COMPO^IT-E. (cOMroslTi: FAMILY.) 209 



pubescent beneath ; racemes roiuitlish or oblong, nnicli sliorter tlum the leaves, 

 the upper ones more or less racemose; heads about lO-flowercd ; rays 3-4; 

 scales of the involucre smoothlsh, obtuse; achcnia silky-pubescent. (S. flexi- 

 ciiulis, Ell.) — Shady woods in the upper districts. September. — Stem l°-2° 

 high, often flexuous. Leaves 3' -5' long, 2' -3' wide. Racemes sometimes 

 longer than the leaves. 



6. S. CSesia, L. Stem slender, often branching, smooth and glaucous ; 

 leaves smooth, lanceolate, acuminate, sessile, sharply serrate ; racemes all dis- 

 tinct, roundish, much shorter than the leaves ; the lowest rarely elongated ; 

 heads about 10-flowered ; rays 3-4, large, bright yellow ; scales of the invo- 

 lucre smooth, obtuse ; achenia pubescent. — Damp shady woods and banks, 

 Florida and northward. September. — Stem 2° -3° high, often i)uri)lc. Leaves 

 3' -5' long, ^'- 1' wide. Eacemes in all the upper axils. 



7. S. Curtisii, Torr. & Gray. Smootliish ; stem tall, not glaucous, 

 straight and mostly simple, striate-angled ; leaves lanceolate or obovate-lancco- 

 late, acuminate at each end, sharply serrate above the middle, sessile ; racemes 

 dense, much shorter than the leaves ; heads 8 - 12-flowercd ; rays 4 - G ; scales of 

 the involucre oblong-linear, obtuse ; achenia hoary -pubescent. — Mountains of 

 North Carolina and Tennessee. September. — Stem 2° -3° high. Leaves 

 5' - 6' long. 



8. S. monticola, Torr. & Gray. Smootliish ; stem terete, simple and 

 slender, puhcrnlent above ; leaves very thin, oblong-lanceolate, acuminate, 

 slightly serrate ; the upper ones small and bract-like ; racemes sessile, the up- 

 permost approximate and nearly as long as the leaves; heads about I.5-flow- 

 ered ; scales of the involucre linear, acute ; achenia smooth. — Mountains of 

 North Carolina, Curtis. September. — Leaves and flowers smaller than the last. 



9. S. lancifolia, Torr. & Gray. Smooth ; stem tall, siinjilo, angled ; 

 leaves long-lanceolate, acuminate, finely serrate, sessile ; racemes ajiproximate, 

 peduncled, somewhat compound ; the upper ones longer than the reduced leaves ; 

 heads nearly sessile ; scales of the involucre oblong, very obtuse, minutely gran- 

 ular ; achenia hairy. — Mountains of North Carolina. September. — Stem 

 3° high. Leaves 4' -5' long. Heads large. 



■*- •*- Racemes crowded in racemose or pyramidal terminal panicles, longer than the 

 leaves (except No. 15) : lowest leaves lari/e, commonhj tapering into a petiole, the 

 uppermost small, sessile and entire. 



10. S. bieolor, L. Pubescent; stem simple, or branching above; lowest 

 leaves spatulate-oblong, serrate ; the upper lanceolate ; panicle racemose, the 

 lowest racemes shorter than the leaves ; heads about 20-flowered ; rays 7-9, short, 

 whitish; scales of the involucre obtuse. — Dry soil in the upper districts, and 

 northward. September. — Stem 1° - 2° high. Radical leaves 2' - 5' long. 



11. S. puberula, Nutt. Minutely pubescent ; stem simple, virgato ; low- 

 est leaves spatulate-oblong, seiTate above the middle ; the upper lanceolate ; 

 panicle dense, racemose orpjTamidal ; heads about 30-flowered ; rays about 10; 

 scales of the involucre subulate ; achenia smoothish. (S. pubesccns, Lll.) — Dry 

 sandy soil, Mississippi, and northward. 



18* 



