inward. in ro! hi, I, ;i small involucre. involucre, a whorl or set of bracts around a flower, umbel or head. keel, a projecting ridge. lacerate, appearing as if torn. laciniate, slashed. In nut, , woolly. lanceolate, lance shaped. legume, a simple pod which dehisces in 2 pieces. lenticular, lens-shaped. I hi, i, ous, woody. ligulaie, strap-shaped. limb, the border of a corolla. Ulnar, narrow and flat, the margins parallel. loculicidal, dehiscent through the back of each cell. lodicule—see page 18. hmal', crescent-shaped. lyrate, lyre-shaped. marcescent, withering without falling off. maritime, belonging to the seacoast. mi mhi unmix, thin and soft, like a membrane. merous, the number of parts in a circle. mesocarp, the middle part of a peri carp. monoecious, baving stamens or pis 1 [Is only. nniri nun/, , lipped with an abrupt short point. inn, ro mill./' , diminutive of the last muricale, besel with Bhorl prickly points. muticous, blunt, pointless. nectar, a sweet secretion in flowers. nectariferous, having neotary. in rr, , reins, usually confined to those that are parallel. nervose, conspicuously nerved. nodose, knotty. oblong, -l times as long as broad. obovate, inversely ovate. a/, /ns, , blunt or rounded at the end. ochroli ucous, yellowish-white. OculaU , with eye-shaped markings. opposite, on opposite sides of the stem, in pairs. orbicular, circular in outline. orthotropous, straight, when the mi- cropyle is on the opposite end from the hilum. nrul, broadly elliptic. ovary, that part of the pist ii contain- ing the ovules. ovate, shaped like an egg, with the broad end downward. ovoid, ovate or oval. ovulift rous, ovule-bearing. palea, chaff. /mil, ml' —see macrophyllum, 210 Al KKAl'KAK, 240 Achillea, 435 lanulosa, 435 Aobyrachaena, 405 mollis, 425 Actinolepia, 430 Wallace!, 431 Adenostegia, 371 tilifolia, 372 maritima, 372 Adenostoma, 202 faseiculatum, 202 Agoseris, 450 plebeia, 450 retrorsa, 451 Agrostis, 36 asperifolia, 36 Diegoensis, 37 verticillata, 36 Agropyron, 59 Parishii, 59 laeve, 59 AlZOACBAB, I3H Alcbemilla, 202 arvensis, 203 Alder, 103 Alfalfa, 210 Alfllerilla, 887 a Igaroba, 205 ALISMAi i. \i I, 16 Allium, 84 haematochiton, 84 serratum, 85 Allocarya. 330 tracbyearpa, 331 Alnus, 103 rhombifolia, 103 Alopecurus, 33 geniculatus, :s:i Alsine, 145 media, 1 45 nil ens, 1 15 Alternanthera, 131 Achy rant ha, 134 Alysswn, 180 maritimum, 180 Amaranth, 133 Amaranth Family, 132 Amakanthaceak, 132 Amaranthus, 133 albu8, 133 blitoides, 133 detlexus, 133 graecizans, 133 retroflexus, 133 Amblyopappus, 431 pusillus, 431 Ambrosia, 411 psilostacbya, 112 AlfBBOSIAB, 411 Ammannia, 260 coccinea, 261 Amorpha, 221 Californica, 221 Amsinckia, 335 intermedia, 335 lyoopsoldes, 33S speotabilis, 885 ANAOABDAOBAB, 238 Anagallis, 299 arvensis, 300 Andropogon. 20 glomeratus, 20 macrourus, 20 saocharoides, 21 Andbopogonbab, 20 Anemopsis, 96 Californica, 96 Anogra, 452 Californica, 452 Anthkmideak, 431 Anthemis, 434 Cotula, 434 Antirrhinum, 357 Coulterianum, 358 glandulosum, 358 Nuttallianum, 358 strictum, 358 subsessile, 358 Apbanisma, 124 blitoides, 124 Aphyllon, 3?) fOBCieulaiwn, 374 A piastrum, 282 angustifolium, 282 Apium, 284 graveolens, '-'si AplopappuB cuneatua, 808 Palrtu ri, 398 pinifoliua, 80S 8quarro8U8, 400 Apocynaceae, 304 Apocynum, 304 oannabinum, 806 Aquilegia, 162 t ranoal a, 152 ArabiB, 178 glabra, 179 Index 461 Arabia Ludoviciana, 178 perfoliata, i?.i repaiula, 178 Vlrginloa, 178 Aralia, 275 Californica, 27."> Al< \ 1.1 A< !B A I •:, 87 I Arbutus, 296 Mell/iesii, 296 . i,v, uthobium, lid occidentals, 110 Arctostaphylos, 291 bicoloi glandulosa, -:\<^ glauoa Manzanita, 297 patula, en: Pringlei, 208 tomentosa, 297 Arenaria, 147 Douglasii, 1-17 Fendleri, 1 17 paludicola, 147 palustris, 148 Argemone, 162 platyeeras bispida, 162 Aristida, 28 Americana bromoides, 28 purpurea aequiramea, 29 purpurea Californica, 29 Arrow-grass, 14 Arrow-grass Family, 14 Arrow-head, 17 Artemisia, 436 biennis, 437 Californica, 437 dracunculoides, 437 heterophylla, 437 vulgaris Californica, 437 Artichoke, 441 Arundo, 44 Donax, 44 ASCLEPIADAC'EAE, 305 Asclepias, 306 eriocarpa, 307 Mexicana, 307 Ash, 302 Asparagus, 92 officinalis, 92 . 