44 



the fruiting- stage, collected near the summit of Mt. Sanhedrin, 

 I^ake county, California, July 28, 1902, is also referred here. It 

 is rather common in Sonoma county, and probably elsewhere in 

 that section of the State. Being a near relative of G. staminea 

 Greene, it may be sought for in collections under that name. 



AntirrMiniJii appendiciilatiini (Durand) 



Ajitirrhiim^n Coulterianiim var. appendiculatum, Durand, 



Pac. R. R. Rep. 5: 11.//. //. 1855. 

 Antirrhmum vagans A. Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. 7 : 373. 



1867. 

 No. 5788, collected near Mark West Springs, Sonoma 

 county, California, June 28, 1902. It is not uncommon in that 

 part of the State, although the original came from the upper San 

 Joaquin Valley, not far from Bakersfield. 



Pentstemon intoiisiis 



Frutescent, much branched, 2-4dm. high: bark of the old 

 branches greyish, rough, that of the season brown; glabrous be- 

 low, short pubescent or puberulent above, leafy up to the inflor- 

 escence: leaves commonly oval in outline, i-i.5cm. long, 3-5mm. 

 wide, or on vigorous young shoots 3cm. long, including the pet- 

 iole of 5mm., 1.5cm. wide, these latter obscurely serrate; all pu- 

 bescent underneath with short hairs, veins rather prominent, 

 margins slightly inrolled, the base obliquely narrowed, apex 

 acutish: peduncles and pedicels of the corymbiform cyme as well 

 as the calyx beset with numerous short-stalked glands: calyx 

 about 7mm. long, the lobes narrowly lanceolate, barely 2mm. 

 wide at base: corollas light crimson, 2-3cm. long, puberulent, 

 the tube nearly tubular, only slightly dilated above, about 5mm. 

 across, upper lip erect, the lower spreading, its lobes oblong, 

 about I cm. long, acutish: sterile filament bearded on one side: 

 stamens and styles included. 



No. 6020, collected August i, 1902, along Eel river near 

 Hullville, I,ake county, California, growing on rocks. It was 

 also seen near the summit of Mt. Sanhedrin. This is one of the 



