538 Abrams : Flora of Southern California 



5-6 min. long, rather deeply Iobed : wings of fruit obtuse at apex, 

 much prolonged above forming a deep rather narrow sinus. 



The narrow bracts and peculiar wings, which resemble the 

 ears of a coyote, distinguish this best from the preceding species ; 

 while the larger flowers readily distinguish both from A. villosa 

 S. Wats., with which they have been confused. 



Palm Springs, .V. A. Parish 4.1 j8, April, 1896 (type); open 

 sandy plain, Riverside County, Grout y -/././> 1901 ; vicinity of 

 Winchester, Hall 2915, no date. 



Delphinium Cuyamacae sp. nov. 



Root rather stout, fasciculately branched 3-5 cm. below the 

 surface, the branches not at all fusiform : stem erect, simple or in 

 large specimens with one or two short slender flowering branches 

 from near the base of the raceme, rather stout and somewhat fis- 

 tulous below, 4-6 dm. high, pale-green and cinereous with a fine 

 close puberulence : basal leaves on very stout cinereous-puberu- 

 lent petioles 6—9 cm. long, dissected into rather broadly linear 

 lobes, 2.5—3 cm - broad, densely puberulent beneath, less so above ; 

 stem-leaves on closely erect stoutish petioles, similar to the basal 

 but becoming smaller and more dissected : raceme simple, narrow, 

 rather dense above, the lower scattered flowers on pedicels about 

 2 cm. long, the upper ones on pedicels about 1 cm. long : sepals 

 purple, puberulent without, the lower oval, 8 mm. long, the lat- 

 eral broadest above the middle, acutish, slightly exceeding the 

 lower ; spur straight or nearly so, 3—4 mm. longer than the blade 

 and about 2 mm. broad at the upper end, gradually tapering : 

 lower petals rose-purple, their claws slender, 6 mm. long, the 

 blades rounded in outline, 5 mm. broad, usually cleft to the 

 middle, ciliate on the margin and with a tuft of whitish hairs on 

 the back ; upper petals purple except the lower whitish margin, 7 

 mm. long, 3 mm. broad at the oblique apex : ovary and imma- 

 ture capsules nearly glabrous : mature fruit not seen. 



Apparently closely related to D. Hanseni Greene, from which 

 it is best distinguished by the character of its pubescence and 

 purple flowers. 



On grassy slopes bordering Cuyamaca Lake, altitude 1 550 

 meters, San Diego County, Abrams j 8 '88, June 26, 1902. 



Acrolasia Davidsoniana sp. nov. 



Stems slender, erect, simple below, 3-4 dm. high : leaves lin- 

 ear or linear-lanceolate, 1-3 cm. long, entire: flowers in clusters 