401 exilis, 402 Great ae, 102 hesperius, 108 Menziesii, 401 Aster Tribe, 392 Asteei \i . 392 a si ragalus, 222 Antiselli, 223 Brauntonii, 223 didj mocarpus, 222 leucopsis, 223 nigrescens, 222 Parishii, 223 pycnostaobys, 223 strigosus, 222 Athysanus, 176 pusillus, I7i; Atriplex, 127 bractt 08a, 128 Breweri, 129 Californica, 129 canescens, 130 ./. cutnbens, 128 expansa, 127 leucophylla, 129 microcarpa, 127 orbicularis, \'!'.< patula, 127 semibaccata. 128 Serenana, 128 Watsoni, 128 Audibertia, 311 Australian salt-bush, 129 Aveneae, 38 A vena, 39 fatua, 39 glabrescens, 40 sativa, 40 Baccbaris, 4114 Douglasii, in.") Emory i, 405 glutinosa, 406 Plummerae, 405 pilularis, 405 viminea, 4U6 Baeria, 427 afflnis, 428 chrysostoma, 428 gracilis, 428 Baeria mutloa, 129 tenella, 128 Barbarea, iti Barbarea, 17 1 vulgaris, \~\ Barberrj , 156 Barberry Family, 156 Barley Tribe, :<~, Bastard Oats, 10 U ATI DACBAB, 131 Hal is, 135 maritima, 135 Balis Family, 131 Bay Tree, lf>7 Hay berry Family. !i7 Bebbia, lis juncea, 418 Bedsl raw, 377 Beech Family, mi Bellflower Family, 385 Bent-grass Tribe, 27 Bkbbebid v B \k, 156 Berberis, 156 dictyota, 157 Nevinii, lf>7 Berula, 287 erecta, 287 Betulaceae, 103 Bicuculla, 163 chrysantha, 163 ochroleuca, 163 Bidens, 417 pilosa, 11s speciosa, 417 Bigelovia Parishii, 398 veneta, 399 Birch Family, 103 Blackberry, 198' Blazing Star, 256 Blepharipappus, 124 elegans, 424 hispidus, 424 platyglossus, 125 Black Sage, 345 Bloomeria, 86 aurea, 86 Blue-curls, 339 Boisduvalia, 265 glabella, 265 Borage Family, 328 BOKAGINACEAE, 328 462 Index Bowlesia, 277 lobata, 278 septentrionalis, 278 Boxthorn, 352 Boykinia, 180 occidt ntalis, 189 rotundifolia, 190 Bramble, 198 Brassioa, 109 alba, 170 campestris, 17n nigra, 170 Brickellia, 392 Califomica, 892 Bristly Foxtail. 25 Brodiaea, 86 capitata, 87 taxa, 87 minor, 87 Bromus, 52 carina tus, 56 Californicum, 57 hordeaccus, 53 Madritensis, 54 marginatus, 56 maximus Gussoni, 51 mollis, 53 Orcuttianus, 55 Itichardsoni, 55 rubens, 51 secalinus, 53 Trinii, 53 pallidiliorus, 54 unioloides, 55 Haenkeanus, 56 Brookweed, 299 Broom, 210 Broom-rape, M7.'l Buckthorn, 241 Buckthorn Family, '.'in Buckwheat Family, Hi) Buda, lis Bulrush, 67 Bur clover, Mill Bur bead, 16 Bur-reed, 9 Bursa, 175 Bursa-pastorls, 175 Hush Poppy, 160 Buttercup, 155 CACTACEAE, 257 Cactus Family, 257 Calabazilla, 854 Calandrinia, 140 caulescens Menziesii,l in elegana, 141 Menziesii, Hi California Laurel, 157 California Lilac, 212 California Poppy, 161 California Sage, 437 California Slippery-elm, 250 California Spikenard, 275 r w.i.iTKuniAcKAi;, 287 Callitriche, 237 marginata, 237 Calochortus, 89 altms, 89 Catalinae, 90 clavatus, 90 invenustus, 90 splendens, 90 venustus, 91 sulphureus, 91 Weedii, 90 purpurascens, 90 vestus, 90 ( ialyptridium, 141 monandrum, 141 Campanim.aokak, 385 Canary-grass Tribe, 26 Cauchalagua, 303 Caper Family, 180 CAPI'AUl DACBAE, 180 Capkii-'oi.i aikak, 380 Capsella, 175 Bursa-pastm is, 175 divaricata, 175 < Hi lilicn, 175 ( lardamine, 172 Gambellil, 172 Carduus, tin < 'alifornicus, 441 edulls, in oocidenl :i i is, in ( larex, 74 Barbarae, ' i llliforniis lal ifol ia, ?."> Hookerlana, 76 laolnlal a, 74 Carex marcida, 76 multicaulis, 75 occidentalis, 76 Pseudo-Cyperus Ameri- cana, 73 siccata, 75 spissa, 71 teretiuscula, 76 triquetra, 75 Carpet-weed, 138 Carpet-weed Family, 138 Carrot Family, 275 Carum, 285 Gairdneri, 286 Lemmoni, 286 Cakyoimi vi.i.ai eak, 143 Castilleja, 368 Californica, 369 foliolosa, 370 Martini, 369 stenanthe, 369 Castor-bean, 233 Catch-fly, 143 Cat-tail, 8 Cat-tail Family, 8 Caucalis, 281 microearpa, 282 nodosa, 282 Caulanthus, 166 amplezloaulls, 166 Ceanothus, 242 crassliollus, '.'ii cuneatus, 244 divaricatus, 243 birsutus, 244 integerrimus, 242 macrocarpus, 211 oliganthus, 241 sorediatus, 21:1 splnosus, 242 tomentosus, 248 ( ienohrus, 26 tribuloides. 26 Centaurea, 112 Mel il cnsis, 1 12 1 !en1 romad ia. ISO Parryi, 121 pungens, 121 Cerasl lum, 1 16 trival, , 1 n; \ [SOOBUm, 146 1 11. 1 ex It;:; Cerasl turn vulgatum, 146 t'KU Aiui'in i.i.ai i: \k, I5<> Ceratopbyllum, 151 demersum, 151 Cercocarpus, 301 betulaefolius, 808 Cereus, 258 Emory i, 358 Chaen&otis, 131 artemisiaefolia. 433 L'laliriusrula. 