302 LILJACEAE 



Locs. Ft. Bragg, W. C. Mathews; Mt. Tamalpais, Jepson 7554, 8226; Berkeley, Jepson; 

 Laundry Farm, Purely; San Pablo Hills, Hall; Las Trampas, Jepson. 



Refs. CALOCHORTUS UMBELLATUS Wood, Proc. Acad. Phila. 20:168 (1868), type loc. 

 Oakland Hills, Wood; Jepson, Fl. W. Mid. Cal. 112 (1901). C. oollinus Lemmon, Erythea, 3:49 

 (1895), type loc. Oakland Hills. 



23. C. uniflorus H. & A. Low, 4 to 10 inches high, the stem very short 

 (commonly rising only 14 to 1 inch out of the ground) and bearing 1 to 3 umbels 

 with elongated flexuous pedicels (2 l / 2 to 8 inches long) ; bulblets 1 to 4 beneath 

 the surface; basal leaf 4 to 6 lines broad, exceeding the inflorescence; bracts 

 linear-lanceolate, long and conspicuous ; sepals ovate-lanceolate, greenish-lilac ; 

 petals lilac, cuneate, somewhat truncate, denticulate, 10 to 14 lines long, naked 

 above, very sparingly hairy immediately above the gland; gland shallow, con- 

 vexly crescent-shaped on lower side, truncate above, covered by an appressed 

 lightly fringed scale and with a dense border of hairs above; anthers broadly 

 linear; capsule elliptic. 



Low wet valley lands : Mendocino and Lake cos. to Monterey Co. Apr.-May. 



Locs. Ridges west of Hupa, ace. Tracy; Round Valley, Mendocino Co., Westerman; 

 Sherwood Valley, Davy 4" Blasdale; Kelseyville, H. Irwin; Calistoga, Jepson; Conn Valley, 

 Jepson 6254; Sonoma, Bioletti; Pacific Grove, Heller 6729. 



Refs. CALOCHORTUS UNIFLORUS H. & A. Bot. Beech. 398, t. 94 (1841), type from Cal., 

 Douglas; Hooker, Bot. Mag. t. 5804 (1869); Jepson, Fl. W. Mid. Cal. 112 (1901). C. lilacinus 

 Kell. Proc. CaL Acad. 2:5 (1863), type loe. Calistoga. 



24. C. greenei Wats. Stem scape-like, 10 to 17 inches high, bearing a 1 to 

 5-flowered umbel ; basal leaf shorter than or equaling the stem, y 2 i ncn broad ; 

 bracts narrow; sepals greenish, lilac within, % the length of the petals; petals 

 long fan-shaped, 1 to l^/o inches long, lilac, somewhat barred with yellow below, 

 arched with a shallow gland pocket; pocket partly covered by a very narrow 

 transverse fringed scale, and bordered above by a thick growth of hairs; lower 

 half of petals above the gland with very sparse fine hairs 3 to 4 lines long ; anthers 

 oblong, obtuse, 2 lines long; capsule 1 inch long or somewhat shorter, orbicular 

 to elliptic, attenuate into a stout beak, on stout flexuous or strictly erect pedicels. 



Wet adobe, Siskiyou Co. to Modoc Co. Fringe of the scale and lower hairs 

 of the border above the gland closely papillate. 



Loc. Forestdale, Modoc Co., M. S. Baker. 



Ref. CALOCHORTUS GREENEI Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 14:264 (1879), type loc. Siskiyou Co., 

 Greene. 



18. ERYTHRONIUM L. ADDER'S TONGUE 



Stem short, simple, scapose, from a deep-seated and elongated membranous- 

 coated corm. Leaves 2, basal or nearly so. (Before coming into flower, first or 

 second year, the plants are stemless, producing simply one broad long-petioled 

 leaf. ) Flowers large, nodding, solitary, or several and racemose ; perianth- 

 segments distinct with longitudinal nectar-bearing groove and 2 or 4 sac-like 

 or bulbous processes at base, or only the inner segments so provided. Stamens 

 6, hypogynous, shorter than the perianth. Style 3-cleft with 3 stigmas, or entire 

 and stigma 1. Capsule somewhat 3-angled, loculicidal. Species 12, North Amer- 

 ica and Europe. (Greek eruthros, red, the color of the flowers in some species.) 



In the Erythroniums the bulb (eorm) is annual. The bulb produced last summer will 

 this spring develop the stem and leaves; during the summer a new bulb forms by its side, 

 and by autumn the old bulb will have shrunk to a hard knotty scar, attached on the one 

 side to the new bulb and on the other to a chain of like scars, which form a pseudo- 

 rhizome representing the growth of preceding years. Carl Purdy, Flora & Sylva, 2:250 

 (1904). 



Bibliog. Watson, S., Revision of the Am. Species of Erythronium (Proc. Am. Aead. 

 26:126-130, 1891). Baker, J. G., Note on Am. Erythroniums (Gard. Chron. ser. 3, 21:299, 

 1897). Purdy, C., Erythronium grandiflorum and related species (Gard. & For. 10:157, 

 1897); Western Erythroniums (Flora and Sylva, 2:250-256, 1904). 



