CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES. 95 



D. stellatus, Kell. 



Brandies and under surface of leaves yellowish-tomentose, 

 the pubescence partly stellate and partly dendroid: leaves 

 subcoriaceous, ovate-lanceolate, entire, the margins strongly 

 revolute, upper surface glabrous and glutinous: calyx gland- 

 ular-puberulent : corolla apparently small (1 inch long), 

 with narrow throat, the color unknown. — Proc. Cal. Acad. 

 II. 18. 



Cedros Island, Dr. J. A. Veatch. The pubescence of two 

 different kinds is very plentiful in this plant, which is 

 doubtless of a species distinct from all our main-land 

 forms; although the dendroid hairs are on other species, 

 and even the stellate are not wanting elsewhere in the genus. 



D. glutinosus, Nutt. l. c. 



Three to six feet high; branches puberuleiit: leaves not 

 coriaceous, linear lanceolate, acutish, pubescent beneath with 

 short, somewhat branching, but no stellate hairs, denticu- 

 late, loosely revolute in age: corolla buff, an inch long, 

 throat narrow, the lobes entire or emarginate. — Mimulus 

 glutinosus, Wendland, Jacq. Hort. Schoenbr. t. 364. Gray, 

 1. c. excluding most of the synonymy and all the varieties. 



Common along streams and in shady places in the vicinity 

 of San Francisco Bay. 



D. latifolius.Nuttl. c. 



Branches puberulent, some of the hairs longer and gland- 

 tipped: leaves thin, from nearly glabrous to quite tomentose 

 beneath (some of the hairs stellate), narrowly oblong, ob- 

 tuse, strongly toothed: corolla buff, 1| inches long, throat 

 enlarging upwards, limb ample, lobes erose-denticulate. — 

 Diplacus glutinosus, Benth. 1. c. in part, and Mimulus glutin- 

 osus, Gray, 1. c. in part. 



Foot-hills of the Sierra Nevada. Collected recently by 

 Mr. Elisha Brooks, and by Mrs. Curran. Very possibly a 

 variety merely of the last species; but the corolla in our best 

 specimens appears quite too unlike. 



