Supplement 479 



SAXIFRAGACEAE 



Kibes gracilliimim Coville & Britton. Page 182, substitute 

 for R. tenuiflont'Hi. Calyx-tube 6-8 mm. long; the lobes 3-4 

 mm. long. 



Kibes indecorum Eastw. Page 192, insert above 1?. maluaccmn 

 ri-ridi folium. Shrub with stiff, erect branches; young shoots 

 pubescent and glandular-hairy; petioles, lower surface of 

 leaves and inflorescence tomentose and glandular-pubescent; 

 leaves 2-5 cm. broad, 3-5-lobed, rugose; racemes equaling the 

 leaves, closely flowered; pedicels 1-2 mm. long; bracts acute; 

 calyx white or greenish, rarely tinged with p.ink, 3-4 mm. 

 long. 



In the chaparral of the mountains and foothills, below 4000 feet 

 altitude; Ventura County, southward to northern Lower California. 



Ribcs Parishii Heller. Page 193, substitute for R. tlivar- 

 icdhini. Calyx purplish-red, strigose-pubescent without, the 

 tube campanulate, 4 mm. long, equaling the reflexed lobes; 

 style densely villous below the middle. 



ROSACEAE 



Cercocarpus ledifolins Nutt. Page 202, insert after ('. 

 bctulaefolhtft, from which it is readily distinguished by the 

 narrowly lanceolate entire revolute leaves. 



Frequent in the higher altitudes of the San Gabriel and the San 

 Bernardino Mountains; recently discovered on Mount Wilson by 

 Miss Geis. 



Adenostoma sparsifolium Torr. Page 202, insert after A. 

 fascicitlatwH. Arborescent, resinously glandular shrub, 2-6 

 m. high; leaves not fascicled, narrowly linear, glandular; 

 flowers in open showy panicles; calyx-lobes, rounded, whitish, 

 2 mm. long, half the length of the white petals. 



This species, which is common in the San Jacinto Mountains 

 and southward to Lower California, has been discovered recently 

 by Dr. Hasse in the Santa Monica Mountains. 



LEGTJMINOSAE 



Lupiniis forniosus Greene. Page 208, insert above L. 

 latifoliwt. Perennial herb, branching from the base, decum- 



