Zauschneria Garretti. Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 
xx :36. 1907. 
Presl— Reliquiae Haenkeanae. 2 :28-29. pi. 52. 1831. 
Watson, S.— Botany of California, i :218. 1880. 
Specimens Cited 
The abbreviations of the various herbaria containing the speci- 
mens cited are as follows: University of California (UC), Cali- 
fornia Academy of Sciences (CA), Dudley Herbarium of Stan- 
ford University (DH), Pomona College (PC), Los Angeles 
County Museum LAM), Carnegie Museum, Pittsburgh, Pa. (Car. 
Mus.), the author's private herbarium GLM). 
EXPLANATION OF PLATES 
Plate 2. Zauschneria viscosa Moxley. The type sheet in the author's 
private herbarium. Photo by the author. 
Plate 3. Zauschneria glandulosa Moxley. The type sheet, No. 188980 
in the University of California herbarium. Photo by the author. 
Plate 4. Zauschneria pulchella Moxley. The type specimens in the 
herbarium of the California Academy of Sciences, Golden Gate Park, 
San Francisco, Calif. Photo by the author. 
ADDENDUM 
Zauschneria canescens Eastwood, sp. nov. 
Villous-canescent, 3-4 dm. high, branching near the base, with 
spicate-congested inflorescence ; leaves opposite, oblong-ovate, 
2-3 cm. long, 5-15 mm. wide, with acute apex and obtusely sessile 
base, margin mucronate-denticulate, lateral veins obscure ; calyx 
22 mm. long, its divisions scarcely 1 cm. long, acuminate, equal- 
ing or exceeding the petals and stamens, the bulb at the base 
2-3 mm. in diameter ; ovary shorter than its bract, broadly fusi- 
form ; capsule villous, sessile. 
Type collected by Culbertson in the South Fork of the Kaweah 
River, Tulare County, California, July 22, 1904, and distributed 
by C. F. Baker under his No. 4502. 
This species resembles Z. velutina Eastw. in the character of 
its pubescence except that it much more rough and coarse. It 
differs from it in the shape of the leaves, which are ovate-acumi- 
nate rather than elliptical, in the congested inflorescence, and the 
included stamens. In the systematic arrangement it should 
come between Z. tomentella Greene and Z. velutina Eastw. 
Specimens Examined 
Baker 4502 (CA, PC) ; Ricks in Middle Tule River, 3400 ft., 
C. A. Purpus 5617 (UC) ; Little Kern River, 9300 ft., Sep., 1897, 
C. A. Purpus 5226 (UC). 
After the above paper was sent to the printer I discovered 
that this species had been overlooked and, rather than change 
the body of the paper, I decided to add the description in this 
way. 
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