132 lanosa, 133 santolinoides, 132 Chaetoohloa, 35 glauca, 25 imbcrbis, 25 Cbamiso, 202 Cheiranthus, 179 angustatus, 179 suffrutescens, 179 CHKNi >;■. iDIACEAE, 123 Chenopodium, 124 album, 134 viride, 125 ambrosioides, 135 Californicum, 135 murale, 125 rubrum, 135 Cherry, 303 Chi a, 343 duckweed, 145 Chicory, 444 Chilicothe, 385 Ctaimaphila, 295 Menziesii, 295 Chlobideae, 41 Chlorogalum, 83 pomeridianum, 84 Chorizanthe, 112 Californica, 113 Pernandina, 114 leptoceras, 113 Parry i, 11 1 procumbens, 114 staticoides, 113 Thurberi, 113 Xanti, 114 Christmas Berry, 196 Chrysoma, 397 euneata, 398 ericoides, 398 Chrysoma Palmeri, .'i1.1* Parishii, 398 pinifolia, 398 Chxysopsis, 395 rasi [giata, 396 sessiltfolia, 396 ClCHOBl i ah. 1 13 Ciohorium, 4 ii Intybus, 444 Ciouta, 385 oooidentalis, 385 Cistaoeae, 353 Cladium, 72 mariscus Californicum, 73 Clarkia, 366 elegans, 266 rhombifolia, 366 Claytonia, 143 p< rfoliata, 143 spathulata, 143 Clematis, 154 lasiantha, 154 ligusticifolia, 151 Cleome, 181 lutea, 181 Clover, 211 Cockle-bur, 413 Coleosanthus, 391 Californicus, 391 Nevini, 393 Collinsia, 362 bicolor, 363 callosa, 363 tinctoria, 363 Collomia, 312 gilioides, 315 grand iflora, 313 gracilis, 312 Columbine, 152 COMPOSITAE, 389 Conanthus, 326 demissus, 337 stenocarpus, 327 Conium, 283 maculatum, 283 C( iXVl I 1 ,v r L Ac ■ KA E, 31 17, 453 Convolvulus, 308 arvensis, 309 occidentalis, 309 tenuissimus, 309 ( 'onvoh uius repens, 309 Soldanella Conyza, 104 Coultcri, 404 Cordylanthus, 372 fllifolius, 373 Corethrogyne, 100 virgata, i'ii Bernardina, toi Corn Spurry, 1 (8 CORNACE LB, 392 Cornus, 393 occidentalis, 393 pubeea ns, 393 Cottonwood, 99 Cotula, 436 australis, 436 coronopifolia, 136 Cotyledon, 186 nudicaule, 186 pulvt /'ni< nta, isv CBASSULACEAE, 183 ( Jreamcup, 159 Crepis, 451 biennis, 451 Cress a, 153 Truxillensis, 153 Croton, 333 Californicus, 333 tenuis, 333 Crowfoot Family, 151 CRDCIPEHAE, 164 Cryptanthe, 333 ambigua, 334 barbigua, 334 flaccid a, 334 intermedia, 334 leiocarpa, 335 microstaehys, 331 muriculata, 333 Cucurbita, 384 foetidissima, 384 Cucubbitaceae, 384 Cuscuta. 310 arvensis, 310 Californica, 310 salina, 311 subinclusa, 311 CUSCUTAt'EAE, 310 Cynara, 441 llil Index Cynara Scolymus, 412 Cynakeae, -HO Cynodon, II Dactylon, 41 Cynosurus, -18 oristatus, 48 ( 'Vl'lli ACKAE, 64 Cyperus, 65 diandrus capitatus, 65 castaneus, 66 erythrorhizos, 66 esculentus, 66 laevigatus, 66 Cytlsus, 210 Canariensis, 210 Dactylis, 47 glomerata, 48 Danthonia, 40 Californlca, 40 Darnel, 58 Datisca, \!.">T glomerata, 257 Datisca Family, 257 DATISCACBAE, 257 Datura, 353 meteloides, 353 Dauous, 291 Carota, 292 pusillus, 292 Deinandra, 421 fasciotilata, 421 Kelloggli, i-.'2 Whrightii, 422 Delphinium, 152 ca rd malf, lfi.'i decorum, 153 palms, 153 1'anyi, 153 variegatum, 153 Dendromecon, 160 rigidum, 160 Dent aria, I7:i Californica, lT.i Desobampsla, 39 calyolna, 80 Deweya, 283 • ;i, 288 Diceniba, 168 chrysantha, (63 .'. uca, 168 Diplaons, 363 longirlorus, 864 puniceus, 3ti4 Diplotaxis, 169 tenuifolia, 169 Dipsaceae, 383 Dipsacus, 383 fullomim, 383 Distichlis, 47 spicata, 47 Dithyrea, 174 Californlca maritima, 174 Dock, 119 Dodecatheon, 300 Clevelandi, 300 Dodder, 310 Dodder Family, 810 Dogbane, 804 Dogbane Family, 304 Dogwood, 293 Dogwood Family, 292 Dondia, 131 Californica, 131 depressa, 131 Moquini, 131 multiflora, 131 Draba, 175 cuneifolla, 176 integrifolia, 176 Sonorac, 176 Drudeopbytum, 281 Parishii, 284 Drymocallis, 199 glandulosa, 20 I monticola, 200 Duckweed, 78 Duckweed Family, 77 Dudley a, 186 ISrauntoni, 187 elongata, 188 lurida, 188 minor, 187 ovatifolla, 187 pulverulenta, 186 Durango Root, 257 Echinodorus, 16 cord ifol ius. 16 roalratus, 17 Eel grass, 18 EL \ti.n \< kak, 251 Elatine, 251 braobysperma, 25 1 Elder, 380 Eleocharis, 70 acicularis, 70 arenicola, 71 montana, 72 palustris, 70 rostellata, 71 occidentalia, 71 Ellisia, 321 chrysanthemi folia. 321 Elymus, 61 condensatus, 61 glaucus, 62 Orcuttianus, 62 tritlooldes, 61 Emmenanthe, 326 pendulitlora, 326 Encelia, 115 Californica, 415 farinosa, 416 Epicampes, 35 rigens, 35 Epilobium, 264 Californicum, 264 holosericeum. 264 panioulatum, 264 Parishii, 265 Eragrosl is, II major, 45 Orcuttianus, 45 pilosti, 45 i it emooarpns, 233 sel Lgerus, 233 Bremooarya, 331 lepida. 