1906] EA STWOOD—CALIFORNIAN PLANTS 287 
younger white or tawny with dense stellate tomentum: leaves orbic- 
ular-cordate, the apex obtuse or abruptly acuminate, generally 
slightly longer than broad, 3-6°™, both surfaces  stellate-tomen- 
tose, the upper less than the lower, the fulvous hairs often outlining 
the veins on lower surface; petioles 5~1o™™ long: flowers 1-3, 
cymose, pendent, the pedicels as long as the peduncles; calyx cam- 
panulate, cuneate at base, the margin truncate but marked with 
5-6 short obtuse scattered teeth, densely clothed with white or 
rufous tomentum; stamens 12, almost equaling the petals, attached 
almost the entire length of the corolla tube, filaments glabrous, 
ribbonlike, anthers with cell divisions white, the connective yellow, 
thick; style thick, broadening at base, lower half tomentose, stigma 
2-lobed, surpassing the corolla. 
The type of this variety was collected by the author May 17, 1904, near 
the Painted Cave Ranch in the Santa Inez Mountains back of Santa Barbara, 
California. Mr. T. S. Brandegee collected the same in the same mountains 
probably near San Marcos Pass in 1888. There is a specimen also of what 
seems the same collected by J. G. Lemmon near San Bernardino, May 1878. 
Near the head of Mission Creek a second collection was made by the author. 
This bush grew in the shade and was taller and less rufous than the others on 
the open hills. 
This differs from the typical S. californica in the broader, rounder leaves, 
heart-shaped at base, the much denser stellate tomentum, and the general prev- 
alence of rufous ha.rs especially on the calyx. 
v Diplacus calycinus, n.sp.—Suffrutescent, viscid-arachnoid through- 
out, the young stems light brown, branching diffusely: leaves elliptical 
to oblong, narrowed at each end, apex obtuse, base cuneate, margin 
revolute, entire or somewhat sinuate-denticulate, upper surface glab- 
rous, often viscid, lower tomentose and viscid, 2-6°™ long, 1-2°™ wide; 
petioles very short, revolutely margined, woolly at junction: flowers 
axillary, the peduncles 5~7™™ long; lower part of fruiting calyx cylin- 
drical, 2°™ long, 5™™ in diameter, 5-ribbed, upper half dilating ab- 
ruptly to thrice the diameter of the lower, with 5 strongly keeled 
almost equal divisions 7”™ long, 3™" wide at base when folded, 
1™™ at the rounded apex, total length of calyx 3.5°™; corolla light 
yellow, the tube curved, uniformly slender for 1.5°™, dilating 
above, the divisions having a spread of 1.5-2°™, exserted from the 
calyx. 
