Vol. 49 No. 2 
BULLETIN 
OF THE 
TORREY BOTANICAL CLUB 
FEBRUARY, 1922 
Miscellaneous notes on plants of Southern California—l 
Puitip A. Munz AND IvAN M. JOHNSTON 
Recent botanical collecting has added to our knowledge of the 
flora of Southern California and has made possible the presenta- 
tion of the notes given in this paper. Collections cited as having 
been made by ‘‘M & H” were by Munz and Harwood, those by 
“M, J & H” were by Munz, Johnston and Harwood; other collec- 
tions are not abbreviated. Specimens of all the plants mentioned 
are in the C, F. Baker Herbarium of Pomona College. 
NOTHOLAENA SINUATA var. INTEGERRIMA Hook. 
Notholaena sinuata var. integerrima Hook. Sp. Fil. 5: 108. 1864. 
Locally abundant on a rocky hillside in a gulch back of the 
Bonanza King Mine, Providence Mountains, Mohave Desert, 
M & H3550and M,J@H 4224. Our material is a fine match for 
the figure given by Eaton (Ferns of North America pl. 39, f. 1. 
1879). New to California. 
WoopsIA SCoPpULINA D. C. Eaton . 
Woodsta scopulina D. C. Eaton, Canadian Nat. II 2:90. 1865. 
This fern, infrequent in the higher mountains of the middle 
and northern parts of the state, must be accredited a place in the 
fern-list of Southern California, as a few plants were collected in 
the Providence Mountains several miles south of the Bonanza 
King Mines. The single colony discovered, M, J & H 4212, was 
growing in the shelter of boulders in the bed of a dry gulch in the 
lower portions of the pinyon belt. The soil in which the plant 
{The BuLLETIN for January (49: 1-30. pl. z) was issued March 21, 1922.] 
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