298 MUNZ AND JOHNSTON: PLANTS OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 
Californian material are minor ones and relative in nature, it 
has been thought best to treat the two Californian forms of 
Siyrax as §. officinalis var. californica (Torr.) n. comb. and as 
S. officinalis var. fulvescens (Eastw.) Munz & Johnston. 
Styrax officinalis var. fulvescens differs from the var. californica 
in its broader, heavily tomentose, usually subcordate leaves, 
and characteristically fulvescent pubescence. It ranges along 
the coastal slopes of California from the mountains back of 
Santa Barbara to those back of San Diego, whereas the var. 
californica occurs in northern California on the hills surrounding 
the Sacramento valley, from Colusa and Calaveras Counties 
northward to Shasta County. The range of the two varieties 
is hence widely separated. 
’ Phacelia (§ Eutoca) Keckii sp. nov. 
- tong, 
upper leaves 3-7 mm. long; flowers in rather dense terminal 
unilateral circinate racemes becoming 3-5 cm. long; pedicels 
I-2 mm. long; sepals green, narrowly oblanceolate, acute, short 
viscid hirsute, becoming 7-8 mm. long; corolla tubular-funnel- 
4-5 mm. long, ovoid, pubescent; seeds brownish, angled, acute 
RIVERSIDE County: along trail from Glen Ivy to Santiago 
Peak, Santa Ana Mts., alt. 4000 ft., Munz 7056 (TYPE, Baker 
Herb. 20490; tsorypr, Gray Herb.). OrancE County: west 
slope of Santa Ana Mts., alt. 4800 ft., Munz 7763 (B).- 
Growing on dry slopes and ridges in the chaparral belt, 
between 3500 and 5000 ft. alt., on both the east and west sides 
of the Santa Ana Mts. The species is apparently most closely 
related to P. suaveolens Greene, and keys out to that species in 
