28 THE GENUS PHORADENDRON 
Nutting, 1894). Hesperia (Trelease, 1892). San Jacinto Reserve (Lei- 
berg, 3161). Los Angeles Co. (Elmer, 3607; Hasse; Abrams & Me- 
Gregor, 543; Chamberlain). San Bernardino Mts. (Coville & Funston, 
130). San Felipe (Palmer, 442). San Diego Co. (Orcutt; Mearns, 3013, 
3198; Schoenfeldt, 3045). Sta. Rosa Mts. (Smith, 5483). Kentucky 
Springs (Davy, 205). Cuyama (Eastwood, 1896). Antelope Valley 
(Hough; Davy, 2603). Without locality (Kuntze, 3168). Mexico. 
Sonora. San Rafael (Jones, 37032, 1882). 
In the south the leaves are prevailingly narrower than in the north, 
particularly so in Parish, 899, from the San Bernardino Mountains, for 
which the name f. Parishii may be used.—Plate 21. What must be taken 
for P. densum occurs also in Arizona (Sedona, near Flagstaff, Hedgcock, 
4915 in part—on Cupressus). 
„> PHORADENDRON PAUCIFLORUM Torrey. 
Phoradendron pauciflorum Torrey, Bot. Whipple. p. 134. 1857. (Senate 
Ex. Doc. no. 78. 33d Congress, 2d Session, —Report of expl. and surv. 
. . . Miss. river to the Pacific. vol. 4. pt. 4, Torrey, Deseription of the 
general botanical collections). 
Not forked, the rather lax and long branches without cataphyls, di- 
cecious. Internodes long for the group (2-4x15-40 mm.), somewhat gran- 
ular-varnished. Leaves oblanceolate-elliptical, submucronately obtuse, 
sessile, 5-7x20-30 mm. Spikes mostly solitary, very short (scarcely 5 
mm.), with 1 or rarely 2 joints 2-flowered when pistillate and about 
8-flowered when staminate: peduncle scarcely 2 mm. long. Fruit straw- 
colored, subglobose, 4 mm. in diameter: sepals somewhat parted.— 
Plate 22. 
Californian region (?exelusively) on Abies and Cupressus.*—The 
type from California. 
Specimens examined:—Unirep STATES. CALIFORNIA.  Duffield's 
Ranch (Bigelow, 2, 1854, to be taken as type). Mariposa (Congdon, 
1903). Trail to Big Carson (Eastwood, 1897-8 on Cupressus). Kern 
Co. (Coville & Funston, 1192, 1891; Davy, 2027). Baldy Trail (Mc- 
Clatchie, 1893). Mount Tamalpais (Eastwood, 1898). Bear Valley, San 
Bernardino Mts. ( Parish, 1443; Jones, 1900). San Jacinto Reserve (Lei- 
berg, 3152). Cajon Pass (Bigelow, Mar. 16, 1854). Cuyamaea Mts. 
(Orcutt, 545). Fish Camp (Hedgcock & Meinecke, 4829). Mexico. 
LOWER CaLrFORNIA. San Pedro Martir (Brandegee, 1893). 
I do not distinguish from this, except in a somewhat longer basal 
attenuation of the leaves and the occurrence of about 14 flowers on each 
*Cf. Hedgecock, Phytopathology. vol. 5. р. 179, for a note on the hosts of this 
and allied Species—not clearly separated. 
