1915] ABRAMS & SMILEY—ERIODICTYON 127 
Type.—The type of the variety is Abrams 3632, collected in chaparral 
between Campo and Jacumba. The description of the species is drawn from a 
sheet of the same collection deposited in the Dudley Herbarium. 
DIsTRIBUTION.—Southern California from the vicinity of Toro Mountain, 
Riverside County, southward through the chaparral region, especially on the 
desert slopes of the Cuiamaca Mountains, to the northern boundary of Lower 
California. 
SPECIMENS EXAMINED.—Riverside County: near Toro Mountain, Leiberg 
3199. San Diego County: Jacumba Hot Springs, Mearns and Schoemfeldt 
3261, 3288; Mountain Springs, Mearns and Schoemfeldt 3207; Cameron’s ranch, 
Laguna, Mearns and Schoemfeldt 3702; San Felipe, Brandegee, April 16, 1895; 
Colorado Desert, in the foothills, Brandegee, April 13, 1896; Potrero, Alderson, 
May 1893; Palm Creek, Colorado Desert, Brandegee, April 18, 1895; Laguna 
Mountains, Brandegee, June 20, 1904; in chaparral between Jacumbo and 
Campo, Abrams 3632; Campo, Hall 9424. Lower California: Nachoguero 
Valley, Mearns and Schoemfeldi 3463. 
4. ERIODICTYON ANGUSTIFOLIUM Nutt. Jour. Acad. Nat. Sci. 
Phil. IT. 2: 181. 1848. 
Eriodictyon glutinosum angustifolium Torr., GRAY, Syn. Fl. 2:176. 1878. 
Low erect shrub, 0.6 to 2 m. high, the branches often crowded, 
glabrous and glutinous: leaves narrowly linear to narrowly linear- 
lanceolate, 5-ro cm. long, 3-10 mm. wide, entire or inconspicu- 
ously dentate, revolute, glabrous and glutinous above, canescent 
and reticulated beneath: branches of the inflorescence glabrous 
and glutinous or sparsely pubescent: cymes racemosely or corym- 
bosely arranged: sepals linear, nearly glabrous or somewhat 
hirsute: corolla nearly campanulate, its tube only about 5 mm. long, 
not exceeding the calyx: filaments united only 3 their length: 
seeds black, slightly longer than those of californica. 
Type Locatity.—“On the Sierra of Upper California [Arizona].” 
DistriBuTIon.—In the Upper Sonoran chaparral of southern Nevada and 
southern Utah southward through Arizona, and also in Lower California in the 
San Pedro Martir region. 
SPECIMENS EXAMINED.—Utah: Silver Reef, alt. 3500 ft., Jones 5149, 5176; 
nearly at the head of the grade 5 miles above Bellevue, Jones 5001; Sandy, 
4 miles east of Leeds, alt. 3400 ft., Jones 5214. Nevada: Charleston Moun- 
tains, alt. 4000-5000 ft., Purpus 6074; Bunkerville, Virgen River, Gooddin 
746. Arizona: Diamond Valley, Purpus, May-October 1898; “‘hills near 
Cactus Pass in the western part of New Mexico” (probably in western Arizona 
on Bill Williams Fork), Bigelow, 1853; Pinal Mountains, Jones, May 24, 1890; 
