32 ERYTHEA. 
3 to 6 inches high, leafy-bracted: flowers middle-sized, 
white streaked with red.—Siskiyou Mountains, California 
and Oregon. Discoveredsin 1876, by L. W. Lee. 
3. @. Columbiana. Calandrinia Columbiana, Howell; 
Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. xxii, 277. Not glaucous; leaves 
spatulate, obtuse or acutish: scapes } to 1 foot high: flowers 
much as in the preceding.—Bluffs of the Columbia River 
and northward to British Columbia. 
4. 0. Howellii. Calandrinia Howellii, Wats. Proc. 
Am. Acad. xxiii, 262. Leaves narrowly spatulate with crisped 
scarious margins: scapes 6 to 10 inches high: stamens 
usually free; flowers large, red, streaked with orange.— 
Moony Mountains, Josephine Co., Oregon. 
5. 0. cotyledon. Calandrinia cotyledon, Wats. 1. c. 
xx, 355. Leaves broadly spatulate, without scarious margins: 
seapes 6 to 15 inches high: flowers as in the last, except 
that the stamens are joined into a column around the styles. 
—Near Preston’s Peak, Siskiyou Co., California. 
% * Root branching; caudex not rising to the surface of the 
ground; flowers few, in a raceme; excurrent calyx- 
nerves not gland-tipped. 
6. 0. oppositifolia. Calandrinia oppositifolia, Wats. 
J.c. Scape 6 to 10 inches high, with 1 to 3 pairs of opposite 
leaf-like bracts below, and some scattered bractlets above: 
corolla white: seed without an aril.—On moist slopes at 
Waldo, Oregon. 
7. ©. Tweedyi. Calandrinia Tweedyi, Gray, Proc. Am. 
Acad. xx, 277. Leaves obovate: seapes 4 to 6 inches high, 
few-flowered, the bracts alternate: petals an inch long: seeds 
with a large loose squamiform aril.— Wenatchee Mountains, 
Washington. 
* * * Root conical or fusiform: caudex 0: scapes 1 to 3- 
owered, 
