460 BOTANICAL GAZETTE [DECEMBER 
Coulterville, Mariposa county, January 1898. Besides this, which was dis- 
tributed by Mr. Congdon to various herbaria there is another specimen in the 
Gray Herbarium, collected by M4/r. Congdon at Benton Mills, Mariposa 
county, July 5, 1898; also one in the Herbarium of the California Academy 
of Science collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam on the Merced River, Sep- 
tember 1902. A specimen collected by the author on the ridge between 
New Idria and Hernandez in San Benito county with immature fruit is also 
placed here, The young berries are rounded or abruptly pointed at base; 
the two calyx appendages are minute, closely appressed to the styles, and 
so densely clothed with long wavy hairs as to be hidden by the dense 
pubescence of the pointed base of the styles. 
GARRYA BUXIFOLIA Gray.—Low, spreading shrub; leaves in 
typical specimens small, about 2™ long, 1-1.5°™ wide, oval to 
elliptical or ovate, entire mucronate rounded or slightly oblique 
at base, the upper surface dark glossy green, lower densely 
white tomentose with almost straight silky upwardly appressed 
hairs; berries becoming subglabrous, beaked base of styles with 
small calyx divisions appressed. 
The type was collected on Red Mountain, northern Mendocino county. 
Howell’s specimens from Waldo, Oregon, have much larger leaves and 
smaller calyx divisions. It is abundant on the hills along the Crescent City 
road near Gasquet’s, 
GARRYA FLAVESCENS Watson.—Shrub with yellowish-gray 
aspect, young stems tomentose with a close, upwardly appressed 
pubescence of fine, almost straight, silky hairs; lower surface of 
leaves with similar pubescence, upper with scattered hairs irregu- 
larly appressed, Leaves broadly oval to narrowly elliptical, 
pointed at both ends, apex tipped with a sharp recurved mucro, 
veins strong and distinct; petioles 0.5—-1°™ long; margin glabrous, 
entire. 
The type specimen from the Gray Herbarium, collected by Dr. 4. 
Palmer at St. George, southern Utah in 1887(no. 18314), has unusually long 
and slender styles on the very immature fruit. A specimen from Kanab 
Plateau, collected by Alfred Weatherill, August 5, 1897, has fruit more 
mature, with the styles almost gone. On none of the berries examined could 
any trace of calyx divisions be found. This species seems to be confined to 
Utah and New Mexico and the adjacent country probably, but it is very 
near the next. 
GARRYA PALLIDA Eastwood.—Distinguished readily in the 
field by the glaucous-gray tone of the entire plant, which does 
