102 PITTONIA. 
sericea, Brew. & Wats. l. c.—Since the publication of the 
description of this species, I have found a new locality for it, 
i. e., a sandy bluff overlooking the ocean, near Lake Merced, 
some miles below the Cliff House. It may also be worthy of 
remark that the living plant has nothing at all of the fra- 
grance of P. Ca lifornica, being wholly scentless, and without 
any glandular pubescence. 
“5. P. PUBERULa. Viscid-puberulent throughout, and with 
some short spreading hairs above, two feet high: leaflets in 
5—8 pairs, $—1 inch long, cuneate-oblong, simply and. not 
deeply incised: calyx cyathiform, 4 lines broad, 3 in depth 
including the triangular-lanceolate segments; bracteoles 
oblong-lanceolate smaller than the segments: filaments 
white-petaloid and only slightly unequal; anthers linear- 
oblong, $ line long: petals spatulate, white: pistils numer- 
ous: akenes 2 line long, ovate-faleate, notably compressed. 
Mesas five miles west of San Bernardino, California, S. B. 
Parish, No. 279, 1885. With considerable resemblance to P. 
Kelloggii, but a totally different pubescence and a more dif- 
fuse and lopa leafy inflorescence. 
* 6. P. CLEVELANDI. Size and habit of the preceding, but 
more slender, more densely puberulent and not at all viscid : 
leaflets smaller, cuneate- to round-obovate, crenate-toothed : 
ealyx half as large as in the last: filaments only lanceolate- 
dilated ; anthers less than 4 line long and nearly as broad: 
petals Apc pale yellow: pistils rather few: akenes 
hardly 4 line long, broadly ovate with a slightly ineurved tip, 
not compressed. 
At Laguna, in the mountains back of San Diego, July, 1885, 
D. Cleveland: also'colleeted on the northern part of the 
peninsula of Lower California, in the same month of the same 
year, by C. R. Oreutt, No. 905. 
“T. P. Parryt = Horkelia Parr yi, Greene, Bull. Cal. Acad. 
ii. 416 (May, 1887).—To the specific character should be 
