118 BOTANY. 
They compose a small section section of the genus, quite otherwise characterized, however, than 
is Decaisne's Micropsyllium, and not embracing all his species. 
PLUMBAGINACEZ. 
ARMERIA VULGARIS, Willd., var. A. Andina var. Californica, Boiss. in DO. Prodr. 12, p. 
682; Benth. Pl. Hartw. p. 332. Hills near San Francisco; and Laguna of Santa Rosa creek ; 
April. "We are not satisfied with the characters on which the acute Boissier has separated into 
many species what may, perhaps, better be regarded as variations of A. vulgaris. 
STYRACACEZ. 
STYRAX CALIFORNICUM, Torr. Desc. Darlingt. in Smithson. Contrib. 6, p. 4, t. 12. Hill-sides : 
and river banks, Mokelumne Hill, California; May 17: in blossom. Some of the racemes are 
5—6-flowered. This is quite an ornamental shrub, and well deserves cultivation. 
PRIMULACEZX. 
TRIENTALIS Evropma, Linn. var. LATIFOLIA. T. latifolia, Hook. Fl. Bor.—Am. 2, p. 121. 
Tokeloma creek; April 16. Mountains, near Oakland, California; April 5. 
GLAUX MARITIMA, Linn. Martinez, California; April 23. 
ANAGALLIS ARVENSIS, Linn. There was no label to this plant. It is, however, common in 
California, and was doubtless introduced from Europe. 
DoDEcATHEON MEADIA, Linn. var. D. integrifolium and D. frigidum, (Cham.) Hook. Fl. 
Bor.—Am. 2, p. 118. Cocomungo; March 17; and mountains, near Oakland, California ; 
April 4. Wecan recognize but one species of Dodecatheon. The length of the tube of filaments 
is exceedingly variable. 
OROBANCHACEJE. (By A. Gray.) 
BoscHNIAKIA STROBILACEA (sp. nov.): squamis orbicularibus vel obovato-rotundis obtusissimis 
ubique confertim imbricatis, floralibus flores subsquantibus ; calyce postice truncato haud 
obliquo, dentibus 3 lineari-subulatis tubo longioribus ; labio corolle inferiore patente superius 
adeequante, lobis oblongis; filamentis basi barbatis; placentis 4 sequidistantibus. Dry and 
rocky hills, South Yuba, California; May. A span high, thick, resembling Conopholis Amer- 
ieana in aspect, the scales larger and broader, about half an inch wide, brown in the dried 
state. The three slender teeth of the calyx are anterior and lateral, a line and a half long ; the 
two others obsolete or indistinct. Anthers sparsely hairy. The shape of the scales and of the 
calyx teeth at once distinguishes this from B. tuberosa and B. glabra of Oregon, etc. 
PHELIPÆA CALIFORNICA, Don, Syst. 4, p. 632. Orobanche Californica, Cham. & Schlecht. in 
Linnea, 3, p. 134. Plains, near Marysville, California; May. The specimen renders it prob- 
able that P. Californica is not distinct from P. Ludoviciana, which has a wide range. 16 is 
nearly allied on the other hand to P. comosa, (the Orobanche comosa of Hooker,) which must 
find a place in this genus, notwithstanding the bractlets are remote from the calyx. 
APHYLLON UNIFLORUM, Gray, Man. Bot. N. States, ed. 1, p. 290. Napa valley, California; April 
21. The range of this species includes all temperate North America, from Newfoundland and 
Canada, south to Florida and Texas, and west to the Pacific. Had Wallroth's name of Anoplon 
been generally adopted by succeeding botanists, it might have been unwise to disturb it. But 
very small anthers—whether sterile or precocions is uncertain, probably the latter, as the ovary is uniformly fruitful ;—and the 
corolla, as is well known, becomes cor nivent-closed after anthesis, its broad lobes invelutely and imbricately enwrapping each 
isne's section Cleiosantha.—Gray, Mss. 
other, so as to form a kind of beak surmounting the fruit. This is the type of 
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