CAi'i'ArviDACK.i:. 473 



apiculation : burls ven.' acute : pods recurveil-spreadiiig, 2 to 6 inches in length, longer aixl 

 seeiniiigly of firmer texture tliau in tlie two foregoing Mpecies. — I'roc. Calif. Acad. Sci. ii. 

 152, t. 46. — Sierras of E. Central Calif(jrnia from the Yoseinite to rhiin:i.s County. 

 ^— ^— -t— Sepals of the outer pair llal«ilif"rMi-orl)icular, dilated, light yellow an<i |>etaloid, 

 very uiie(iual and much larger tliau the oblong sepals of the inner pair : one pair of longer 

 lil:um-Mts connate. 

 S. polygaloides, (jKay, p. I71. Extend range to Calaveras Co., Dacij. 



47. CAULANTHUS, -SVatson. 



C. pilosus, Watsov, p. 173. Strike out last sentence, wliich relates to po<jr anil unu.-ually 

 hispid specimens of Sisijmbrium altissimitin, L. 



48. THELYPODIUM, En.ll. 



T. Ho"Wellii, Watson, p. 174. Add syn. Slreiitanl/uts Hotnllii, Jones, Proc. Calif. Aca<l. 



Sci. sir. 2, V. 623, not Wats. The fruit appears to be distinctly tiiat <jf a 'riiili//>oiliiiiii, and 



the type seems very remote from Slrejitant/ms cordatus to which it is compared by l'rofe.>*«or 



Jones. 

 T. (0 salsugineum, Ronixsox, p. 175. Add locality, Mocse Jaw, A.'^siniboia, Mucmn. 

 T. lasioph^llum, var. rigidum, RoniNSoy, p. 177. In line 3, for " by Maij at Elmira, 



Calif., 1883," read, by Mrs. Cumin at Elmira, Calif., May, 1883. 



50. WAREA, Nutt. Add lit. Nash, Bull. Torr. Club, xxiii. 101 ; S.null, 

 ibid. 408, 409. As Dr. Small has pointed out, it is quite clear Ironi the material 

 now at hand that in describing W. amplexifolia, Nuttall (Jour. Acad. Philad. vii. 

 83, t. 10) combined two distinct plants. 



The species of the genus may be revised thus : — 

 W. cuneifolia, Nutt., p. 180. Amply characterized. 



"W. sessilifolia, Nasu. Leaves rather small, 6 to 10 lines long, half as broad, ovate, ses- 

 sile bv a rounded e.Kauriculate base : flowers deep purple. — Hull. Torr. Club, x.xiv. 101. 

 W. amplexifolia, Nutt. 1. c. as to descr. in great part and ;is to plant from W. Floriila fig- 

 ured. — Sandy soil, W. Florida, Ware, Nash. The name is not distinctive, as all the known 

 species have leaves sessile or nearly so. 

 W. amplexifolia, Nutt. Leaves larger, becoming an inch or two long, and half a.s 

 broad, elliptic-ovate, deeply cordate and auriculate-amplexicaul : flowers white or p.ale 

 purple. — Nutt. 1. c, in ])art, namely, as to syn. Stanlei/a ? amplexifolia ; Small, 1. c, but 

 Nutt. should stand as authority. It is quite evident iioth from his synonymy and in his 

 descr. (in which occurs " leaves sessile and amplexicaule ") that he had both plants in mind 

 when he described W. amplexifolia, and if one of these plants is removed as W. sessilifolia, 

 the other mu.«t stand for Nuttall's species. — Sandy soil, E. Floriila, St. Augustine. Miss 

 Reynolds, Tavaris, Lake Co., Webber, ace. to N.ash. 



CAPPARIDACILE. 



2. cristat:£lla, Xutt. 



C. Jam^sii, Toru. & Gray, p. 182. Extend range to Nebraska, .ace. to Rydberg. 



4. cle6me. l. 



C. integrifolia, Toim. & Gray, p. 1S3. Ill first lino of descr. for " 2 or 3 feet high." read, 

 2 to 6 feet high. And to range add, occasional in California, as at San Emidio Canon, 

 Kern Co., Tevis, ace. to Miss Eastwood. 



