ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS TO VOL. I. 435 



3. C. pilosum, Ledeb. Humboldt Coiintv, coiuruou in thickets, V. Rattan. 

 Petals bitid. 



Page 67. 3. STELLARIA. 



2. S. nitens, Xutt. Plumas County, Mrs. R. M. Austin. 



5". S. crispa, (Jliam. & Schlecht. Glabrous, much resembling ^S*. horealis : leaves 

 ovate to oblony-uvate, acute or shortly acuminate, 3 to 10 lines long : flowers solitary 

 in the axils or few in a terminal cyme. — *S'. borealis, var. crispa, Fenzl. 



Near Calaveras Grove and ou Mount Shasta (Hooker k Gray) ; Plumas County (Mrs. Austin) ; 

 northward to Alaska. 



Page 69. 4. ARE N ARIA. 



5. A. Californica, Brewer. Chico, Mrs. J. Bidivell. Plains about Yreka {Rev. 

 E. L. Greent), a small form with acuminate sepals exceeding the small petals. The 

 seed appears to be smooth or nearly so. 



G". A. verna, Linn. Perennial, cespitose, 1 to 3 inches high, glabrous or pubes- 

 cent : leaves linear-subulate, nerved, erect, 2 or 3 lines long, acute : bracts herba- 

 ceous : sepals lanceolate, acuminate, 3-nerved, 2 lines long, a little exceeding the 

 petals, about equalling the capsule. 



Var. hirta, Watson, Shortly hirsute throughout. 



Lassen's Peak (Mrs. R. M. Austin) ; the variety. Mountairis of Colorado and Utah, and 

 northward to Arctic America ; Mount Mansheld, Vennout ; Northern Europe and Asia. 



Page 69. 5. SAGINA. 



2. S. Liniisei, Presl. Manachi JNIeadows, Kern County, Rothrock. 

 Page/L 7. LEPIGONUM. 



1. L. macrothecum, Fisch. & Mey. Humboldt Bay, Rattan. Flowers pink. 

 Page 72. 9. LCEFLINGIA. 



1. L. squarrosa, Nutt. Sierra Valley, J. G. Lemmon. 

 Page 75. 2. CALANDRINIA. 



5". C. Leana, Porter. Glabrous acaulescent perennial, with very thick branch- 

 ing rootstock : leaves numerous, all radical, linear-oblanceolate, thick and fleshy, 

 1 to 1| inches long : stems naked or with a few glandular-ciliate bracts, a foot high 

 or less, diflTusely paniculate-branched above : sepals rounded, glandular-ciliate ; petals 

 6 to 8, red, cuneate-obovate, 3 to G lines long : stamens as many : capsule oblong- 

 ovate : seeds shining. — Coult. Bot. Bulk i. 49. 



Mount Shasta, Little Castle Lake (Helen S. Wright) ; Siskiyou Mountains, near Jackson I-ake 

 (Greene) ; Jackson County, Oregon {L. IV. Lcc) ; also on Saddle Mountain, near Astoria, Oregon 

 (J. W. Marsh), and on the Eastern Cascade Jlountains, lat. 49°, Dr. Lyull, 1860. 



Page 76. 3. CLAYTONIA. 



P. C. exigua, Torr. k Gray. (Substitute for C. perfoliata, var. exigua.) 

 Low, glaucous, very fleshy and succulent: leaves terete ur t^lightly llattencd above, 

 the cauline linear or oblong, or very short and orbicular-connate about the stem : 

 petals white to rose-color, li to 3 lines long : seeds dull, minutely tuberculate. 



From the Lower Sacramento region to the Columbia. 



2^ C. bulbifera, Gray. Closely allied to C. Sibirica: perennial by crowded 

 bulblets at the base of the radical leaves, which are ovate-lanceolate to lanceolate, 

 attenuate at base, acute or acuminate : stems lax, .'* to 3 feet high, with a pair of 



