42 



BRASSICACEAE 



THEI.YPODIUM BRACHYCARPUM Torr. U. S. Expl. Exped. 17: 

 231.//. /. 1874. 



Originally collected "on the Klamet River, southern bor- 

 ders of Oregon," but the statement is made in Bot. Cal. that it 

 was "probably on the Upper Sacramento," a region in which 

 the species has never been found, nor is it likely to be, unless 

 as a chance introduction. 



No. 801 1, collected June 9 in flower at Montague, Siskiyou 

 county. It is abundant throughout the Shasta valley, often 

 growing in large patches in low places. As the Klamath river 

 is only thirteen miles from Montague, our specimens may pos- 

 vsibly be from near type locality. 



TheIvYPODIUM cooperi S. Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 12: 246- 

 1876. 

 No. 7680, collected April 14, at Randsburg, Kern county, 

 growing near rocks on the hills and in considerable quantity. 

 The flexuous stems give the plant a weak appearance. Origi- 

 nally collected "by Dr. J. G. Cooper near Fort Mohave," a point 

 not many miles west of Randsburg. 



Thelypodium i^asiophyllum (H. & A.) Greene, Bull. Torr. 

 Club, 13: 143. 1886. 



Turritis lasiophylla H. & A. Bot. Beech. 321. 1840. 



No. 7605, collected April 6, on the dry elevated plain east 

 of Kern City, Kern county, sheltered by low shrubs. The up- 

 permost leaves are nearly or quite entire in these plants, all 

 thin, bright green, the young pods at first ascending, later de- 

 flexed. 



No. 7751, collected April 24, on the lower slopes of the 

 mountain about three miles southwest of Mojave, Kern county. 

 In these specimens, which were from a northerly slope near 

 a ledge of rock, all the leaves are pinnatifid, the pods deflexed? 

 the uppermost ones with the end curved upward. 