83-1 miorantha, 331 Eric lcbab, 295 Ericatru Ha, 898 microphylla, :w I . I mil, 402 cuKi,/, rut , 104 folinstis, 403 fragills, 408 Phlladelpblous, 108 Eriodiotyon, 827 Oalifornicum, 327 glutinosum, 828 /'((/■/. [nd ex 165 Eriodictyon tonientosum, It Eriophyllum, 430 confertiflorum, 430 Eriogonum, 116 Bloomed, 118 cinereum, 11? elongatum, lis tascioulatum, i it gracile, 1 19 leucocladon, 119 latifolium, l IT nudum, 117 parvifolium, 117 saxatile, 118 Thurberi, 1 16 vimineum, 119 virgaturn, 119 Wrightii, 118 Erodium. ','27 cicutarium, 22S macrophyllum, 228 mosehatum. 228 Eryngium, 280 Parishii, 280 Erysimum, 168 officinale, 169 Erysimum, 179 Erythraea, 303 venusta, 304 Bschscholtzia, 161 Californica, 161 hypocoides, 161 peninsularis, 161 Eucrypta, 321 chrysanthemifolia, 321 Eulobus, 269 Californicus, 269 EfPATOIUEAl.. 390 Euphorbia, 234 albomarginata, 235 dictyosperma, 236 melandenia, 235 nutans, 236 polycarpa, 235 serpyllifolia, 236 EtJPHORBIACEAE, 231 Eupatorium, 391 Pasadense, 391 Euryptera, 290 Hassei, 291 Euryptera lucida, 290 Euthamia, 307 ocoidentalis, 397 E\ en i ng - primrose Fam- ily, 261 Everlasting, 109 Everlasting Tribe, 406 F \i. V'KAK, 140 False Mermaid Family, 837 Fennel, 288 Fescue Tribe, 43 Festuoa, 51 microstachys, 51 ciliata, 52 i (rayi, 52 Myuros, 52 eilial a, 52 octoflora, 52 Fes rUCEAB, 43 Fit' wort, &59 Figwort Family, 355 Filago, 409 Californica, 409 Fimbristylis, 71 thermalis, 71 Finger-grass Tribe, 41 Flax, 230 Flax Family, 229 Fo'-niculum, 288 Foeniculum, 288 i ulgare, 288 Four-o'clock, 136 Four-o'clock Family, 136 Frankenia. 252 grandiflora, 252 Frankenia Family. 251 Fran k en i a< k a e, 251 FranseHa, 413 acanthicarpa, 413 bipinnatifida, 413 leauifolia, 413 Fraxinus, 302 dipetala, 302 Oregana, 302 /-V. inni, tin, 251 ( 'alifomica, 251 Fremontodendron, 250 Californicum, 250 Fritillaria, 88 Fritillaria biflora, 88 Fuller's-teasi Gaertneria, 112 aoanthioarpa, 113 bipinnal tfida, 113 tenuifolia, 412 Galingale, 65 in, 377 Andrewsii, 379 angustifolium, 378 Aparine, 378 Californicum, 379 grande, 379 Nuttallii, 379 siccatum, 378 i riodum subbiflorum, 378 < tarry a, 293 flavescens Palmeri, 2d4 pallida, 294 Veatchii Palmeri, 294 undulata. -.".14 Gastridium, 37 lendigerum, 37 Gajophytum, 272 pumilum, 273 ramosissimum, 272 Gentian Family, 303 Gentianaceae, 303 GE8 k.Nl U 'EAE, 227 Geranium, 227 Carolinianum, 227 Richardsoni, 227 Geranium Family, 227 Giant-reed, 44 Gingseng Family, 274 Gilia,313 abrotanifolia, 313 achilleaefolia, 314 airactyloides, 313 aurea, 314 Citlifornica, 317 ciliata, 3iy densifolia, 316 dianthoides, :',17 gilioides, 315 inconspicua, 315 latiflora exilis, 315 Li mmoni, 318 liniflorus, 318 micrantha, 318 •let; Index Gilia multicaulis, 31-1 prostrata, 313 staminea, 314 tenella, 319 tenuiflora altissima, 315 virgata, 316 floribunda, 316 risfiihilii, 313 Githopsis, 387 specularioides, 387 Glycyrrhiza, 984 glutinosa, 824 Gnaphalium, 409 Californieum, 410 Chilense, 410 leucocephalum, 410 microcephalum, 410 palustre, 410 purpureum, 411 ramosissimum, 410 Godetia, 366 Bottae, 267 Dudleyana, 267 epilobioides, 268 pulcherrirna, 267 quadrivulnera, 267 viminea, 267 Goldenrod, 396 Golden Stars, 86 Golden-top, 49 Goosefoot, 121 Goosefoot Family, 123 Gourd Family, 384 Gkamineae, 18 Grape Family, 241 i Srass, Barley, 59 Beard, 35 Bent, 36 Bermuda, 34 Blue-eyed, 93 Brome, 52 Bur, 26 Canary, 26 Cord, 41 Crab, 23 Ditch, 22 Drop-seed, 32, 34 Knglish Ray, 57 Feather, 29 Fescue, 51 Grass, Foxtail, 33 Hair, 38 Hard, 58 Johnson, 21 Kentucky Blue, 50 Meadow, 49 Melic, 46 Nit, 37 Orchard, 47 Pampas, 44 Panic, 23 Ray, 57 Salt, 47 Triple-nerved, 28 Velvet, 38 Wheat, 59 Wild Oat, in Grass Family, 18 Grindelia, 393 camporum, 393 cuneifolia, 393 robusta, 393 Ground-cherry, 349 Groundsel Tribe, 437 Gutierrezia, 394 divergens, 394 Gynerium, 44 argentium, 44 Gyrostachys, 95 Romanzofllana, 95 Habenwria, 94 UnalascJiensis, 94 HALORAGIDACEAE, 273 Hasseanthus, 184 elongatus, 184 multicaulis, 185 Hazardia, 399 squarrosa, 400 Heath Family, 295 Hedge-nettle, 341 HKi.KNIKAK, 425 Helenium, 488 puberulum, 433 Hkmantiikak, II 1 Helianthemum, 253 Alders* mi i, 853 senparium, 253 Heliantlms, 