356 University of California Publications in Botany [VOL. 9 



The plant, determined by Greene as C. Bloomeri, and reported by 

 Merriam (I.e.) as growing in the Hudsonian and even above timber 

 line on Mt. Shasta, has not been seen, but it is probably of this variety, 

 since W. M. Canby 113, collected on the same mountain at timber line, 

 is of this variety. In the Sierra, the species scarcely enters the boreal 

 region and Piper 72 assigns it to the Arid Transition exclusively in 

 Washington. 



2. Chrysothamnus Bolanderi Greene, Erythea, vol. 3, p. 114. 1895. 

 Linosyris Bolanderi Gray, Proc. Am, Acad., vol. 7, p. 354. 1868. 



Type locality. "Mono Pass, at 9-10,000 feet of elevation." 

 Bolander. 



Range. Central Sierra Nevada. 



J(we. Canadian, rising into the Hudsonian. 



Specimens examined. Mono Pass, Bolander 6135; Soda Springs, 

 Upper San Joaquin, Congdon, August 19, 1895; Mt. Warren, Tuol- 

 umne County, Congdon, August 21, 1894 ; Golden Trout Creek, Tulare 

 County, 8-8,700 feet, H. M. and G. E. Hall 8413; Bloody Caiion, 

 Mono County, Congdon C 125. 



Coville 50 refers his No. 1690 to this species but notes its disagree- 

 ment with the type of C. Bolanderi and suggests that it may belong 

 to C. Parryi (Gray) Greene of the Kocky Mountains, a species not 

 otherwise known west of Colorado and Wyoming. This number has 

 been made the type of C. asper Greene (Leaflets, vol. 1, p. 81. 1904). 

 I have had no opportunity to examine the specimen. 



3. Chrysothamnus Nevadensis Greene, Erythea, vol. 3, p. 114. 



1895. % 



Linosyris Howardi var. nevadensis Gray, Proe. Am. Acad., vol. 6, p. 541. 

 1866. 



Type locality. "Mount Davidson, Nevada, above Virginia City." 

 Bloomer. 



Range. East slope of the Sierra Nevada, and in adjacent Nevada. 



Zone. Arid Transition and Canadian. 



Specimens examined. Mt. Davidson, Bloomer; Ebbett's Pass, 

 Alpine County, hilltop at 9,000 feet, Brewer 1985, a dwarf form 

 perhaps better included under the following variety. 



