(19) 
24. Dudleya Bernardina Britton, sp. nov. 
Acaulescent, green, or the young leaves and inflorescence some- 
what glaucous; “basa 1 leaves forming a rosette, spreading, obovate- 
spatulate to rhombic-obovate, abruptly ae acuminate, 5-8 cm 
ong, 5 cm. wide or less; flowering bran 1.5-2. igh, 
leafy to or near the base, its leaves se to ovate- -lanceolate, 
acute or acuminate, sagittate-clasping ; cyme 10 cm. broad or less, 
many-flowered ; pedicels becoming 1-1.5 cm. long; calyx 5-6 mm. 
long, deeply 5- osen the lobes ovate, acute; corolla Follow, about 
12 mm. long, cleft to below the middle, its lobes sharply acute; 
stamens about three fourths as ae as the corolla. 
San Bernardino Mountains, southern California: type collected 
by S. B. and W. F. Parish, 1881 (no. roo). 
25. Dudleya Goldmani Rose, sp. nov. 
Acaulescent ; basal leaves in small dense rosettes, rhomboid- 
long, their leaves small, ovate, cordate at base, acute; inflorescence 
few-flowered, the flat- topped cyme very glaucous; pedicels 10-15 
mm. long, slender ; calyx 4-5 mm. » tongs its lobes ovate, acutish; 
corolla pinkish, or deep orange, 1 m. long, its tube ver short 
its lobes oblong, acutish, rather thin aa perhaps more inclined to 
spread than in other species; stamens and _ styles eonsiiersbly 
shorter than the corolla. 
Collected by E. A. Goldman in Pine Valley, head of Carmel 
River, Monterey Co., California, August 3, 1902 (no. 763), some 
of the specimens flowering in Washington, 1903 (type); and by 
Miss Alice Eastwood, same county, Los Berros Trail, Santa Lucia 
Mountains, May 1-12, 1897. 
26. Dudleya minor Rose, sp. nov. 
Acaulescent, or very old plants with a carrot-shaped rootstock 
5 cm. long, crowned by a small rosette of spreading leaves; leaves 
rhomboid-ovate, the larger ones 5-7 cm. long, narrowed at base, 
abruptly acuminate, glaucous; inflorescence slender, with a few 
elongated one-sided racemes; pedicels slender, 10-15 mm. long; 
calyx 5-7 mm. long, its lobes ovate to ovate-lanceolate, acute; co- 
rolla yellow or pale. orange, 12 mm. long, its tube 2 mm. long. 
Collected on rocky banks, San Gabriel Cafion, altitude 600 to 700 
meters, Los Angeles Co., Cal., by Dr. H. E. Hasse, June, 1902 
(Rose, no. 421, type). Here also seems to belong A. J. Mc- 
Clatchie’s plant, collected in the same region, May 25, 1896. 
