648 UMBELIilFERAE 



^lurshy nioadows (U* in sliallow wattT, 4700 to 8500 feet: Sierra Nevada from 

 Tulare Co. to Eldorado Co. North to Crater Lake, Oregon. July-Aug., fr. Aug. 



Loi's.— Volcano Creek, IlaU cf- T!tihcocl- 5443; Giant For(\st, Jepson 13,305; Bnbbs Creek, 

 Fresno Co., Jepson 803; ^larkwood Mdw., Fresno Co., Jepson 1G,042; Shaver Lake, Fresno Co., 

 Jepson 10,0114 ; Huntington Lake, Jepsun 13,075 ; Kelly Mdw., Madera Co., ace. Kennedy ; Fresno 

 Big Trees, Jepson 15,980 ; Konitz ])lace, Mariposa Co., Confidon ; Chilnualna ('reek, Mariposa 

 Co., Congdon; Peregoy Mdw., Yosemite, Jepson 5040; Strawberry, Tuolumne Co., A. L. Grant 

 561; Dorrington, Calaveras Co., Jepson 10,191; Silver Creek, Eldorado Co., Kennedy 90. 



Kefs. — OxYi'OLis occiDENTALis C. & R. Contrib. U. S. Nat. Herb. 7:196 (1900), type loc. 

 Crater Lake, Leiberg 4413; Hall, Univ. Cal. Publ. Bot. 6:168 (1915); Jepson, Man. 726, fig. 

 710 (1925). 



28. CONIOSELINUM Fiseli. 

 Tall branching perennials with leaty btems, glabrous herbage and ternately de- 

 compound leaves. Flowers white, in compound umbels. Involucre of few bracts. 

 Involucels of many bractlets. Fruit oblong to obovate, flattened dorsally, with 

 rather prominent stylopodium. Ribs narrowly winged, the lateral usually broad- 

 est. Oil-tubes solitary in the intervals, or sometimes 2 in the lateral one, 2 to 4 on 

 the commissure. — Species 5, North America, Europe and Asia. (Compounded 

 from Conium and Selinum, since resembling both these genera.) 



1. C. gmelinii C. & R. Lost Parsley, Stems stout, 3 to 5 feet high; leaves 

 ternate, then pinnate, the 5 or 7 divisions or leaflets ovate in outline, acute, deeply 

 pinnatifid and more or less toothed, % to 1^/4 inches long; umbels on stout pe- 

 duncles; rays 15 to 26, 1 to 1^/^ inches long in fruit; bracts 2 to 4; involucels of sev- 

 eral narrowly linear bractlets; fruiting pedicels slender, 3 to 4 lines long; fruit 

 oblong, 3 lines long; wings thickish and corkj% rather narrow; oil-tubes conspicu- 

 ous, 2 on the commissure, solitary in the intervals, sunk in the body of the seed, 

 especially the dorsal ones. 



Marsh}^ flats, 5 to 1500 feet : Mendocino Co. to Humboldt Co. North along the 

 coast to Washington and Alaska. Fr. Aug. 



Locs. — Conioselinum gmelinii is very slightly known in California, where only three stations 

 can be cited: Long Valley, Mendocino Co. (Contrib. U. S. Nat. Herb. 7:152) ; Indianola, s. Hum- 

 boldt Bay, Tracy 4388; Crescent City, Jepson 9389. Alaska: Uyak, Kadiak Isl., Jepson 382. 



Eefs.— Conioselinum gmelinii C. & R. Contrib. U. S. Nat. Herb. 7:150, fig. 48 (1900). 

 Ligusiicum gmelinii C. & S. Linnaea 1:391 (1826), type loc. Unalaska, Chamisso. C. pacificnm 

 C. & E. Contrib. U. S. Nat. Herb. 7:152 (1900) ; Jepson, Man. 727 (1925). Selinum pacificum 

 Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 11:140 (1876), type Kellogg 4' Harford 315, probably collected in Mendo- 

 cino Co., but said to have been "Sausalito hills"; Jepson, Fl. W. Mid. Cal. 355 (1901), ed. 2, 

 299 (1911). 



29. ANGELICA L. 

 Stout perennials with leafy stems and ternately or pinnately compound leaves. 

 Flowers white, in large terminal compound umbels. Involucre none or scanty. In- 

 volucels of few small bractlets or none. Calyx-teeth mostly obsolete. Fruit strongly 

 compressed, elliptic-oblong in outline. Ribs prominent, the lateral broadly winged, 

 the others often narrowly winged. Oil-tubes 1 to 3 in the intervals, 2 to 4 on the 

 commissure. — Species about 50, North America, Europe, Asia and New Zealand. 

 (Latin angelica, angelic, on account of its medicinal properties.) 



Maritime species; rays subequal; herbage more or less tomentose; ovary tomentose 



1. A. hendersonii. 

 Montane species ; rays more or less unequal. 



Herbage puberulent or eventually glabrous ; ovary tomentulose ; Coast Ranges and coastal 



S. Cal 2. A. tomentosa. 



Herbage glabrous. 



Leaflets not linear. 



Ovary pubescent ; leaflets narrow-lanceolate to ovate-lanceolate ; central and n. 



Sierra Nevada 3. A. breweri. 



Ovary glabrous; leaflets ovate-lanceolate; Siskiyou Co 4, A. lyallii. 



Leaflets narrowly linear; s. Sierra Nevada 5. A. Uneariloba. 



