4 Muhlenbergia, Volume 3 
Am. Oaks, 79, and Sargent, Sylva, 8: 119, as a hybrid between 
Q Wislizeni and Q. Kelloggit. As neither of the supposed par- 
ents are known from the island, or are likely to be found there, 
either the hybridity of this oak, or its presence on the island, 
must be an error. 
THELYPODIUM LACINIATUM Endl. Gen. Pl. 876. 
This has been reported from Santa Catalina Island, but 
without doubt by inadvertence for 7: laszophyllum Greene, a 
species known to occur on the island, and widely distributed on 
the adjacent mainland. ‘There is no specimen of 7. lacintatum 
from the island in the Brandegee herbarium. 
LUPINUS ARIZONICUS Wats. Proc. Am. Acad, 12: 250. 
Parry and Lemmon’s collection of this plant, given as “near 
San Bernardino,” in Bot. Cal. 2: 440, was made at or near 
Whitewater, in the Colorado desert. The species is strictly a 
desert one. 
OXALIS CORNICULATA L. Sp. Pl. 435. 
This has been reported several times from our region: Bot. 
Cal. 1: 96, “most common south of Santa Barbara; Davidson, 
Pl. Los Ang. Co., “foothills from Santa Monica to Pasadena;” 
McClatchie, Fl. Pasad. 635, ‘frequent along streets.” Yet it is 
doubtful if it occurs otherwise than as an escape, as in Mc- 
Clatchie’s note. As such the variety atropurpurea Planche, 
has established itself in places in the streets of San Bernardino, 
notably affecting the crevices of pavements. The other refer- 
ences are toa plant common on the mesas near the coast and for 
some fifteen miles or more inland in the canyons of the coast 
-mountains. All that I have examined are referable to O. 
Wrighttt Gray, but quite possibly O. pxemzla Nutt. may be de- 
tected in the coast mountains. 
CONDALIA PARRYI Weberbauer, in Eng. & Prantl, Nat. Pfl. 3: 
Abt. 5. 404. 
Lizyphus Parryt Torr. Bot. Mex. Bound. 46. 
