110 University of California Publicafions. [botaxv 



MoxARDELLA MACRAXTHA Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. xi. 100 (1876). 



Robust, stems 1-2 ft. long; pubescence sparse and spreading; 

 internodes elongated; the larger leaves 9-14 lines long and 8 

 lines wide; corolla deep red, tube somewhat trumpet-shaped, 

 apparently glabrous but short-pubescent under a strong hand- 

 lens; stamens exserted beyond the corolla- lobes. In our speci- 

 mens the corollas are l5~l4 in. long, but there is figured in 

 Hook. f. Bot. Mag. t. 6270 a form with corolla only an inch 

 long. 



Palomar, San Diego Co., on shaded hillsides beneath chap- 

 arral, May, 1901 (W. L. Jepson and H. M. Hall, H. M. H. no. 

 1936); Mill Creek, San Bernardino Co., July, 1898, (S. B. 

 Parish, no. 4578). 



MoNARDELLA MACRANTHA TENUiFLORA fWafs.J Gray, Syn. Fl. 



ii. pt. 1, 459 (1886). M. ienuiflora Wats., in Gray, Proc. 



Am. Acad., xvii. 230 (1882). Plate XI. 



Stems about a foot long, more pubescent than in the last, the 

 pubescence not appressed; internodes long; leaves ovate, the 

 larger 10-14 lines long; corolla pale rose or yellowish, the tube 

 slender and more pubescent, li-1^ in. long; stamens not exserted 

 bej-ond the corolla- lobes. 



Caiion of the San Jacinto River at 4400 ft. alt., on shaded 

 hillsides of the chaparral belt, June, 1897 (no. 669), July, 1897 

 (no. 687), July, 1898 (no. 976); Palomar, San Diego Co., July 

 5, 1896 (A. J. McClatchie); Palomar, July 3, 1896 (A. J. 

 McClatchie) . The last is intermediate between this form and the 

 next. 



Monardella. MACRANTHA pinctorum Hall, var. nov. Plate XII. 



Stems shorter than in the last, ashy-pubescent, the hau's 

 short and dense ; internodes sometimes short with as many as five 

 pairs of leaves crowded on a stem only an inch and a half long, 

 sometimes more elongated; leaves ovate to elliptic, much reduced 

 in size, the largest under 6 lines in length; corolla very slender, 

 pale yellow to almost white, l-li in. long, conspicuously pubes- 

 cent; stamens not exserted beyond the corolla-lobes. 



In the Yellow Pine belt of San Jacinto Mt., at 6000 to 8000 

 ft. alt., July, 1897 (no. 725, type), July, 1897 (no. 691), June, 



