NEOPHYTON. 43 



ly oblong. This is the only prostrate sp. I have 

 seen, and it is often assurgent. 



309. PALEISTA Raf. Perianthe uniserial 

 8-lOsepals unequal serrate fimbriate, rays nu- 

 merous 24-30 short linear 2dentate, fioscules 

 4fid 4androus, phoranthe with fringed bristles, 

 seeds 4gone tuberculate, crown with a thick 

 margin and a pencil of short bristles. Pro- 

 cumbent, radicant branched, leaves opposite, 

 jloicers commonly geminate^ — Thus this G. 

 differs from Eclipta in perianthe, chaff and 

 seeds. 



310. Paleista procumbens Raf. Eclipta do 

 Elliot not others. Procumbent strigose tricho- 

 tome, leaves sessile triplinerve long lanceolate 

 remotely serrate, peduncles elongate, 1 or 2, 

 sepals of perianthe lanceolate acute serrate 

 fimbriate — in Carolina and Florida in damp 

 soils, flowers small white estival and autumnal : 

 certainly quite distinct from my Eclipta nu- 

 tans, nearer to E, longifolia in some things. 

 I add to this the doubtful E. brachypoda not 

 seen by me, but to contrast them. 



311. Paleista? brachypoda Raf. Eel. do. 

 Mx &.C Amellus Carolin. Walt, prostrate di- 

 varicate, leaves lanceolate nearly entire, pe- 

 duncles 1-2 very short, sepals oval lanceol. 

 fioscules Sandre — in Carolina Slc perhaps a 

 peculiar G. or subgenus to be called Brachy- 

 poda prostrata ! 



312. CACOTANIS Raf. Perianthe conical 

 imbricate, with many rows of sepals, many 

 rays, chaff bristly, seeds compressed notched 

 crowned by a few small bristles. Leaves al- 

 ternate, flowers terminal. — I united this plant 

 to Eclipta in 1817 by a mistake, the habit is 

 totally unlike our Ecliptas. It differs from all 



