650 



UMBELLIFERAE 



Openly wooded mountain slopes, 4500 to 8000 feet: Sierra Nevada from Inyo 

 Co. to Tehama Co. Also in western Nevada. Jiily-Au^. 



Locs. — Burdick grade, Inyo Co., Almcda Nonhjke; Bubbs Creek, Fresno Co. (Sierra Club 

 Publ. 27:49) ; Chilnualna Falls, Mariposa Co., Congdon; Iletch-Hctchy, Jep.ion 3451 ; Dorrinp- 

 ton, Calaveras Co., A. L. Grant 591; Kennedy Mdw., Tuolumne Co., A. L. Grant 445; Barrette 

 Camp, Silver Creek, Eldorado Co., Kennedy 79; Bear Valley, Nevada Co., Jcpson 1.3,4SG; Bow- 

 man Lake, Nevada Co., A. M. Carpenter; Pioneer road sta., North Fork Yuba Kiver, Sierra Co., 

 Jepson 16,832; Rich Point, Middle Fork Feather River, Jepson 10,610; Manzanita Lake, e. 

 Tehama Co., Jepson 15,330. 



Refs. — Angelica breweri Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. 7:348 (1868), type loc. Ebbetts Pass, 

 Alpine Co., Brewer; Jepson, Man. 728 (1925). 



4. A. lyallii Wats. Cascade Angelica. Plants 2 to 4 feet high ; herbage and 

 inflorescence glabrous; leaves biternate, then pinnate; leaflets ovate-lanceolate, 

 serrate, II/2 to S^^ or 5 inches long; fruiting 

 rays 1^^ to 21/2 inches long, the outer row 

 somewhat coalescent at base so as to be web- 

 footed; outer row of pedicels similarly coales- 

 cent; fruit broadly oblong to obovate, 3 to 

 3I/2 lines long; dorsal and intermediate ribs 

 sharply salient, equal; lateral wings about as 

 broad as the body; oil-tubes solitary in the 

 intervals. 



Boggy or moist mountain slopes, 5500 to 

 7000 feet: Siskiyou Co. North to Alberta. 

 July. 



Locs. — Mt. Shasta, K. Brandegee ; Log Lake, 

 Shackelford Creek, Butler 465. 



Refs. — Angelica lyallii "Wats. Proe. Am. Acad. 

 17:374 (1882), type loc. "Galton and Cascade Moun- 

 tains", n. Wash,, Lyall; Jepson, Man. 728 (1925). 



5. A. lineariloba Gray. Poison An- 

 gelica. Stout, glabrous, 2 to 3 feet high; 

 leaves 2 or 3 times ternate, then pinnate with 

 about 5 (3 to 9) leaflets; leaflets linear or 

 linear-lanceolate, 1 to 3 (or 5) inches long, 1 

 to 2 (or 5) lines wide, entire or often with a 

 pair of coarse teeth towards the base, fre- 

 quently decurrent on the rachis; fruiting 

 rays 1 to 2 or 3% inches long; involucre and 



involucels none; fruit oval-oblong, glabrous, 4 to 7 lines long; dorsal and interme- 

 diate ribs filiform; lateral wings thickish, a little narrower than the body; oil-tubes 

 solitary in the dorsal intervals, in pairs in the laterals. 



Openly brushy mountain slopes in granite sand, 6000 to 9500 feet : Tulare 

 Co. to Mariposa and Mono Cos. July- Aug. 



Locs. — Farewell Gap, Jepson 1140 ; Mineral King, Jepson 1155 ; Lewis Camp, Kern Canon, 

 Tulare Co., Jepson 968; Bubbs Creek, Jepson 791; Kaiser Pass, Jepson 16,092; San Joaquin 

 Pass, Madera Co., Congdon; Lundy, Mono Co., Congdon. In Kern Canon the herbage is said to 

 kill horses. 



Var. culbertsonii Jepson. Leaf -segments 4 to 41/^ lines wide. — Little Kern River. 



Refs. — Angelica lineariloba Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. 7:347 (1868), type loc. Ostranders 

 Mdws., Yosemite, Bolander; Jepson, Man. 728 (1925). Var. culbertsonii Jepson, I.e., type loc. 

 Little Kern River, Culberison 4276. 



Fig. 270. Angelica breweri Gray. 

 a, leaf, X % ; 6, umbel, X % ; c, cross 

 sect, of carpel, X 6. 



bi- 



30. COELOPLEURUM Ledeb. 



Very stout perennial herb of the sea-coast with glabrous herbage. Leaves uni-, 

 or tri-temate, with very large inflated petioles. Flowers greenish-white, in 



