Edward L. Greene: Novitates Boreali-Americanae. II. 241 
curtae, 4—6 florae, pedicellatae, erectae, squamis brunneis, obtusis, non 
raro breviter aristatis, nervo lutescente, utriculo latioribus sed brevioribus; 
utriculus fusiformis et curvatus, facie concava et facie convexa omnino 
conspicuus, totus appresse pubescens. 
Affinis C. temnolepi a quo utriculo pubescente bene distinctus. 
Japonia: Nippon: junio 1905; no. 178 (Urb. Faurie). 
6. Carex macrandrolepsis Lévl., nov. spec. 
E stirpe C. depauperatae. — Radix, fibrosa; culmis graciles, glabri; 
folia angusta (1—2 mm) 7-striata, 2 nervis proeminentibus, culmos 
aequantia et superantia; bracteae evaginatae in laminam brevem desi- 
nentes; spicae 2—3 distantes; superior mascula, pedunculata, interdum 
longissime (3 cm); squamae masculae paleaceae, apice rotundatae sed 
aristatae; squamae inferiores totam fere spicam obtegentes; 
spicae femineae 1—2, 2—4 florae; squamae femineae margine hyalino- 
rosene, nervo 5-plici, viridi, in aristam producto; utriculus 9-nervatus, 
glaber ovatus, in rostrum longum et late fissum desinens. 
Corea: in herbidis Quelpaert, maio 1907; no. 2285 (Urb. Faurie). 
LXVII. Novitates Boreali-Americanae. 1l.) 
Auctore Edward L. Greene. 
(Originaldiagnosen.) 
6. Antennaria obtusata Greene, nov. spec. 
Planta habitu et magnitudine À. apricae, 9—13 cm alta, undique albo- 
tomentosa, stolonibus brevibus reptantibus, folis 1,5 em longis, late 
obovato-spathulatis apice obtusissimis, caulinis lineari-oblongis acutis, 
capitulis 3—7 magnis confertis; involucri subturbinati squamis apice 
subscariosis obtusis serrulatis. 
In crevices of rocks about the Dyer Mine, Uintah Mountains, Utah, 
collected by L. N. Goodding, 30 June, 1902, and distributed under 
No. 1209, and with the name Antennaria aprica, Greene. The plant differs 
from that species much in leaf outline, has a different involucre, much 
less imbricated, the scales with much less conspicuous tips the margins 
of which are minutely and evenly serrulate, nor have they the color of 
those of 4. aprica. It comes from a region which is for to the westward 
of the general range of the plant of the sunny plains and open hills of 
Colorado and Wyoming, and grows in the cruices of mountain rock 
walls; yet the real À. aprica seems to be represented in Mr. Gooddings 
No. 1303 irom a different kind of locality in the Uintahs. 
1) L cf. Rep. V (1908), pp. 45—46. 
Repertorium novarum specierum. 16 
