I'ipei — New Plants of the Pacific Northwest. 77 



(irindelia andersonii, n. sp. 



Perennial, glabrous except for a very sparse pubescence especially in 

 tbe inflorescence, gummy only on the heads ; stems erect, 30-50 cm. high ; 

 basal leaves not seen but described as "growing in close rosette out of 

 which the flowering stems arise"; cauline leaves numerous especially 

 toward the top, alternate or a few opposite, linear to narrowly spatulate, 

 entire, acute, attenuate to the base, 4-10 cm. long; heads solitary or 

 several in a loose cyme, all peduncled, each 1.5-2 cm. broad; tegules in 

 several series, somewhat gummy, lanceolate, broadest at base, attenuate 

 acuminate, the outermost linear and foliaceous; rays about 30, deep yel- 

 low, 15-20 mm. long; pappus bristles two, corneous, whitish, minutely 

 serrulate, straight or curved, shorter than the florets. 



Saanich Arm, Vancouver Island, July 5, 1917, J. R. Anderson, "grow- 

 ing at the mouth of a stream with Glaux maritima on tidal flats sub- 

 merged at high water." 



A very remarkable species especially in its foliage. It might be con- 

 sidered an abnormal form if it did not occur in abundance where 

 collected. 



Hoorebekia (§Pyrrocoma) curvata, n. sp. 



Underground parts not seen ; stems slender, curved and apparently 

 subdecumbent, sparsely pilose, 45 cm. long, simple to the inflorescence; 

 leaves membranous, narrowly lanceolate, cuspidately acute, sparsely 

 pilose on each surface, remotely ciliate with short stout hairs from a white 

 indurated margin, the lower 10-15 cm. long narrowed at base and short 

 petiolate, the cauline much shorter, sessile and gradually reduced up- 

 ward; inflorescence thinly tomemtose of 7 to 12 long-peduncled heads; 

 involucre broadly campanulate, 5-7 mm. high; tegules plane, broadly 

 linear, cuspidate-acute, chartaceous except the green tips, sparsely pilose 

 on the back and densely ciliate with white hairs, loosely imbricate in 

 about three ranks; receptacle with about 6 concentric sets of subulate- 

 triangular flat papillae; rays few, slender, 6-7 mm. long; tubular corollas 

 5 mm. long; pappus copious, sordid ; akenes densely appressed pubescent, 

 the terminal hairs longer and forming a dense circlet. 



Klamath Falls, Oregon, M. E. Peck No. 7492, August 28, 1916. A 

 peculiar species not closely related to any thus far described, but nearest 

 Aplopappus laneeolatus (Hook.) Torr. & Gray. 



