OF MAKINE COASTS. 85 



Lathyrus litoralis (Nutt.) Endl. 

 A maritime species occuring on sea shore of Marin Co. and north- 

 ward in California ( Jepson : Flora of Western Middle California, 1901. 

 p! 298). 



L. maritirmts Bigelow. 



Perennial herb, with creeping rootstock, stout, 30 cm. high or more, 

 glabrous, stems sharply angular, spreading; leaves with many pairs of 

 leaflets, these ovate or elliptical; leafstalk ending in a long tendril; 

 flowers large, purple; pod hairy when young, 3 — 5 cm. long. 



Sandy and gravelly coasts of Northern Europe, not going further 

 south than Pieardy; Arctic Europe, Asia, and America, where it ex- 

 tends down the eastern coast. A form called L. californicus Dougl. is 

 found on sea shores of Washington, and a variety aleuticus White, is 

 found in the arctic parts of America. 



Lotus corniculatus L. var. crassifolius Pers. 



Perennial stock, with a long taproot; stems decumbent or prostrate, 

 1 — 5 dm. long; leaves pinnate, somewhat fleshy; leaflets ovate, pointed, 

 flowers yellow. 



This variety represents a race characteristic to the sea shores of 

 Europe, but is not ^elated to L. crassifolius Greene, which is a different 

 plant of Western America, where it does not follow the coast. 



Distributed over Europe, Northern and Central Asia, the mountain- 

 ous districts of East Indian Peninsula, and Australia. 



Lupinus arboreus Sims. 



Arborescent or suffrutescent, silky pubescent on young stems and 

 lower surface of leaves; petioles short; leaflets narrowly lanceolate, 

 3 — 6 cm. long, 9 — 11 on first leaves, 6 — 8 on later leaves from the 

 axils, these smaller; corolla sulphur-yellow, keel purple tipped; cotyledon 

 of the seedling petioled. 



Sand strands and in the neighborhood of coasts, California. 



L. Chamissonis Esch. 



Perennial, stems woody below, 3 — 12 dm. high, densely tomentose; 

 leaflets 7—9, silky-pubescent, oblong-oblanceolate, 1—3 cm. long, peti- 

 oles short; flowers blue, the banner with a yellow spot. 



Sandy soil along the whole Californian coast and Oregon coast. 



