( 434) 
plants are usually setose-hispid and glandular-pubescent or glandu- 
lar-villous. They are very much like Menzies’ original specimens, 
and perhaps are also identical with 4. glandulosa Eastw. The 
specimens I have cited from the Topatopa, the Liebre, and the 
San Bernardino Mountains are not at all glandular and are almost 
or entirely without setose hairs. The leaves are comparatively 
bright green, being only sparsely tomentose. In the Cuiamaca 
Mountains, on the other hand, the plants have very pale foliage, 
which is more or less permanently canescent. The branches are 
without setose hairs, but are either canescent or glandular- 
pubescent. 
Specimens examined: Santa Ynez Mountains, Elmer 3708; 
Mount Wilson trail, altitude 600 meters, Abrams 1500; 'Topatopa 
Mountains, Abrams {3 McGregor 84; Liebre Mountain, Abrams & 
McGregor 370; Cleghorn Canyon, San Bernardino Mountains, 
Abrams § McGregor 705; Mount Wilson trail, altitude 1000 me- 
ters, Abrams 1520; Los Tunas Canyon, Santa Monica Mountains, 
Abrams 1699; Silverado Canyon, Santa Ana Mountains, Helen D. 
Geis 723; between Julian and Banner, Abrams 3973; hills near 
Campo, Abrams 3620. 
6. Uva-ursi drupacea (Parry) 
Arctostaphylos Pringlet drupacea Parry, Bull. Calif. Acad. 2: 494. 
1887. 
Type locality: “Mountains east of San Diego.” 
Distribution: San Bernardino Mountains, southward to north- 
ern Lower California. Transition. 
Specimens examined: Mill Creek Falls, 1600 meters, Parish 
5070; Strawberry Peak, San Bernardino Mountains, Abrams, 
July 28, 1901; Abrams & McGregor 726; San Jacinto Mountains, 
altitude 1400 meters, Hall 2092; summit of Cuiamaca Mountain, 
Abrams 3947; Cold Creek, San Bernardino Mountains, Abrams 
€§ McGregor 815. 
STYRACACEAE. Sryrax Famity. 
1, SYTYRASG? STORAX. 
I. STYRAX CALIFORNICUM FULVESCENS Eastw. Bot. 
Gaz. 41: 286. 1906. 
Type locality: ‘“‘Near the Painted cave in the Santa Ynez Moun- 
tains back of Santa Barbara, California.” 
