A List of Plants collected by I. Yamazuta 



on Mt. Omei 



(Contmiied from p. 137) 



V 



By 



Sjulaliissi M.itsutl.i 



20, Compositae. 



35. Anaphalis pterocaulon (Fr. et Say.) Maxim, in Mel. Biol. 

 XI. 233 ; DiELS in Engl. Bot. Jahrb. XXIX. 613 ; Grnaphalium 

 pterocaulon PR.^et Say., Enum. PI. Jap. II. 405. (On the summit). 



A. sinica HcE. is closely allied to tlie present sp., and is dis- 

 tinguished from it by the absence of the wings on the stem, but the 

 wings seem to vary in the degree of development. 



36. Anaphalis triplinervis (Clarke in Hook. f. Fl. Brit. III. 

 281 ; Anteimaria triplinervis Sims, Bot. Mag. t. 2468 ; DC. Prodr. 

 VI. 270. (On the summit). 



The present specimen has much closed corymb, but not open as 

 represented in the plate of Bot. Mag. I.e. Still the specimen well 

 agrees with the description in other respects. The plant is not hither- 

 to reported from China. If my identification is right it is new to the 

 flora of central China. 



37. Aster (Ser. I. Alpigeni Nees.) Yamazutae, n.s. (At the foot, 

 moist places). 



Herb perennial, rhizome shoot, erect or oblique, rooting. Leaves 

 radical, forming a rosette, elliptic or oblong, obtuse, muqronate, some- 

 what attenuated towards the base, hispid and distantly mucronate on 

 the undulate margins, hispid with adpressed hairs above, only so on 

 the nerves beneath, 4-6 cm. long, 1.5-2 cm. wide ; nerves obscure 

 above, distinct beneath, primary ones 2 or 3 on both sides, 

 arcuate. Petioles 1.5—2 cm. long, winged throughout, ciliate. Scapes 

 exceeding the leaves, 10-15 cm. long, unbranched, monocephalous, 

 pubescent towards the tip, hispid towards the base, distantly bearing a 



