procumbent, moderately branched: 

 leaves narrowly elliptic, acute, nar- 

 rowed below, commonly pseudoverti- 

 eillate, 8-10 lines long, punctate: fls ax- 

 illary, solitary at the nodes: pedicels 

 filiform, elongated, spreading or hori- 

 zontal, nearly or quite an inch long: 

 sepals ovate, acute, tuberculate-punc- 

 tate, 1% lines long: petals commonly 

 smaller or wanting: seeds smooth and 

 shining. X. C. ; Fia,; Texas. Mts. Baja 

 Cal. (Or). 

 ARENARIA SAXOSA A. Gray. 



Finely puberulent but green: stems 

 many, spreading from a rather stout 

 root, decumbent or creeping at the 

 base, 2-12 in. long: leaves numerous 

 opposite, not fascicled or pseudoverti- 

 cillate (s-ometimes crowded), slightly 

 fleshy, lance-oblong, acute, mucronate, 

 2-9 lines long, sessile by a scarcely nar- 

 rowed base: fls terminal and subsoli- 

 tary on short simple peduncles or in 

 stouter individuals numerous and more 

 or less paniculate: petals almost or 

 quite equalling the ovate-lanceolate 

 sharply acuminate slightly fleshy se- 

 pals. Colo. Texas. Baja Cal. (Or). 



ARENARI PALUDICOLA Robinson. 



"Glabrous, flaccid: stems several, 

 subsimple, procumbent, rootir.g at the 

 lower joints, sulcate, shining, leafy 

 throughout: leaves uniform, flat, 1- 

 nerved, acute, spreading, %-!% in. 

 long, 1-3 lines broad, often punctate, 

 somewhat connate, slightly scabrous 

 upon the margins: peduncles- solitary 

 in the axils, 1-2 in. tong, spreading or 

 somewhat deflexed: sepals nerveless, 

 not at all indurated, acutish about % 

 the length of the obovate petals.*" 

 Robinson, Am ac pr 29:298. Swamps 

 near San Bernardino (Parish 941) and 

 San Francisco, Cal. 



Arenaria palustris Watson, Bot Cal 

 1:70 (not Gay). 

 ARENARIA DOUGLASII T. & G. 



Thinly glandular-pubescent and 

 somewhat viscid, or nearly glabrous: 

 stems much branched, 2-15 in. high: 

 leaves attenuate to filiform points: pe- 

 duncles filiform: fls numerous, larger 

 than in the related species, 4-5 lines in 

 diam.: sepals ovate, thin-margined, ob- 

 scurely or more or less distinctly rib- 

 bed: petals obovate, conspicuous: cap- 

 sule subglobose; the valves rounded at 

 the apex; seeds large, smooth, or with 



fine radiate striation, reniform, broad- 

 ly margined. Baja Cal. to Oregon; Ar- 

 izona. 



SAPONARIA VACCARIA Linn. 



Smooth annual with ovate or oblong- 

 lanceolate, sessile and somewhat con- 

 nate leaves: fls in a broad flat corymb: 

 calyx ovoid, with 5 sharp .herbaceous / 

 angles, the intervening parts being 

 white and scarious: corolla rose-col- 

 ored, destitute of appendages. Europe. 

 Naturalized widely, s 



SAG-IN A OCCIDENT ALIS S. Watson. 



Annual, glabrous, very slender and 

 delicate, 2-6 in. high, decumbent at 

 base or ascending: leaves not fascicled, 

 *4-% in. long, pungent. Los Angeles, 

 Cal. to Washington. 



r'OLYCARPON DEPRESSUM Nutt. 



Stems numerous, 1-2 in. long: leaves 

 opposite, spatulate, obtuse, attenuate 

 to slender petioles: bracts much short- 

 er than the scarcely carinate sepals: 

 petals very narrow or subfiliform: 

 capsule spherical. Baja Cal. (Palmer, 

 Orcutt). San Diego (Nuttall). San Ber- 

 nardino (Parish). 



LOEFLINGIA SQUARROSA Nutt. 



Small, 2-4 in. high: branchlets 

 scarcely or not at all secund: sepals 

 pietty strongly recurved and squar- 

 rose: stamens 3-5: seeds oblong or el- 

 liptical in outline. Sierra Co., Cal. to 

 Baja Cal. 



FOUQUIERA SPLENDENS Engelm. 



Branching near the base, sending up 

 numerous divergent simple slender 

 stems few to 20 ft. high, with ashy- 

 gray bark and large pith; leaves 

 strongly grooved and ridged by the 

 decurrent bases of the spines, spatu- 

 late to obovate, % in. long, the prima- 

 ry attenuate into rigid petiole: fls bril- 

 liant crimson, on short pedicels in nar- 

 row nearly simple terminal racemes. 

 Hocotillo or candle wood, the straight 

 poles (when dry) excellent for torches, 

 and often cut for fences. Abundant 

 from the western precipitous slopes of 

 the Colorado desert 'to El Paso, Texas, 

 south into Baja Cal., Sonora, and to 

 the state of Durango. Mexico. Curious 

 at all times, brilliant in flower. Stems 

 have produced leaves and flowers 

 many months after being cut and 

 stored in a house on an increase in the 

 humidity of the atmosphere. 



