84 University of California Puhliraiions. [botant 



not yet been found elsewhere in California.* The San Jacinto 

 specimens do not diflfer from those of the type collection, so far 

 as can be made out from Dr. Gray's description, which is here 

 supplemented by the following notes based on our no. 2500: 

 Shrubby, 1-3 ft. high; leaves not fascicled but somewhat 

 crowded on the short rigid branchlets, 4-5 or rarelj' 7 lines long, 

 sparsely pubescent above, densely silky-pubescent beneath; 

 flowers clear white, fragrant, f in. across; calyx-lobes silky- 

 pubescent externally and on the upper third of the inner surface. 



Ribes amictum Greene, Pitt. i. 69 (1887) . R. Menziesii Pursh., 

 of Bot. Calif., in part. Gooseberry. 



In the Lower Transition Zone. Not common and not found 

 on the east side. (No. 2259.) 



Ribes cereum Dongl. 



A common shrub from the 8000-foot contour to the summit. 

 (Nos. 2353, 2411.) 



Ribes lacustre molle Gran. B. mihigennm McCiatchie, Eryth. 

 ii. 79 (1894). 



Common on the summit and also collected at 9200 ft. alt. in 

 Round Valley. Evidently confined to the Hudsonian Zone. 

 (No. 2410.) 



Ribes Nevadense KelL, Proc. Calif. Acad. i. 65 (1873, re- 

 print). R. sanguineum variegatum Wats., in part. 



Frequeut in moist soil throughout the Lower Transition Zone. 

 (Nos. 2260, 2423.) 



Tellima af finis (Gray) Boland. Lithophragma affinis Gray. 

 Star of Bethlehem. 



This is a species of the foot-hills, but reaches the pine l)elt on 

 the south and west sides. (No. 2187.) 



* This species has been reported from San Pedro Martir, Lower California, by 

 Mr. T. S. Brandegee, Zee iv. 205 (1893). 



