Helianthus. LXXV. COxMPOSITiE. 339 



tire, 9 ; disk flowers ^ ; receptacle chaffy, conical ; pappus of the 

 disk of 2 erect awns. — ® JVativc at the Suuth, <SfC. Lvs. opposite^ entire. 



1. Z. ELEGANs. — i/r/.s. on long peduncles ; ^/-s, cordate, ovate, sessile-amplexi- 

 caul ; 5/. hairy; chaff serrated. — Native of Mexico. Jl. Aug. — Several varie- 

 ties are known in cultivation; viz. o. violucca, with violet-colored flowers; 

 /?. alba, flowers white ; y. piirpurasccns, flowers purple ; i. coccmca, flowers of a 

 brilliant scarlet, f 



2. Z. MULTiFLORA. — H(/s. oTi loug pcdunclcs ; Zf5. ovate-lanceolate, on short 

 petioles. — Native of the Southern States. — Z. pauciflorum, with bright yellow 

 flowers, is also found in cultivation, t 



34. HELIANTHUS. 



Gr. JjXtof, the Bun, av^oi, flower; from the resemblance of the flowers. 



Heads many-flowered ; ray-fls. neutral, disk $ ; scales of the invol- 

 ucre imbricated in several series ; receptacle flat or convex, the chafi" 

 persistent, embracing the achenia ; pappus of 2 cliafiy awns, decidu- 

 ous ; achenia compressed or 4-sided, not margined. — Herbs mostly %-., 

 rough. Lvs. opposite., the upper often alternate^ mostly tripli-veined. 

 Rays yelloic, disk yellow or purple. 



^ Disk dark purple. 



1. H. ANNUUS. Common Sunfiaxrer. — Lvs. all cordate, 3- veined, only the 

 lowest opposite ; ped. thick ; fis. nodding. — This well-known annual is from S. 

 America. It grows in any soil, but its magnitude is increased by the fertility 

 of it in direct proportion, until it reaches the height of 10 and even 20 feet. The 

 common height may be stated at 7 leet. The enormous size of the flowers with 

 their broad rays of brilliant yellow are too well known to require description. An 

 edible oil has been expressed from the seeds, Jl. — A splendid variety occurs 

 with the flowers all radiate. 



2. H. ANGUSTiFOLius, Navro^o-leaved Suvjlower. 



Erect, slender, glabrous or hispidly hirsute ; lvs. ses.sile, linear, tapering 

 to a long point, 1-veined, rigid, opposite, the upper often alternate, margin sub- 

 denticulate, often revolute ; kd^. pedunculate, few ; scales lance-linear, the long 

 point spreading ; cliaff linear, 3-toothed. — Sandy or rockv places, N. J. ! Ky. 

 and Southern States, common. Stem 2 — 3f high, subsimple. Leaves 2 — 5' by 

 3 — 6", broadest at the abrupt base. Rays 12 — 18, expanding about 2', Disk 

 flowers brown at the summit. 



3. H. RiGiDus. Desf. (H. scaberrimus. Ell. H. crassifolius. Nntt.) Stiff- 

 leaved Sunflovxr. — SI. erect, rigid, simple or with few branches, scabrous 



or smoothish, nearly naked above ; lvs. lanceolate, tapering to each end, petio- 

 late, mostly opposite, tripli-veined, serrulate or entire, rigid, scabrous both 

 sides; hd^. few; scales ovate, acute, regularly imbricate, shorter than the di.sk; 

 r/«rt//obtusish ; pappus 2 squamae. — Prairies, &c.. Wis. Lapkayn, to Mo., La., &c. 

 Plant 2 — 4f high. Leaves 3 — 6' by I — 1', very rough with papillose hairs, but 

 less so than in H. divaricatus. Rays 12- 20, expanding 2 — 3', light yellow. 



^ ^ Disk yellow. * Leaves opposite. 



4. H. L^TiFLORus. Pers. Splendid Sunflower. 



St. rough and branched above ; lvs. oval-lanceolate, acuminate, serrate, 

 tripli-veined, very rough on both sides, on .short petioles, upper ones often alter- 

 nate; 5c«/fs ovate-lanceolate, ciliate, appressed, a little shorter than the disk; 

 chaff entire or 3-toothed; ra?/s 12— 20.— Barrens, &€., la. Ohio. Torr. tf« Gray. 

 A rough, but showy plant, 3 — if high. Leaves thick, 5 — 8' by 1^ — 2^'. Rays 

 nearly 2' in length. Disk yellow. Aug. — Oct. -f 



5. H. occiDEXTALis. Riddcll. Wc.^/ern Sunfloirer. 



St. slender, simple, nearly naked above; lvs. opposite, oval, scabrous, ob- 

 scurely serrate, contracted at "base into long, hairy petioles, upper ones small 

 and few, entire; kds. pedunculate; scalr:^ lance-oval, appressed. — Sand prairies, 

 29* 



