(430 ) 
Fruit a berry or berry-like drupe; anthers with dorsal, reflexed appendages; 
corolla urn-shape 
Ovary 5-celled; ovules several to each cell. 3. Arbutus. 
Ovary 5-10 celled; ovules 1 to each cell. 
Ovary rugose or granular. 4. Comarostaphylis. 
Ovary not rugose or granular. 
Leaves dark green and glabrous above, tomentose beneath, not 
rtical. 5. A ylococcus. 
Leaves similar on both surfaces, often vertical. 
6. Uva-ursi. 
1. AZALEA. Aza.ea. 
1. AzaLEA occIpenta.is Torr. & Gray, Pacif. R. Rep. 4: 116. 
1857. 
Rhododendron occidentale A. Gray, Bot. Calif. 1: 458. 1876. 
Type locality: “Laguna de Santa Rosa, in low and wet ravines.’ 
Distribution: Coast Ranges and Sierra Nevada, southward to 
the Cuiamaca Mountains in San Diego County. Transition. 
Specimens examined: San Jacinto Mountains, in canyons on 
the west side, at 1800 meters, Hall 2241; Cuiamaca Mountains, 
altitude 1500 meters, Susan G. Stokes, July, 1895; Abrams 3953. 
2. PHYLLODOCE. 
1. Payttopoce Brewer (A. Gray) Heller, Muhlenbergia 1: 1 
1900 
Bryanthus Brewert A. Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. 7: 367. 1868. 
Type locality: Of the several specimens cited, the first, which 
was collected by Brewer, was from “Woods Peak, Eldorado Co.,” 
California. 
Distribution: Southern Cascade Mountains, southward through 
the higher altitudes of the Sierra Nevada to Mount San Gorgonio, 
San Bernardino Mountains. Canadian Zone. 
Specimens examined: Mount San Gorgonio, dbrams & Me- 
Gregor 750. 
3. ARBUTUS. Maprofo. 
1. Ansurus Menziesm Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept. 1: 282. 1814. 
Type locality: “On the north-west coast of America.” 
Distribution: British Columbia, southward to the San Gabriel 
Mountains in southern California. ‘Transition and extending into 
the Upper Sonoran. 