114 animus, 115 Oliverl, ii.") Helianthus Parishii, 415 Heliotrope, 329 Heliotropium, 329 curvassavicum, 329 //< mizonia, 422 fas&culata, 422 minima, 423 tenella, 423 Hesperocnide, 108 tenella, 108 Hesperoyucca, 91 Whipplei, 92 Heteromeles, 196 arbutifolia, 197 Heterotheca, 395 grandifolia, 395 Heuchera, 190 elegans, 191 Hieracium, 451 Parishii, 451 Hippuris, 273 vulgaris, 273 Hoarhound, 341 Holcus, 38 lanatus, 38 Holodiscus, 196 discolor, 196 dumosus, 196 Honeysuckle, 381 Honeysuckle Family, 380 HORDEAE Hordeum, 59 Gussonianum, 60 maritimum, 60 murinum, 60 nodosum, 60 depressum, 60 Horkelia, 200 Califomica sericea, 201 platycalyx, 201 puberula, 901 Berloea, 901 Hornwort, 151 Hornwnrt Family, 150 HOBth tea, 816 braehycarpa, '.mt glabra, 219 maritime, 217 parvifiora, 21 7 Purshtona, 816 st riet a, 219 In«l lUlcX 107 Sulsea, 432 heterocuroma, 133 Hutehinsia, 174 procumbens. 175 Hydroootyle, '-'77 ranuaculoides, -J77 umbellata, 277 HVllKnl'H YI.I.At'KAE. 319 Hypoobaeris, -445 radloata, 446 Ice-plant, 139 Incense Cedar, 7 Indian Hemp. 305 Inulkae, 406 Ipomoea, 308 purpurea, 308 Iris Family, 92 Isocoma, 399 vernonioides, 399 Isomeris, 181 arborea, 181 globosa, 181 Jamestown-weed, 353 Jaumea, 426 carnosa, 426 JUL I.A.N daceae, 96 Juglans, 97 Californica, 97 JTJNCACEAE, 79 JUNCAGINACEAE, 14 Juncus. 80 acutus sphaerocarpus,80 Balticus, 80 bufonius, 81 Lescurii elatus, 80 longistylis, 81 Mexicanus, 80 nodoaus megacephalus, 82 patens, 81 phaeocephalus, 82 paniculatus, 82 robustus, 80 Torreyi, 81 Juniperus, 7 Californica, 7 occidentalis, 8 Jussiaea, 262 Californica, 262 repens Californica, 262 Knotweed, 121 Koeleria, 45 cristata, 45 pinetorum, 16 pubt scens, 40 Koellia, 347 Californica, 317 Konig. ISO maritima, 180 Krynitzkia, 334 oxycarya, 334 Labiatae, 338 Lace Pod, 176 I.actuca, 450 Scariola, 450 Lady's Mantle, 202 Lagophylla, 423 ramosissima, 424 Lamarckia, 48 aurea, 49 Larkspur, 152 Lastarriaea, 112 Chilensis, 112 Lathyrus, 226 Alfeldi, 226 laetiflorus, 226 splendens, 226 violaceus, 226 Lasthenia, 429 glabrata Coulteri, 429 Laurel Family, 157 Lauraceae, 157 Laijia, 424 Legouzia, 386 biflora, 386 Lki.uminosae, 204 Lemna, 78 cyclostasa, 78 gibba, 78 minima, 78 minor, 78 trisulca, 78 Valdiviana, 78 Lemnaceae, 77 Lepidium, 167 acutidens, 168 dictyotum acutidens, 168 lasiocarpum, 168 medium, 167 nitidum, 168 l.rpiilnspai'l win, l.'i* squamatum, 438 Leptilon, 108 Canadense, 401 Leptochloa, 42 mucronata, 12 Leptodactylon, 316 Californicum, 317 Leptosiphoti, 318 bicolor, 319 parviflorus, 318 Leptosyne, 416 Douglasii, 417 gigantea, 417 Lepturus, 58 cylindricus, 58 incurvatus, 58 Lessingia, 400 glandulifera, 400 Libocedrus, 7 decurrens, 7 Licorice, 224 Lilaea, 15 subulata, 15 Liliaceae, 82 Lilium, 88 Humboltii, 88 Lily, 88 Lily Family, 82 LlMNANTHACEAE, 237 Limnanthus, 238 Douglasii, 238 Limonium, 301 Californicum, 301 Linaceae, 229 Linanthus, 317 aureus, 318 bicolor, 319 ciliatus, 319 dianthiflorus, 318 Lemmoni, 318 liniflorus, 317 parviflorus, 318 pusillus, 318 Linaria, 357 Canadensis, 357 Linseed, 230 Linum, 230 usitatissimum, 230 Lippia, 338 lanceolata, 338 K»s Judex Lithophragma, 191 afflnis, 192 Lizard-tail Family, 05 Loasa Family, 255 LOASACEAE, 855 Lobelia, 388 splendens, 388 Loco- weed, 382 Loettingia, 150 squarrosa, 150 Lolium, 57 perenne, 57 multiflorum, 58 temulentum, 58 Lomatium. 889 dasycarpum, 290 utriculatum, 289 Vaseyi, 289 Lonicera, 381 subspioata, 381 Loosestrife Family, 260 Lophotocarpus, 17 calycinus. 17 LORANTB U3EAE, 109 Lotus, 815 Americanus, 216 argophyllus, ■!]:< Davidsoni, 219 glaber, 818 grandiflorus, 218 Heermanni, 880 humistratus, 217 junoeus, 219 latbyroides, 216 leucophyllus, 819 micranthus. -,'17 Nevadensis, 219 nudiflorus, 818 ttgiflorus, 216 rubellus, 217 salsuginosus, 217 strigosus, 218 \V rangel ianus, 216 Ludwigia, 868 diffusa California! , 263 Lupinus, 806 afflnis, 808 Chainissonis, 209 longifolius, 209 conciimiis, 2ii7 soides, 209 Lupinus gracilis, 208 Grayi, 309 hirsut issimus, 207 latifolius, 208 longlfolius, 2ii'.i micranthus, 208 rivularis latifolius, 209 sparsiflorus, 207 truncal us, 207 Lycium, 352 Californicum, 352 Parishii, 353 Riotaii, 352 Lycopus. 