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gland-tipped lobes or teeth, those of the branches entire, all 
sagittate-clasping ; racemes loose, flexuous, not secund; pedicels 
ascending, an inch long; calyx very dark purple, very smooth 
and shining; sepals ovate-cymbiform, with a thick, obtuse, but 
prominent nerve; petals consisting of a stout, thick, lanceolate 
purple claw and a minute, veinless, white lamina; upper pair of 
filaments united almost to the summit, their anthers small and 
rudimentary, not polliniferous; pod about 2 inches long, nearly 
straight on the ascending or suberect, long pedicels; seed with a 
very narrow. wing. 
Point Tiburon, Marin County, April and May, 1886; col- 
lected only by the writer. Related to S. g/andulosus, but per- 
fectly smooth and very glaucous; otherwise readily distinguish - 
able by the very small lamina of the petals, and the short sub- 
erect, long-stalked pods, in a loose, equilateral raceme. The 
rather large, subglobose calyx is nearly black. 
STREPTANTHUS PERAMANUS.—A foot or two high, pilose- 
‘hispid; leaves sinuately toothed and auriculate-clasping; racemes 
somewhat secund; calyx a half-inch long, deep magenta; sepals 
all ovate-cymbiform, sharply carinate, the lateral pair turned in- 
ward behind the upper petals, the apex of each meeting that of 
the other in front of the uppermost sepal; uppermost pair of 
‘filaments united above the middle, thence divergent, but their 
anthers reduced and sterile; each anther of the lowest pair held 
within the folds of the corresponding petal; upper pair of petals 
a third longer than the lower, limb of all white, with purple veins, 
somewhat conduplicate; pods 3 inches long, arcuate-spreading, 
on pedicels of less than a half-inch; seed narrowly winged. 
Oakland Hills; collected many years ago by Mr. Bolander, 
and again this year, by the writer. A most beautiful species, 
with the habit and pubescence of S. g/andulosus, to which it has 
been referred; but the living plant reveals at once the singular 
irregularity of the calyx above pointed out. The lowest sepal is — 
left apart from the others, and the three form, as it were, a broad 
upper lip, the two lateral curving around the uppermost one and 
meeting point to point in front of it. ; 
THELYPODIUM LASIOPHYLLUM.—Turritis (?) Jasiophylla, 
Hook and Arn., Bot. Beech., 321; Sisymbrium reflexum, Nutt.,' 
