228 coMPOSiTJi. (composite family.) 



» 

 pinnatifid ; the middle ones 3 - 5-parted ; the uppermost often undivided, toothed ; 

 disk yellowish, ovate or conical ; rays large, drooping ; chaff of the receptacle 

 truncate, pubescent at the apex, about as long as the 3-angled achenia. (R. digi- 

 tuta, Mill. R. laevigata, Purs/i.) — Swamps, Florida, and northward. July and 

 August. — Leaves large. Rays 1'- 2' long. 



7. E.. heterophylla, Toit. & Gray. Pubescent ; stem cor}'mI)osc above ; 

 leaves coarsely .serrate, rough above, tomentose beneath ; tiic lowest orbicular- 

 cordate or 3 -5-parted, on long petioles; the middle ones 3-lobcd ; the upper- 

 most ovate, sessile and entire ; disk globose, yellowish ; rays drooping ; chali" of 

 the receptacle acute ; achenia 3-sided. — Swamps, Middle Florida. August. — 

 Stem 3° -4° high. Leaves and heads much smaller than in the preceding. 



* * Dish columnar, elomjated : stems tail, simple. 



8. R. maxima, Kutt. Smooth ; leaves large, membranaceous, oval or 

 oblong, slightly toothed or entire, feather-veined, the lower ones petioled, the 

 upper clasping; head solitary, long-pcduncled ; rays large, drooping. — Wet 

 pine barrens, West Florida and westward. August. — Stem 4° - 9° high. Low- 

 est leaves 8'- 12' long. Rays 2' long. 



9. R. nitida, Nutt. Smooth and siiining ; stem tall, naked above ; leaves 

 rigid, ol>long-lanceolate, sliglitly toothed or entire, 3-5-ribbed ; the lowest long- 

 petioled ; the upper partly clasping, small ; rays large, drooj^ing ; disk brown. 



— Borders of swampy thickets, Georgia, Florida, and westward. July. — Stem 

 3° - 5° high. Lowest leaves 4' - 6' long. 



* * * Lower leaves opposite : dish ovate, yellow : chaff of the receptacle cuspidate, 

 rilbi'd: achenia biconvex, striate, hairy, rounded at the apex : pappus none. 



10. R. ? Porteri, Gray. Rough with short scattered hairs ; stem panicu- 

 lately branched ; leaves lanceolate, entire, narrowed at each end, fringed at the 

 base ; exterior scales of the involucre linear, as long as the disk ; the interior 

 shorter, resembling the chaff of the receptacle ; rays 7-9, longer than the disk. 



— Stone Mountain, Georgia. — Stem 2° - 3° high. 



46. LEPACHYS, Raf. 



Scales of the involucre few and small. Chaff of the oblong or columnar 

 receptacle truncate and tiiiekened at the apex. Achenia flattened and margined. 

 Pappus 2-toothed or none Otherwise like Rudbeekia. — IVrcnnials. Leaves 

 pinnately divided. Rays large, drooping, yellow. 



1. L. pinnata, Ton-. & Gray. Rough with short oppressed hairs; stem 

 .sparingly brancihcd ; divisions of the leaves 3 - 7, lanceolate, acute, serrate or 

 entire ; disk yellowish, oval or oblong, shorter than the rays ; jiappus obscurely 

 2-toothed. (Rudbeekia tomentosa, Ell.) —Dry soil, West Florida, Georgia, • 

 and westward. July- Sejit. — Stem 3°- 4° high. Rays 2' long. 



47. HELIANTHUS, L. Runflowkr. 



Heads many-flowered ; the niy-ilowcrs neutral; those of the di-k tubular and 

 perfect. Scales of the involucre imbricated in 3 or more rows, with or without 



