400 CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES. 



120. LoNiCERA HISPIDULA, Dougl. ; Torr. & Gray, 1. c. 5. 

 Only one plant seen, and that with the two preceding 

 species. 



121. LoNtcERA SUBSPICATA, Hook. & Am. Bot. Beech. 

 349. — South side ne ir the sea; frequent. 



122. Galium aparine, Linn. Sp. PI. 157. 



123. Galium angustifolioi, Nutt. ; Torr. & Gray, I.e. 

 22. — Rocky places low down on the north side; not fre- 

 quent. 



124= Galium flaccidum, Greene, Pittonia, i. 34. 



125. Galium buxifolium, Greene (see page 150). — Near 

 G. Catalinense, Gray, bat foliage of different texture and 

 form, and the nodes of the stem lacking the " tumid ring " 

 of that species. 



126. Brickellia Californica, Gray, PI. Fendl. 64. — In 

 sunny open places among the canons of the north side; 

 quite as shrubby as the New Mexican plant called B. 

 WrigJdii, which is doubtless the same thing, specifically at 

 least. 



127. Grixdelia eobusta, Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. 

 vii. 314. — Interior; not common. 



128. Aplopappus squarrosus, Hook & Arn. Bot. Beech. 

 146. — Frequent southward in the interior. 



129. BiGELOViA YEXETA. Gray, Syn. Fl. i. 2, 112.— 

 With the last and as frequent, but neither of them in any 

 abundance as on the mainland. 



130. BiGELOYiA VEXETA, var. SEDOIDES. — Stems woody at 

 base but wholly prostrate and less than a foot long: leaves 

 obovate, coarsely serrate, thick and succulent: heads rather 

 large, crowded in a terminal corymb. 



On the edges of low cliffs overhanging the sea, on the 

 north side of the island; at a short distance would be mis- 



