350 UMBELLIFEE^.. 



Leaflets % to K in- long; bractlets inconspicuous, shorter than the umbellet; 



iruit2 lines long or less, with filiform ribs 1. V. Kelloggn, 



Leaflets 1 in. long or more; bractlets conspicuous, some exceeding the 



umbellet; fruit 3 to 4 lines long, with prominent sharp ribs 



2. V. Hartwegi. 



1. V. Kelloggii (Gray) 0. & E. Minutely scabrous, J to If ft. 

 high; flowering stems leafless or with a single loaf J to 1 ft. above the 

 base; leaves 1 to 2 or 3 times ternate; leaflets ovate or roundish, 

 sharply serrate, incised, the terminal divisions ternate, or quiuate, or 

 divided, mostly | to 1 iii. long; rays about If in. long, in fruit 3f in. 

 long or less; pedicels 1 to 2 lines long; bractlets inconspicuous, 

 shorter than the umbellets; fruit 1 to 2 lines long, nearly as broad; 

 ribs tiliform; oil-tubes 3 in the dorsal intervals, 5 to 6 in the laterals, 

 8 to 10 on the commissural side. — (Ueweya Kelloggii Gray.) 



Kather rare: Mission Hills, San Francisco, BoLander ace. to Gray; 

 Mt. Tamalpais, Jepson; Bolinas Bay, Kellogg, who first collected it; 

 Petaluma, fide Coulter & Kose; Monterey Co., Eastwood; Fort 

 Tejon ace. to Covi le. A more slender plant than the next. 



2. V. Hartwegi (Gray) C. & K. A.caulescent, mostly csespitose, 

 1 to 3 ft. high; caudex much branched, crowning a taproot which 

 penetrates vertically to a depth of 2 ft. or more and is f to 1 in. in 

 diameter; scapes and petioles somewhat scabrous; leaves biternately 

 divided, or a portion triternately divided, the ultimate lateral divi- 

 sions mostly 3-foliolate, the ultimate middle divisions mostl)' 

 5-foliolate; leaflets ovate or oblong, sparingly incised, serrate, mucro- 

 nate, nearly 1 to 2 in. long, oi' the leaflets often more or less confluent; 

 petioles 2 to 6 in. long; rays about 15, 2 in. long or less; bracts none; 

 bractlets 3 to 6, unequal, linear-lanceolate, long-pointed, exteriorly 

 disposed, mostly surpassing the umbellets; flowering pedicels less 

 than 1 line long; fruit nearly orbicular, smooth, 8 to 4 lines long; 

 ribs filiform; (jil-tubes as in the last. — (Deweya Hartwegi Gray.) 



Higher slupes in the hills, somewhat rare in our district: Mt. 

 Diablo; Niles; Oakland Hills; San Luis Obispo Co.; Sierra Foothills, 

 Upper Sacramento Valley, where first collected by Hartweg in 1847; 

 Folsom; Amador Co.; Mariposa Co.; Sequoia Mills; Kern Co. 

 Last of Mar. -Apr. Fr. July. 



12. APIUM L. 



Ours erect glabrous biennial with fibrous roots and pinnately 

 divided leaves. Stems tri- or di-chotomously branched, forming a 

 paniculate inflorescence, the compound umbels terminal on the 

 branches and subsessile in the forks. Involucre and involueels small 

 or none, or the former sometimes foliaceous. Flowers white, in 

 compound umbels. Calyx-teeth obsolete. Fruit elliptic-ovate or 

 broaderthan long. Kilis prominent, obtuse, equal. Oil-tubes solitary 

 in the intervals, 2 on the commissural side. Seed-face plane. (^Old 

 Latin name of Celery.) 



1. A. graveolens L. Common Celery. Erect, 3 or 4 ft. high; 

 lower leaves lon^-petii.led, leaflets 5 ftir 7 or 9), 1^ to 3 in. long and 

 as broad or broader, coarsely toothed and 3-c!eft or even -divided; 