317 lucidus, 318 LTTHBACBAB, 260 Ly thrum, 261 Californicum, 261 Mad aria, 419 elegans, 420 Madder Family, 377 Madia, 419 dissitiflora, 480 sativa, 419 Madikak, 418 Madrono, 296 Malacothrix, 448 Californica, 448 Clevelandi, 449 saxatilis tenuiflora, )!'.' Mallow. 846 Mallow Family, 245 Malva, 246 parviflora, 247 pusilla, 247 MALVACEAE, 845 Malvastrum, 248 Davidsonil, 249 exile, 218 fascioulatum, 84fl Fremont ii, 21{.t 8pli n diil mn, 219 ThurbeH, 840 Manzanita, 297 Maple, 840 Maple Family, 840 Mariposa Lily, BO Marrubium, 341 vulgare, 34 1 Marsh Rosciium Matilija Poppy, 159 Matricaria. 435 discoid* a, 435 matricarioides, 435 Mayweed, 134 Mayweed Tribe, 434 Meadow-rue, 156 Meconopsis, 162 heterophylla, 162 Medicago, 210 apiculata, 210 denticulata, 810 lupulina, 211 orbicularis, 81 1 sal iva, 210 Mi'liea, 46 imperfecta, 46 Hexuosa, 46 minor, 16 refract a, 47 Melilotus, 211 alba, 211 Indica, 211 Mentha. 348 piperita, 348 spicata, 349 viridis, 349 Mentzelia, 255 afflnis, 256 aliicaulis :;:i .7; -if :::; -: -.;■. dispt rsa, 256 gracilenta, 256 integrifolia, 856 laevioaulis, -jr>f> micrantha, 856 Mesembrianihenmm, 139 aequilaterale, 139 orysl allinum, 130 nodiflorum, 14(1 Mesquit, 805 M [orampelis, 385 maorooarpa, 385 Mioromeria, 346 i IhamissoDls, 346 Douglasii, 846 M lorOpUS, 4(17 Californicus, 108 M Loroseris, n i aphantooarpha tenella, 411 oyolooarpha, i US I ndex 469 Microsteris, 312 Californica, 312 Mignotte Family, 182 Milkweed, 306 Milkweed Family, 306 Milkwort Family, 330 Millet Tribe. 22 Mimulus, 3ti4 Bigelovii, 365 brevipes, 365 oardinalis, 365 < xili8, 367 floribundus, 366 Fremont i, 365 Langsdorfii grandis, 366 luteus, 366 microphyllus, 367 moschatus, 365 sessilifolium, 366 Miner's Lettuce, 141 Mint Family, 338 Mirabilis, 136 Californica, 137 inultiflora pubescens,136 Mission Bells, 88 Mistletoe. IK) Mistletoe Family, 109 Mock-orange, 384 Modiola. 246 Caroliniana, 246 Mollugo, 138 verticillata, 138 Monanthochloe, 44 littoralis, 44 Monardella, 346 lanceolata, 346 Monkey-flower, 364 Monolepsis, 126 Nuttaliana, 126 Monolopia, 429 major, 430 Montia, 141 perfoliata, 142 spathulata, 142 Morning-glory, 308 Morning-glory Family, 307 Mountain Mahogany, 201 Muhlenbergia, 32 Californica, 32 Parishii, 32 sylvatica Californica, 32 Muilla, B5 serotina, 85 Mullen, 346 Mustard, 169 Mustard Family, 164 MtJTTSEAE, 412 Myrica, 98 Californica, 98 MYRICACBAE, 97 Myriophyllum, 271 spicatum, 274 Naiad, 12 N MDACKAK, 9 Xaias, 12 flexilis, 13 Nama Parryii, 328 Nasturtium officinale, 172 Navarretia, 312 atractyloides, 313 prostrata, 313 viscidula, 313 Nemacladus, 387 ramosissimus, 387 montanus, 387 pinnatifidus, 388 Nemacaulis, 1 12 denudata, 112 Nuttallii, 112 Nemophila, 320 aurita, 320 insignis, 320 integrifolia, 321 Menziesii integrifolia, 321 racemosa, 320 Nemoseris, 447 Californica, 447 Nettle, 107 Nettle Family, 106 Nicotiana, 353 Bigelovii, 354 Clevelandi, 354 glauca, 354 Nightshade, 350 Nyctaginaceae, 136 Oak, 104 Oat, 39 "Wild, 39 Oat Tribe, 38 CEnanthe, 287 CEnanthe sarmentosa Californica, 887 T Plum muw. bab, 301 Plumbago Family, 3ol Poa, 49 annua. 19 Fendleriana, 50 Index 471 Poa inttrma, 50 pratensis, 5 I scabrella. 51 Poison Hemlock, 283 Poison Oak, 239 Pokeweed Family. 135 POl I Ml INIACEAE, :;n Polycappon, 1 19 depressum, 149 Polygala, 231 Californica, 231 POLTG \l.\< !E \K, 230 P( iLTGONAi KAK, 110 Polygonum, 121 aviculare. 122 Convolvulus, 123 hydropiperoides, 122 incarnatum, 122 lapathifolium, 122 nodosum, 122 Polypogon, 35 littoralis, 36 Monspeliensis, 35 Pondweed, 10 Pondweed Family, 9 Pop-corn Flower, 332 Poplar, 99 Poppy Family, 158 Populus, 99 Fremonti, 99 trichocarpa, 99 Portulaca, 142 oleracea, 142 PoKTl'LACEAE, 140 Potentilla, 198 Anserina, 199 glandulosa, 200 Nevadensis, 200 multijuga, 198 Potamogeton, 10 foliosus Californicus, 11 fiuitans, 10 lonchites, 10 natans, 10 pauciflorus Californicus, 11 pectinatus, 11 Potato Family. 349 Primrose Family, 298 Pki.mclaceae, 298 Prosopis, 205 Prosopis juliflora, 2ii5 pubescens, 206 I'm nus. 203 demissa, 204 ilicifolia, 204 Pseudotsuga, ."> macrocarpa, 6 Psilocarphus, 408 globiferus, 408 Psoralea, 220 Californica, 221 macrostachya, 220 orbicularis. 221 physodes, 220 Pterostegia, 111 drymarioides, 111 Ptiloria, 446 cichoriacea, 447 pleurocarpa, 446 virgata, 146 Pulse Family, 204 Purslane, 1 12 Purslane Family, 140 /'y, nanthemum, 'M~ ( 'alifornicum, 31? PTROLACEAB, 294 Quercus, 104 agrifolia. 106 Californica, 106 chrysolepis, 106 Douglasii, 105 dumosa, 105 Engelmanni, 105 lobata, 105 Wislizeni, 106 Radish, 170 Eafinesquia Californica, 447 Ragweed, 411 Ragweed Tribe, 411 Ramona, 344 grandiflora, 344 nivea, 344 polystachya, 345 stachyoides, 345 Ranixci'i.aceae, 151 Ranunculus, 155 Californicus, 155 Cymbalaria, 155 Ranunculus bebe- carpus, 155 trichophyllus, 155 Raphanus, 17u sativus, iTn Raspberry, 198 Rattle weed, 222, 223 Razoumofskya. 109 occidentalis, 109 Rein-orchis, 94 Reseda, 182 lutea, 182 Resed m 1. w . 182 RllAM.NAII.AK, 210 Rhamnus, 211 Californica, J II tomentella, 242 crocea, 241 ilicifolia, 241 Rhus, 238 (1 i vers i lot >a, 239 integrifolta, 2:i'.t laurina, 239 ovata, 239 triloliata, 240 Ribes, 192 aniarum, 193 divaricatum, 193 hesperium, 194 malvaceum viridifoli- um, 192 Nevadense, 193 speciosum, 194 tenuiflorum, 192 Ricinus. 233 communis, 234 Rock-rose, 253 Rock-rose Family, 252 Romero, 340 Romneya, 159 Coulteri, 160 trichocalyx, 160 Roripa, 171 curvisliqua, 172 Nasturtium, 171 Rosa, 203 Californica, 203 R( is u'KAE, 195 Rose, 203 Rose Family, 195 Rcbiaceak, 377 472 Index Rubus, 1-97 leucodermis, 198 Nvikomu, 197 parviflorus, 197 vitifolius, 198 Rumex, 119 Acetosella, 120 conglomeratus, 121 crispus, 121 hymenosepalus, 121 persicarioides, ISO pulcher, 120 salicifolius, 120 Ruppia, 11 maritima, 11 Rush, 80 Rush Family, 79 Russian Thistle, 132 Roubieve, 126 multiflda, 126 Sage, 343 Sagina, 1 16 occidentalis, 146 Sagittaria, 17 oalycina, 17 latifolia, 18 variabilis, 18 Salicaikae, 98 Salicornia, ISO ambigua, 130 subterminalis, 130 Salix, 99 argopbylla, 102 exigua, 102 virens, 102 laevigata, nm lasiandra, n«i lasiolepis, 101 macrostachyia, nil leucodendroides. 102 nigra vallloola, 100 Parishi:in:i, mi Salmon Berry, l'J7 Salsify, 448 Salsola, 182 Tragus, 182 Salvia, 848 carduacea, 848 ( Solumba rlae, 848 Bambuous, mbo Sambucus glauca, 380 Samolus, 299 floribundus, 299 Villi randi Arru rican us, 299 Sand Rocket, 169 Sand-verbena, 137 SANICTTLA, 278 arguta. 379 bipinnata, 280 bipinnat Ifida, 2T'.» laciniata, 279 Menziesii, 278 Nevadensis, 279 tuberosa, 280 Sarcodes, 295 sanguinea. 295 SAtTRTTRACEAE, 95 Saxifraga, 190 Californica, 190 Saxikhachaceak, 188 Saxifrage, 190 Saxifrage Family, 188 Schoenus, 72 nigricans, 72 Scirpus, 67 Americanus, 67 atrovirens, 69 Californicus, 68 cernuus, 67 lacustris occidentalis, 68 maritimits, 69 microcarpus, 69 Olneyi, 68 pungt //«, 68 ripariug, 67 robustus, 69 Tatora, 69 Screw-bean, 906 Scropbularla, 859 Californica, 359 SCROPHDLAR] \< r u . 855 Scutellaria, 840 Bolanderi, 841 tubcrosa, :i40 Sea Purslane, 138 Sedge. ;:: Sedge Family. 61 Scduui, IS I obtusatum, 184 Sedum spathulifolium, 184 Senecio, 439 Californicus, 439 Douglasii, 44U ilecetorum, 439 vulgaris. 439 Sknk< icinkak, 437 Sesuvium, 138 sessile, 139 Shooting-star, 300 Sida, 249 hederacea. 249 Sidaloea, 247 delphinifolia, 248 hwmiMs, 248 malvaeSora, 247 parviflora, 248 Silene, 143 Anglica, 144 ant Irrbina, 144 GalUca, 144 laciniata. 144 multinervia, m verecunda. 1 15 Silk-tassel Tree, 293 Sisymbrium acutangulum, 166 eanesa ns, 177 officinale, 169 refiexwm, 166 Sisyrinohium, 93 belluui. 93 Sitanion. 62 anomalum. 64 Californlcum, 64 jubatum, 68 multisetum, 63 Sium. 256 cicutaefolium, 286 heteropliyllmn. 286 Skullcap, 84fl Snap dragon, 857 Sneezeweed, 188 Sneezeweed Tribe, 425 Snow berrj . 381 Snow-planl . 295 Soap plant, 88 s< 'i, \n ac i \i , 849 Solanum, 850 Douglasii, 851 nisi i';i i a, 852 Index 17:: Solanum villosum, 351 Wallacei, 351 Xiinti. 851 glabrescens, 351 intermedium, 351 Solidago. 306 Californica, 396 coDtinis. 397 Sonchus. 449 asper, 450 oleraceus, 449 Sophia, 177 incisa, 177 pinnata, 178 Sorghum. 21 Halepense, 21 Sorghum Tribe, 20 Sow-thistle, 449 Spanish Bayonet, 91 Sparganium, 9 eurycarpum, 9 Spartina, 42 foliosa, 42 glabra, 42 Specularia, 386 Jnfiora, 386 Speedwell, 367 Spergula, 148 arvensis, 148 Sperffularia, 148 Spike-rush, 70 Spiranthe8, 95 Romanzoffia Spirodela, 77 polyrhiza, 77 Sphacele, 345 calycina Wallacei, 346 Sphaerostigma, 269 alyssoides. 272 bistorta, 270 campestre, 271 Parishii, 272 contortum, 271 Greenei, 271 hirtellum, 271 micranthum, 271 spirale, 270 Veitchianum. 870 viridescens. 270 Sphenosciadium, 288 capitellatum, 288 Sporobolus, 34 alroldes, 34 asperifolius, 34 Spruce, 6 Big-cone, 6 False, 5 Spurge Family, 231 Stanley a, 165 pinnata, 165 Star-thistle, 442 Stellaria rru '/in, 145 nitens, 145 Stercula Family, 250 Stekculiaceae, 250 Stillingia, 234 linearifolia. 234 Stipa, 29 coronata, 30 eminens, 30 Andersonii, 30 Hassei. 29 Parishii, 30 setigera, 31 speciosa, 31 viridula, 31 Stone-crop Family, 183 Stramonium, 353 Streptanthus, 166 heterophyllus, 167 Stylochine, 408 gnaphalioides, 408 Stylophyllum, 185 densiflorum, 186 Hasst-i, 185 insulare, 185 Snai/a, 131 Californica, 131 guffrutescens, 131 Torreyana, 131 Sumac Family, 238 Sunflower, 414 Sunflower Family, 389 Sunflower Tribe, 414 Sweet Alyssum, 180 Sweet Clover. 211 Sycamore, 195 Syntherisma, 23 sanguinalis, 23 Tarweed, 419 Tarweed Tribe, 418 Teasel Family, 383 Tetradymia, 438 comosa. 138 Thalesia. 371 faseloulata, 371 Thalictrum, 156 polycarpum, 156 Thelypodium, 165 lasiophyllum, 166 inalienum, (66 Therofon, 189 elatum, 189 rotundifolium, 189 Thistle, 440 Thistle-sage. 343 Thistle Tribe, 440 Thorn-apple, 353 Thysanocarpus, 176 curvipes, 177 laciniatus, 177 Tillaea, 188 minima, 188 Timothy, 33 Tissa, 149 gracilis, 149 macrotheca, 149 marina, 148 tenuis, 1 V.i Tobacco, 353 Tornilla, 206 Tragopogon, 1 17 porrifolius, 448 Trichostema, 339 lanatum, 340 lanceolatum, 3;© Trifolium, 221 albopurpureum, 213 bifidum, 212 ciliatum, 212 ciliolatum, 212 depauperatum, 215 furcatum, 214 gracilentum, 212 involucratum, 213 Macraei, 313 albopurpureum, 213 microcephalum, 211 obtusiflorum, '.'14 pratense, 213 repens. 212 roeeidum, 214 474 Index Trifolium spinulosum, 213 stenophyllutn, 215 tridentatum, 214 variegatum, 213 Wormskjoldii, 213 Triglochin, 14 maritima, 15 Trist turn barbatum, 53 Tropidoearpum, 178 dubium, 174 gracile, 173 Typha, 8 angustifolia, 8 latifolia, 8 Typhacbab, 8 Umhki.i.ifkkae, 275 Umbellularia, 157 Californica, 158 Uropappus, 449 Lindleyi, 445 linearifolius, 445 Urtica, 107 Breweri, 108 holosericea, 107 urens, 107 ORTICACEAE, 106 Valerian Family, 382 Valehi anackak, 382 Viih rianella, 382 macrocera, 382 Velaea, 284 arguta, 284 Parishii, 884 Venegasia, 426 carpesioides, 427 Verbasoum, :s.vi virgatum, 358 Verbena, :{3f> bracteosa, 837 polystaohya, 337 proatrata, 837 urticifolia, 337 Vbbbenacbae, 336 Verbesina, 416 encelioides, 416 Veronica, 367 Buxbaumii, 368 Byzantina, 368 peregrina, 368 Vervain Family, 336 Vetch, 224 Vicia, 224 Americana, 824 linearis, 225 t rune at us, 225 Californica, 225 exigua. .'■.'."> Hassei, 225 sativa, 225 Viola, 253 bland a. 251 crysantha, 225 Douglasii, 255 lobata, -.Til palmata cucullata, 254 pedunculata, 254 VlOLACEAE, 253 Violet, 253 Violet Family, 253 Virgin's Bower, 154 Vitaceae, 244 Vitis, 245 Girdiana, 245 Wallflower, 179 Walnut, 97 Walnut Family, 96 Washingtonia, 281 brachypoda, 281 Watercress, 171 Water-hemlock 285 Water-hoarhound, 347 Water-leaf Family, 319 Water-milfoil Family, 273 Water-plantain Family, 16 Water-starwort Family, 237 Waterwort Family, 251 Wax Myrtle, 98 Western Nettle, 108 Whispering Bells, 326 White Fir, 6 White Sage, 345 Wild Buckwheat, 117 Wild Cucumber, 385 Wild Grape, 245 Wild Hyacinth, 86 Wild Pea, 226 Wild Hye, 61 Wild Toad-flax, 357 Willow, 99 Wintergreen Family, 294 Wolfflella, 79 lingulata. 79 oblonga, 79 Wood sorrel, 229 Wood sorrel Family, 22S Woolly Blue-curls, 340 Xanthium, 413 Canadense, 414 spinosum, 113 Xylothermia, 206 montana, 806 Yerba Buena, 346 Yerba Manse, 96 Yucca, 92 arborescens, 92 Whipplei, 92 ijriiiiiiiiii'iilin, 92 Zanniohellia, 12 palustris. 12 Zauschneria, 863 Californica lai [folia, 863 mlorophylla, 863 Zostera, 13 marina, 13 Zygadene, 83 Zygailenus, S3 Fremontii, 83 ERRATA Page 19, line 8 — for "Andropogyneae" read "Andropogoneae." for " Pleum " read " Phleum." for " Cream Cup" read " Creamcup." fur " L. usitatissmum " read " L. usitatissi- muni." " 265, " 15 — after "Boisduvalia" insert " Spacli." " 351, after line 5 insert " Occasional in waste places about Los Angeles." ' 28, " 26 1 159, " 1 ■ 230, " 15 3 5185 00220 0317