ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS TO VOL. I. 457 



I'ageSSe. 62. LEPTOSYNE. 



4. L. maritima, Gray. — Coreopsis maritima, Centh. & Hook. : Hook. f. Bot. 

 Mag. t. G2-H. 



Page 360. 56. HEMIZONELLA. 



Disk flowers occasionally as luauy as four. 

 3. H. minima, Gray. Camp r,id\vell, Modoc County Dr. Matthews. 

 Page 365. 57. HEMIZONIA. 



13. H. Fremontii, Gray. Near Chico, Mrs. J. Bidwell. 



15. H. mollis, Gray. Flowers varying to yellow : Yoseniite Valley, Lemmon. 



19. H. plumosa, Gray. Five feet high or more : flowers whitish. Sandwaste 

 of creek near Grayson, opposite Stockton, Lemmon. 



Page 378. 68. ACTINOLEPIS. 



1. A. coronaria, Gray. 8an Diego, rare, D. Cleveland. 



3. A. mutica, Gray. — Kellogg, Proc. Calif. Acad. vii. 131. Abundant near 

 San Diego, D. Cleveland. 



Page 384. 71. LASTHENIA. 



1. L. glabrata, Lindl. Near San Diego, D. Cleveland. 



Page 386. 74. HULSEA. 



2. H. heterochroma, CJray. On Mount Grayback, near San Bernardino, 

 Lemmon. 



4". H. Parr3n, Gray. Low (6 inches high) with leaves mostly radical, white 

 floccose-tomcntose, broadly spatulato, obtuse, deeply toothed, 2 inches lon'^ : stems 

 simple or sparingly branched at base, somewhat glandtdar-villous, bearing a few 

 scattered linear leaves : heads solitary, half an inch long ; involucre glandular- 

 pubescent, the broadly linear scales about equalling the disk : rays purple or purplish, 

 scarcely exceeding the disk : pappus scales oblong, nearly equal, somewhat lacerate. 

 — Proc. Amer. Acad. xii. 59. 



Bear Valley, headwaters of the JMohave River, Parry. 



5. H. nana, Gray. Top of Mount Grayback, San Bernardino County [Lemmon) ; 

 Siskiyou County {Greene); Union County, Oregon {W. C. Cusick) ; Mount Paddo, 

 Washington Territory, SuhdorJ". 



6. H. vestita. Gray. Near summit of San Jacinto Mountains, San Diego 

 County, aS". B. Parish. 



Page 388. 76. PALAFOXIA. 



1. P. linearis, Lag. San Bernardino Mountains, S. B. Parish. 



Page 391. 77. CH^NACTIS. 



11*. C. sufirutescens, Gray Ms. "About a foot high, much branched from 

 n shrubby base, densely white-tomontoso : leaves once or twice pinnately parted into 

 a few linear entire divisions : heads solitary on long naked glabrate peihincles, rather 

 large (| to nearly 1 inch high) : pappus of 10 or 12 equal scales, which nearly equal 

 the apparently white corolla." 



Rocky hanks of the Sacramento River, below Strawberry Valley, J. G. Lemmon. 



