230 Muhlenbergia, Volume 2 



GiLlA STAMINEA Greene 



No. 8167, collected April 12, in Madera county on gravelly 

 hills near the San Joaquin river about five miles above Pollasky. 

 These specimens have smoother calices than the typical plant, 

 but do not seem referable to any other species. 



GiLiA LEPTOMERIA Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. 8: 278. 1870. 



No. 8344, collected May 29, near Laws^ Inyo county, grow- 

 ing in sandy soil near the irrigating ditch east of the town. 

 Th« type came from "mountain valleys of NeVada and Utah." 



GiUA INCONSPICUA (J. E. Smith) Sweet 



j ;No. 8291, collected May 21, in the first canyon in the Sier- 

 ras south of Bishop, Inyo county, growing in sand on steep 

 slopes. Also not uncommon in similar situations near Bishop. 

 The plants are glandular and woolly pubescent, especially below. 



G1UA.GAMPANULATA Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. 8: 279. 1870. 



^ cN6.828iy collected May 18, in the foothills west of Bishop, 

 in coarse granite sand. Plentiful locally. In habit and general 

 appearance, more resembjingspme of the species we have been 

 calling Lznanihus. 



GiUA i^iUFOfi^Mis Parry; GraiyJ Proc. Am. Acad. lO: 75. 1874. 

 N^d. 8226, collected May 9, in Silver canyon in the White' 

 mountains opjposite Laws,' Inyo county, growing on slopes iri?^: 

 loose gravel. Plentiful locally. As noted by Coville iri th<* 

 report of the Peath Valley expedition, the flowers are lemon yel- 

 low, and are not "very open campanulate," as iiescribed in the 

 Synoptical Flora, but appear so when dry and distorted by pres- 

 sure. In the living state they aire narrow, cylindrical rather 

 than campanulate. The type was collected in "southern Utah, 

 on the detritus of volcanic rock." ^ , 



