34 Muhlenbergia, Volume 4 
is very different, and quite characteristic. The following speci- 
mens of D. Andersonii are in the collections: Cathedral Trail, 
Mariposa county, August 7, 1899, Congdon; Willow Creek, Mo- 
doc county, June, 1894, R. M. Austin; Forestdale, Modoc 
county, M. S. Baker; Prosser creek near Truckee, June, 1887, 
C. F. Sonne. 
D. RECURVATUM Greene. Our southern forms have the 
leaf segments narrower and the flowers usually smaller. The 
follicles (not described by Greene) are thick, oblong, one half 
_ inch long, not at all divergent at the tip, conspicuously veined, 
spine on the tip straight; pedicels arcuate, the lowest one inch 
long. The specimens from near Vacaville, Solano county, 5399 
Heller and Brown; and Antioch, Contra Costa county, April 17, 
1889, Chestnut and Drew, are from the region where the type 
was found, are minutely puberulent on the stem and not hirsute 
on the leaf. The southern forms are from San Antonio moun- 
tains, 5750 feet altitude, Hall; Lytle Creek Canyon, 5500 feet 
altitude, 1462 Hall; Bear Valley, San Bernardino county, 6500 
feet altitude, 3781 Parish; Victorville, San Bernardino county, 
3000 feet altitude, 6201 Hall; summit of Cajon Pass, 1790 Par- 
ish; Acton, Los Angeles county, May 31, 1895, Hasse; Burch- 
am’s Ranch, Mojave river, 4913 Parish; Lancaster, Los Angeles 
county, May 12, 1893, Davidson; Lancaster, Los Angeles 
county, 9227 University of California herbarium. The speci- 
mens from Lancaster have somewhat the appearance of scafo- 
sum, with leaves more deeply divided into narrow segments, but 
the fruit is similar to the others quoted, and they probably be- 
long here. 
D. Parryi Gray. he leaf segments of D. Parry7 are de- 
scribed as linear and obtuse. Most of ours are linear, but are 
more frequently acute than obtuse. Generally distributed from 
Ventura county to San Diego. Hopper’s Canyon, Ventura 
county, Davidson; Los. Angeles, Davidson; Glendale, Los An- 
geles county, 894 Braunton; Claremont, Chandler. Santa Ana 
