(441) 
3. Ertopicryon TraskiaE Eastwood, Proc. Calif. Acad. III. 1: 
L217.) 1898. 
Type locality: “On one volcanic upland on Santa Catalina 
Island, Calif., at an elevation of about 1500 feet.” 
Distribution: Santa Ynez Mountains on the mainland, and 
Santa Catalina Island. Upper Sonoran. 
Specimens examined: Santa Ynez Mountains, Elmer 4017; 
the Sisquoc, Santa Barbara County, Baker, July, 1895. 
4. Ertopicryon Parryi (A. Gray) Greene, Pittonia 2: 22. 1889. 
Nama Parryi A. Gray, Bot. Calif. 1: 621. 1876. 
Type locality: “On the Mohave slope of the San Bernardino 
Mountains.” 
Distribution: San Gabriel Mountains southward to the Cuia- 
maca Mountains, and probably extending into northern Lower 
California. ‘Transition. 
This is an anomalous species, strikingly different in habit; the 
tall, mostly simple, herbaceous stems arise from a more or less 
woody, branching base. 
Specimens examined: Mount Gleason, San Gabriel Mountains, 
Elmer 3643; open pine forests in the vicinity of Strawberry Valley, 
San Jacinto Mountains, Hall 2502; between Cuiamaca and Ori- 
flamme Canyon, Cuiamaca Mountains, Abrams 3927; Rock Creek, 
altitude 1650 meters, Abrams &F§ McGregor 577; Oakgrove Canyon, 
Liebre Mountains, Abrams & McGregor 386. 
MENTHACEAE. Mint Famity. 
Anther-bearing stamens 4. 
Ovary merely 4-lobed; stamens coiled in the bud, becoming long-exserted 
in flower. 1. Trichostema. 
Ovary deeply 4-parted; stamens not long-exserted. 
Calyx becoming much inflated. 2. Salazaria. 
Calyx not inflated. 3. Sphacele. 
Anther-bearing stamens 2. 4. Ramona. 
1. TRICHOSTEMA. Buve-curt. 
Corolla-tube well-exserted beyond the calyx. 1. T. lanatum. 
Corolla-tube scarcely exserted beyond the calyx. 2. Lf. Parishiv. 
1. TRICHOSTEMA LANATUM Benth. Lab. Gen. & Sp. 659. 1835. 
bd 
Type locality: ‘“Hab. in California.” First collected by Douglas. 
Distribution: On dry chaparral ridges from Monterey County 
