84: LEAFLETS. 



E. Jones, in 1883 are probably the same ; smaller plants, glab- 

 rous throughout, the upper filaments not quite so completely 

 joined, 



E. ELATiOB. stout annual, erect, branched above, commonly 

 2 feet high : lowest leaves 3 to 4 inches long, laciniately lobed or 

 pinnatifid, the lobes not gland-tipped, both faces of leaf as well 

 as base of stem hispid, not even the narrow auriculate-clasping 

 cauline ones glabrous, but these merely dentate : racemes lax : 

 bilabiate calyx and corolla red-purple : upper pair of filaments 

 united to above the middle, their anthers much reduced: pod 3 

 inches long, ascending, straight or slightly curved upwards. 



The type, with large laciniate and prickly foliage is from the 

 Santa Lucia Mountains, California, occupying sheet 4, 295 in U. 

 S. Herb., G. E. Vasey having obtained it in 1880. Certain 

 specimens distributed from Santa Lucia Mountains, as 5. glan- 

 dulosus, by E. A. Plaskett, seem to belong here, though their 

 foliage is not as ample and is more slightly and regularly rather 

 than laciniately lobed. 



B. Bakbei. Habit of B. glandulosa, and about as large, 

 stouter, more sparsely hispidulous and the hairs much shorter; 

 leaves and their teeth equally gland-tipped : calyx shorter, its 

 sepals less acute and less connivent, colored very dark and 

 dull purple: petals narrow, also dark purple save as to the white 

 and strongly crisped narrow margin : upper pair of stamens 

 exserted quite beyond the petals, united to near the summit by 

 the filaments, their anthers of less than one-third the size of 

 the other four, these last on very short filaments and borne 

 scarcely beyond the summit of the calyx. 



Near Bethany, on the plains of the upper San Joaquin, 27 

 April, 1903, C. F. Baker; distributed by him under n. 3785, and 

 under my manuscript name S. Bakeri. Pods not known. 

 Calyx of the size and blackish coloring of that of E. BioUitii, 

 but the sepals wanting the sharply keeled character they have 

 in that species. 



E. AMPLEXICAULIS. Caulanthus amplexicaulis, Wats. Proc. 

 Am. Acad, xvii 364. With the inflorescence and flowers of 

 Euclisia, at least as to the texture, coloring and peculiar irregu- 



