ESCHSCHOLTZIA. 229 
torus short, turbinate, striate, its rim reduced, turgid or thick- 
ish : seeds not known. 
Type specimens in my own herbarium from some unrecorded 
station in the Santa Cruz Mountains, by C. C. Parry, 1888. 
The plant is so very glaucous that I tried to think of it as a 
depauperate mainland form of my then newly published insular 
Æ. glauca; and by this error, that name obtained a place in the 
Flora Franciscana. 
11, E. teucostiota. Allied to the last, much less slender, 
less glaucous, yet about as pale by a system of white spots on 
all the foliage marking the base of the primary divisions and first 
subdivisions, and also by a quite dense and fine short papillose 
pubescence on all the branches, petioles and peduncles: ulti- 
mate leaf-segments oblong-cuneiform, the middle one of each 
three broadest and cuspidately acute, the others merely acute : 
peduncles long and stout: corollas 1 inch wide: pods 2 inches 
long, minutely scaberulous ; torus under them with narrow but 
thin and deflexed rim: seeds a little elongated, the usual reticu- 
lation wanting but replaced by scattered soft subpyramidal low 
protuberances either distinct or inclined to run into an obscure 
rugosity. 
Remarkable species, apparently gathered only by Mr. Brand- 
egee at Ben Lemond, Santa Cruz Co., Calif., June, 1889; 
specimens in Herb. U.S. and of Calif. Acad. also of Mr. Parish 
12 E. HELLERIANA. Large diffusely branched perennial, 
leafy and floriferous throughout, not seeming dichotomous ; 
herbage glabrous, barely glaucescent: leaves of open dissection, 
all the segments being very narrow and much divergent, the 
ultimates a little dilated under the acutish tip: calyx 4 inch 
long, thin acutely ovoid, with ratber short and slender proper 
apiculation : corolla small for the plant, 1} inches wide, yellow, 
and without orange basal spots: filaments short, subulate 
Purple-tipped: stigmas 4, unequal: pods 22 inches long, stout- 
