402 Flora of the Cape Region, [zoe 



long, about 5-fiowered; calyx i)^ mm. long, segments lanceolate, 

 acute: tube of the corolla slender, 10 mm. long; lobes oblong 

 obtuse half the length of the tube: stamens 10, the 5 larger 3 

 mm. long, 2-celled, nearly sessile, the alternates i -celled, 2 mm. 

 long on filaments little shorter — the connective in both forms 

 brush-hairy at tip: rudiment of ovary 3 mm. long: ? flowers not 

 seen: fruit i-celled, oblong-oval beaked, 5-1 1 cm. long on slender 

 peduncles half as long, and with five horns 3-5 cm. long project- 

 ing backward from the base: seeds 6 mm. long covered by the 

 milky white aril; testa rugose, crustaceous. — The first speci- 

 men was collected by Dr. Gustav Eisen. It was afterward found 

 abundantly, in fruit, about the western side of the mountains. 



756. ^CHiNOCYSTis (Echinopepon) Coulteri (Gray). — 

 Canon Hondo. 



259. Garrya Wrightii Torr. This species is common in 

 the mountains, and reaches a height of 3 m. or more. The 

 leaves are not mucronulate on the margins as are most of the 

 Arizona forms. Specimens from the Santa Rita Mountains have 

 nearly smooth leaf margins, while those from Santa Pedro Martir 

 are exceedingly rough. 



757. Randia obcordata Wats. — Common at low eleva- 

 tions. 



758. Crusea parvifolia Hook. & Arn. Bot. Beech. 430. 

 Agrees very closelj' with the description and figure, difi"ering 

 only in unessential particulars. — Canon Hondo on the western 

 side of the mountains. 



274. Valeriana sorbifolia HBK. 



759. Stevia micrantha Lag. In the mountains at various 

 places, not common. 



760. Eupatorium sagittatum Gray. Common in the 

 vicinity of Pescadero, usually growing in brush fences. Well- 

 known from Guaymas northward to Arizona. 



293. Erigeron subdecurrens Schultz Bip. This is the 

 Conyza Coulleri o( the previous list. 



761. CoNYZA soPHi^PoiviA, HBK. — El Taste. 



762. Baccharis sarothroides Gray. — Near Sierra San 

 Lazaro. 



