CEUCIFEEa:. 17 



arcuate-spreading on the short pedicels: seeds oval, the upper half 

 narrowly margined. — Mt. Hamilton. 



6. S. glandulosus, Hook. Pubescence and sinuately toothed foliage 

 of the last, but larger, 1 — 2J£ft. high: racemes more or less inclined to 

 be secund: fl. very large, bright red-purple: sepals )4 in- longi ovate- 

 cymbiform, carinate, 3 strongly connivent at tip, the fourth hanging 

 loosely apart from the others: petals well-exserted, white-margined: 

 upper pair of filaments connate above the middle, thence rather widely 

 divergent, their anthers smaller than the others, but not greatly reduced, 

 apparently sterile: pods 3 in. long, a line wide, arcuate-recurved : seed 

 narrowly winged. — On clayey hillsides and banks, in the Oakland Hills, 

 and southward. 



7. S. Biolettil, Greene. Habit and pubescence of the last, but smaller 

 and more slender, the leaves glaucous beneath: racemes not secund: fl. 

 4 — 5 lines long: sepals very dark purple: upper pair of filaments much 

 the longest, united two thirds their length, thence divergent, their 

 anthers half the size of those of the shorter stamens, apparently pollinifer- 

 ous: pods slender, suberect, hispid. — Hood's Peak, Sonoma Co. 



8. S. pule hell us, Greene. Low and much branched, }£ — 1 ft. high, 

 pilose-hispid: leaves linear-oblong or oblong-lanceolate, the cauline 

 sessile by a broad, partly clasping base, and with a few coarse and very 

 salient teeth: racemes rather dense, subsecund: calyx deep lilac-purple, 

 the sepals subequal, broadest at base, sharply carinate, the keel with some 

 bristly hairs: upper pair of filaments united almost throughout, their 

 subsagittate anthers little reduced, the other 4 stamens in very unequal 

 pairs: pods very narrow, hispidulous, spreading and slightly incurved. 

 — Southern flanks of Mt. Tamalpais. 



9. S. llispidus, Gray. Stiff-hirsute or hispid throughout, only 3 — 6 in. 

 high, branchiug: lowest leaves obovate- or cuneate-oblong, coarsely and 

 somewhat incisely toothed, the teeth obtuse; cauline narrower, scarcely 

 clasping: raceme short, loose, the fl. at length recurved: sepals red- 

 purple with white petaloid tips, half as long as the similarly colored 

 petals: pods hispid, V-/i — 2 in. long, 1 line wide, straight, ascending: 

 seeds winged. — Mt. Diablo. 



10. S. seenndus, Greene. Slender, sparingly branched above, 1 — 2 ft. 

 high: the long pinnately toothed or lobed lower leaves hispid-strigose; 

 cauline lanceolate, sagittate, entire or toothed, and, with the branchep, 

 pedicels and pods,sparsely hispidulous with spreading short hairs : racemes 

 rather dense, wholly secund: fl. flesh-color, 4 lines long: sepals sharplg 

 carinate, the keel hispid-ciliolate, the short tips greenish, the remote 

 lower one distinctly, the opposite uppermost one obscurely unguiculate: 



