Anaphalis 



Compositae 



953 



o 5o 



Map 2084 

 ArUennana fa Flax 

 var. calophylla (Greene) Fern. 



0" 50 



Map 2085 



Anlennaria munda Fern. 



6. Antennaria fallax Greene. Pussytoes. Map 2083. This species 

 closely resembles the preceding one and was not separated from it in 

 Britton and Brown, Illustrated Flora, edition 2. This is the most common 

 species of the genus in the state. Frequent in all parts of the state in dry 

 clay or sandy soil in open woodland and pastures and on roadside knolls. 



Que. to Minn., southw. to Va., Ind., Miss., and Tex. 



6a. Antennaria fallax var. calophylla (Greene) Fern. (Rhodora 38: 230. 

 1936.) (Antennaria calophylla Greene. Pittonia 3 : 347. 1898.) Map 2084. 

 This variety is more frequent in the southern counties and according to 

 Fernald "ranges from Georgia to Texas, coming north to Virginia, Indiana, 

 Illinois, and Missouri, in the northern states passing insensibly into A. 

 fallax." 



7. Antennaria munda Fern. (Antennaria occidentalis of authors, not 

 Greene.) (Rhodora 38: 229-230. 1936.) Map 2085. The only specimen of 

 this species from Indiana which I have seen is the one I collected in 

 Porter County. Fernald writes me that a duplicate of this number belongs 

 to this species. I have not been able to make an intensive study of this 

 and the preceding species. I have not seen a key that will definitely separate 

 them. In this complex I am also including our reports of Antennaria oc- 

 cidentalis Greene. 



Cent. Maine to Que., westw. to Thunder Bay District., Ont., southw. to 

 Mass., Conn., Va., ne. Pa., cent, and w. N. Y., n. Ind., and Minn. 



8983. ANAPHALIS DC. Everlasting 



1. Anaphalis margaritacea (L.) Gray var. revoluta Suksd. f. arach- 

 noidea Fern. * (Rhodora 40: 219. 1938.) Pearly Everlasting. Map 2086. 

 This is a northern species which has been reported several times from 

 Indiana. In nearly every instance the author has failed to report Gna- 

 phalium obtusi folium which doubtless occurs in every county of the state. 

 Without doubt all or most of our authors have confused the two plants. 



* The latest name for this plant is Anaphalis margaritacea var. intercedens Hara. 

 (Rhodora 41: 391. 1939.) 



