(391) 
3. Lupinus Brittoni sp. nov. 
Bushy and Haid below, with long herbaceous branches, 
about 1 m. high; herbage appearing glaucescent with a minute 
appressed pubescence; petioles slender, exceeding the leaflets; 
leaflets ae apeimired 25-45 mm. long, acutish at apex, with 
prom nent recurved point; racemes 15-30 cm. long; many- 
a 
flow ae flowers scattered or in approximate whorls; Se: 
5 mm. long; lower calyx-lobe entire, 7 mm. long; corolla (in dried 
middle on the upper edges; pod 3 cm. long; seeds 5-6, pea, 
4 mm. long, nearly as wide, light tan, specked with dark t 
Type collected by the writer (3904) in Cottonwood 7 ie. 
San Diego County, June 5, 1903, and deposited in the Herbarium 
of Stanford University. 
The glaucescent instead of silvery herbage, the shorter and 
closely appressed pubescence of the pedicels and calyx, and the 
minute pale seeds, separate this species readily from true L. albi- 
frons of central California. The characters given in the key con- 
trast it with the other southern California members of this group. 
4. Lupinus Hatt Abrams, Bull. Torr. Bot. Club 37: 151. 
IIo. 
Type locality: “Reche Canyon, altitude 400 meters, San Ber- 
nardino Mountains.” 
Distribution: Foothills of the San Gabriel and the San Bernar- 
dino Mountains. Upper Sonoran. 
Specimens examined: Reche Canyon, altitude 400 meters, Hall, 
May 15, 1901; vicinity of San Bernardino, Parish 4772; Anaheim, 
Baker 4102. 
5. Lupinus Douctasiu Agardh, Syn. Gen. Lupin. 34. 1835. 
Type locality: Collected by Douglas, probably near Monterey. 
Distribution: Dry hillsides near Monterey southward to the 
Santa Ynez Mountains. Upper Sonoran 
Specimens examined: Fremont’s Pass, Santa Ynez Mountains, 
Mrs. Marshall, July, 1907. 
6. Lupinus CHaMISSONIS Mem. Acad. Petersb. 10: 288. 
826. 
Type locality: “in Novae Californiae arenosis.” This was 
probably collected at San Francisco. 
