356 Munz AND JOHNSTON: PLANTS oF CaLIFoRNIA—II 
‘ Phlox bernardina sp--nov: 
_ Phlox dolichantha Brand; Engler, Pflanzenreich 4*°°: 67. f. 
18, A-D. 1907; Nels. W. Am. Phloxes 28. 1898; Milliken, 
Univ. Cal. Pub. Bot. 2: 65. 1904. Not P. dolichantha Gray, 
Proc. Am. Acad. 22: 310. 1887. 
TYPE: in open pine forest, 6000 feet altitude, Bear Valley, 
June 1886, Parish 1818, (Univ. Calif. Herb. 194015) 
The new species indicated here is the plant from the San 
Bernardino Mountains that has been known as P. dolicantha. 
The type of P. dolichantha Gray, however, came from the Pahran- 
gat Mountains in southern Nevada and is evidently a form of 
what has been called P. Stansburyi brevifolia and P. superba. 
In the recent treatments of Phlox by E. Nelson, Milliken, and 
Brand, the plant from the San Bernardino Mountains has 
usurped the name of P. dolichantha to the exclusion of the 
original Nevada plants. P. bernardina differs from P. dolichantha 
and its immediate relatives in its very elongated corolla-tube, 
which is over four, instead of less than three, times the length 
of the calyx; in having its stems not shrubby below but her- 
baceous to the ground; and in its habitat, which is not at low 
altitudes in desert mountains but in the open pine forests of 
the San Bernardino Mountains. The new species is separated 
from its nearest relative by over 100 miles. It is known only 
from San Bernardino Mountains and appears to have been 
collected there in Bear Valley only. 
NAMA HUMIFUSUM Brand 
Nama humifusum Brand, Beitrage Hydrophyll. 9. 1911. 
In Southern California this species has been known only 
from the three localities (Soldiers’ Home, Los Angeles County, 
and Diamond Lake and Sweetwater Valley in San Diego County) 
given by Brand in the Pflanzenreich (4%: 146. 1913); the 
plant, however, may be reported from Laguna Canyon in Orange 
County, where it was collected in May, 1919, Munz, Street, 
& Williams 268r. 
Lycrum SPENCERAE Macbride 
Lycium Spencerae Macbride, Contr. Gray Herb. 53: 18. 1918. 
The type of this species proves to be a flowering specimen of 
Prunus fasciculata (Torr.) Gray (Proc. Am. Acad. 10: 70. 
