LIST OF CEDROS PLANTS. 901 
6. SPHÆRALCEA FULYA. Erect and stout, 2—4 feet high, 
sparingly branching, suffrutescent, clothed densely throughout 
with a yellowish stellate pubescence: leaves small, of thick 
and firm texture, of triangular-lanceolate outline, coarsely 
toothed: calyx 4 lines long, cleft a little below the middle 
into triangular acute segments: corolla } inch long, light 
scarlet: fruit unknown. 
In clay soil, back from the sea; infrequent. 
7. RHAMNUS INSULARIS, Kellogg, Proc. Cal. Acad. ii. 20. 
OË somewhat stunted growth, as compared with the same on 
the island of Santa Cruz, but still sufficiently unlike R. crocea. 
8. Vearcura CrpRosENsIS, Gray, Bull Cal. Acad. i. 4. 
Equably distributed on rounded hill-tops, or on steep declivi- 
ties, or, growing most vigorously in broad open level places 
near the sea (page 198). 
9. Raus Lenru, Kellogg, Proc. Cal. Acad. ii. 16. Com- 
mon in low places where the canons open out to the sea. A 
more sightly shrub or small tree than the next, by virtue of 
its rather handsome glaucous foliage and large red drupes, 
the size of which is nevertheless considerably exaggerated in 
the figure in the Hesperian. 
10. REUS mvrEGRIFOLIA (Nutt.) Brew. & Wats. Bot. Cal. 
i 110. Less frequent than in California. 
ll. Raus LAUNE Nutt. in Torr. & Gray, EL i. 219. 
Only a few small bushes were noticed. 
( Kellogg), Greene, Bull. Cal. 
19. ASTRAGALUS FASTIDIOSUS 
e apt to 
Acad. i. 186. Not plentiful as species of the genus ar 
be in their localities. 
Bull. Cal. Acad. i. 6. 
* 13. ASTRAGALUS INSULARIS, Kellogg, 
Veatch. 
Still known only in the specimens obtained by 
