(36) 
8. STYLOPHYLLUM EDULE (Nutt.) Britton & Rose. 
Sedum edule Nutt. in T. & G. Fl. N. Am. 1: 560. 1840. 
Cotyledon edulis Brewer, Bot. Calif. 1: 211. 1876 
Southern California, near the sea. 
9. STYLOPHYLLUM ATTENUATUM (S. Wats.) Britton & Rose. 
Cotyledon attenuata S. Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 22: 472. 1887. 
San Quintin, Lower California. 
10. STYLOPHYLLUM DENSIFLORUM Rose. 
Cotyledon nudicaule ore Bull. So. Cal. Acad. Sci. 2: 42. 
1903. Not Lam _ 1786 
terete, acute, 6-12 cm. long; Ase ane branches dead: ead weak ; 
spreading, distinct nearly to the base; stamens 10, a little shorter 
than the corolla; carpels spreading. 
Collected on mossy ledges and crevices of perpendicular cliffs, 
altitude 350 meters, in San Gabriel Cafion, Los Angeles Co., Cal., 
by H. E. Hasse, June 21, 1902, and at or near the same station 
by L. R. Abrams. 
tr. Stylophyllum Orcuttii Rose, sp. nov. 
Resembling S. attenuatum in its foliage and habit, but stouter 
and very glaucous; corolla-tube much shorter and shorter even than 
the calyx, the lobes broader, and more keeled, segments rose-colored, 
not at all tinged with yellow; calyx-lobes obtusish; anthers red. 
— on Coronado Islands by Lieut. Charles F. Pond, 
-, June 4, 1889; Initial Monument, C. R. Orcutt, R. D. 
ee T. S. Brandegee (type) and in cultivation in various 
botanical gardens. 
Mr. Orcutt says of this species: ‘* First collected in 1883 by Miss 
Fanny E. Fisk, at Sanzal, on Todos Santos bay, Lower California ; 
later found growing abundantly at the initial Mexican boundary 
monument, near San Diego, California, by C. R. Orcutt and 
others, and living material sparingly distributed as C. attenuata, 
rom which it differs chiefly in its inflorescence. Corolla tinged 
with rose purple, not yellow as in C. attenuata. This and C. 
attenuata 1 cannot distinguish in cultivation except by the flowers, 
