360 University of California Publications in Botany [Vol.9 



Professor and Mrs. Hall in their Yosemite Flora cite Gray as the 

 author of the combination " Haplopappus discoideus" but they now 

 inform me that this was an inadvertence, the combination not having 

 been previously made. 



2. Haplopappus suffruticosus Gray, Proc. Am. Acad., vol. 6, p. 542. 

 1866. 



Macronema suffruticos^im Nutt., Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. II, vol. 7, p. 322. 



1841. 

 Macronema grindelifolium Rydb., Mem. N.Y. Bot. Gard., vol. 1, p. 384, 



1900. 

 Macronema grindelioides Rydb., Bull. Torr. Bot. Club, vol. 27, p. 619. 1900. 

 Macronema imhricata A. Nels. and Macbr., Bot. Gaz., vol. 52, p. 150. 1916. 



Type locality. — "On the sandy and gravelly banks of the Malade, 

 a stream of the Oregon near the Blue Mountains. ' ' 



Range. — East Oregon to the southern Sierra Nevada, eastward on 

 the mountains of the Great Basin to the Rockies of Montana, Wyom- 

 ing, and Idaho. 



Zone. — Hudsonian. 



Specimens examined. — Summit of Sierra Nevada, E. L. Greene, 

 October 14, 1874; Pyramid Peak, 10,000 feet, McGregor 165; ridge 

 south of Donner Pass, about 8,500 feet. Heller 7182 ; Sierra County, 

 Lemmon 97; Pyramid Peak, near Carson's Pass, 8-10,000 feet. Brewer 

 2141; Mt. Rose, 10,800 feet, Kennedy 1143; head of Fall Creek, 

 Ormsby County, Nevada, 2,460 m., Baker 1498 ; Mono Pass, Bolander 

 6139 ; Rubicon Peak, Tahoe, in slide rock, 9,000 feet. Smiley 407 ; 

 Mt. Hoffman, Yosemite, Congdon, August 18, 1890; meadows near 

 Black Mountain, Fresno County, 10,000 feet. Hall and Chandler 617 ; 

 mountain slopes on Soda Creek, Tulare County, 10-11,000 feet, Pur- 

 pus; Mt. Guyot, from timber line up to 12,300 feet, H. M. and G. R. 

 Hall 8425. 



While in general the material from the northern Rockies has the 

 leaves somewhat broader than much of our California representation, 

 and in so far justifies Dr. Rydberg's statement that his M. grindeli- 

 folium has the foliage spatulate, yet such plants are by no means rare 

 among our western collections (compare Hooker and Gray from Castle 

 Peak). This breadth of l§af reaches a maximum in Heller 7182, which 

 has been made the iy^e of a new species, M. im'bricata, which, in my 

 opinion, is not distinguishable by characters of even varietal sig- 

 nificance. 



