(432 ) 
Branchlets and inflorescence with a golden resinous undument, or 
glandular pubescent; leaves bright yellowish-green 
3. U. patula. 
Pedicels more or less pubescent or villous; ovaries pubescent or eae. 
Bracts firm, herbaceous or foliaceous; sepals ciliate on the margins, other- 
wise glabrous or puberulent. 
Fruit ovoid, very viscid; stone solid, slightly ribbed; leaves very 
glaucous; branchlets glabrous or sometimes glandular-villous. 
. UL glauca. 
Fruit depressed-globose, pubescent, not viscid; stone lobed and sepa- 
rable into irregular nutlets; pubescence of herbage variable. 
5. U. tomentosa. 
Bracts thin and ious; sepals and herbage glandular-villous; stone solid, 
ovoid. 6. U. drupacea. 
Dr. F. N. Williams (Journ. Bot. 48: 183,184. 1910) has shown 
that Uva-ursi (Tourn.) Miller (Gard. Dict. 3. 1754) has priority 
over Arctostaphylos Adans. (Fam. 2: 163. 1763) and should re- 
place it, according to the Vienna Rules. 
1. Uva-ursi Parryana (Lemmon) 
Arctostaphylos Parryana Lemmon, Pittonia 2: 68. 
Type locality: “On the Tehachapi opens of south-central 
California, four miles west of Keene Station. 
Dicabuton: Tehachapi Mountains and Mount Pinos, south- 
ward to Mount San Antonio. Transition and Upper Sonoran. 
Specimens examined: Mount Pinos, altitude 2100 meters, 
Abrams (§ McGregor 261; Elmer 3980; Soldiers’ Camp, near Fort 
Tejon, Abrams &F McGregor 281; Coldwater Canyon, Mount San 
Antonio, altitude 2250 meters, Abrams 2716. 
2. Uva-ursi pungens (H.B.K.). 
ae pungens H.B.K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 3: 278, pl. 250. 
818. 
bo pea: pungens Klotzsch, Linnaea 24: So. 1851. 
ype locality: “Crescit in Regio Mexicano, locis alsis, juxta 
Moran et Villalpando, alt. 1300-1400 hex.” 
Distribution: Southern California, southward to the mountains 
of Lower California and central Mexico. Upper Sonoran. 
Specimens examined: Near Clark’s ranch, San Bernardino 
Mountains, altitude 1500 meters, Abrams 2936; between Campo 
and Jacumba Hot Spring, dbrams 3624; Pine Valley, San Diego 
