121 
2. V. Hartwegi. Mostly acaulescent, 1 to 2 feet high, 
minutely scabrous throughout; leaves biternate and quinate (ulti- 
mate segments more or less confluent); leaflets ovate, 1 to 2 inches 
long, acute at base, more coarsely and deeply mucronatc-serrate 
and lobed: umbel 16 to 20-rayed, mostly with no involucre, and 
involucels of prominent foliaceous linear-oblong reflexed bractlets 
on one side of the umbellets; rays 2^ to 4 inches long; pedicels 
short: fruit nearly orbicular, smooth, 3 or 4 lines long, 2^ to 3 
lines br'oad, sharply ribbed: oil-trrbes 3 in the dorsal intervals, 5 to 6 
in the laterals, 8 to 10 on the commissural side. (Fig* 138.) — 
Deweya Hartwegi Gray, Pr'oc. Am. Acad. vii. 342. Arracacia 
Hartwegi Watson, Proc. Am. Acad. xxii. 415. 
California, Lower Sacramento {Hartweg), near San Francisco {Kellogg), 
on Whipple Exped. {Bigelow), Butte and Placer counties [Mrs. R. M. Aus- 
i 
tin), Mariposa Co. (J. W. Congdon), Kern Co, {Parish 1939, distributed as 
Deweya arguta), San Felipe {Mrs. A. E. Brush). FI. April to June. 
- 3. V. Kelloggii. Acaulescent or nearly so, mostly pu- 
berulent, mor-e slender: leaves triternate; leaflets ovate, half to less 
than an inch long, mostly 3-lobed: umbel 8 to 16-rayed, mostly 
with no involucre, and involucels of small linear bractlets; rays 1 to 
3 inches long: frrrit 1 or 2 lines long, almost as broad, somewhat 
notched at base, with filiform ribs: otherwise like the last. (Fig. 
139 .) — Deweya Kelloggii Gray, P roc. Am. Acad. vii. 343. 
Arracacia Kelloggii Watson, Proc. Am. Acad. xxii. 415. 
California, about San. Francisco and BolinasBay {Kellogg & Bolunder), 
Petaluma (J. >F. Congdon), San Luis Obispo {Jones)\ Oregon, Waldo and 
Grave Creek Hills {Hotoell), Glendale {Howell & Anderson). 
Some of the Oregon forms are glabrous. 
4. V. Parishii. Glabrous throughout, nearly acaulescent, 
about a foot high: leaves thickish, ternate-pinnatifid, the segments 
ovate, irregularly cuspidate-toothed and lobed, with revolute mar- 
gins: umbel about 2()-rayed, with no involucre and involucels of 
few setaceous bractlets; rays 2 inches or more long; pedicels about 
4 lines long: calyx-teeth prominent: fruit (immature) oblong, gla- 
brous, about 3 lines long, with prominent ribs: oil-tubes 3 or 4 in 
the intervals, 4 or 5 on the commissural side. 
Southern California {Parry & Lemmon, in 1876), San Bernardino Mts. 
{S. B. ct' W. F. Parish 978 and 1827, in June 1881 and 1886, distributed as 
Cymopterus terebinthinus) , Long Meadow, Tulare county, 8-9000 feet alt. 
{Dr. E. Palmer, July, 1888). 
