1899] Fernald, —Notes on New England Antennarias. 151 
its subcapitate inflorescence of large heads it more nearly resembles 
Professor Greene's 4. Farwellii; but that species is quite glandless 
and its basal leaves are characteristically narrower than those of 4. 
ambigens. This species, too, is near 4. fallax, Greene, but that is a 
much taller glandless plant with more scattered cauline leaves and 
looser corymbs. 
A. FALLAX, Greene. In a recent note (RHODORA i. 74) I included 
under this species a number of northern New England specimens. 
More recently, however, I have been able to examine one of Professor 
Greene's specimens, which is well matched by a New England plant, 
though not by all the specimens formerly cited by me. At that time I 
took for 4. fallax a plant with the basal leaves as green and generally 
as glabrous as those of A. Parlinii. True A. fallax, however, has the 
basal leaves definitely gray-pubescent above, and the greenish or tawny 
(not purple) involucral bracts have ‘scarious or petaloid tips. This 
plant has been examined from the following New England stations, the 
central Maine specimens formerly referred to 4. plantaginea belonging 
here : — MAINE, gravelly bank, Orono, June 7, 1897 (Geo. B. Fernald) ; 
rich grassy slope, Orono, June 3, 1898 (M. L. Fernald, no. 2346) ; 
North Berwick, May 30, 1899 (J. C. Partin, no. 1149) : NEw Hawr- 
SHIRE, roadside thickets, Jaffrey, May 31, 1897 — remarkably large 
specimens (Æ. Z. Rand and B. Z. Robinson, nos. 414, 415) : VERMONT, 
in partial shade, Weybridge, May 21 and June 1, 1899, low open woods, 
in clay soil, Ferrisburgh, June 4, 1899 (Ezra Brainerd, nos. 15, 16): 
MASSACHUSETTS, dry pine woods, Wilmington, June 11, 1899 (G. G. 
Kennedy). 
The plant with bright green leaves, formerly confused with 4. fallax 
appears, upon an examination of more material, to belong rather with 
A. Parlinit, var. arnoglossa. The specimens referred to A. fallax were 
quite glandless, a character which, at that time, was considered suffi- 
, cient to separate the plant specifically from 4. Pardinii. Abundant 
material recently examined shows, however, that occasionally a few 
glands occur, and that, with no other characters to distinguish it, the 
plant must be considered 
A. PARLINH, var. ARNOGLOSSA, Fernald, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist. 
xxviii. 244. New England specimens examined: — MAINE, sandy 
field, Milo Junction, June 6, 1898, gravelly bank, Orono, June 4, 1898 
(M. L. Fernald, nos. 2344, 2342, 2345) ; Somesville, July 2, 1897 
(E. L. Rand); North Berwick, May 28, 1899 (7. C. Parlin) : New 
