MEMOIRS OF THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN. 4O9 



Antennaria luzuloides Torr. & Gray, Fl. N. Am. 2: 430 [Syn. Fl. 



I-: 232; Bot. Cal. i: 340; Man. R. M. 176]. 



On hillsides, at an altitude of about 2000 m, 



Montana: Clark's Fork, 1882, Tzvcedy, 411; Bridger Moun- 

 tains, 1896, Flodman, 86 g. 



* Antennaria oblanceolata. 



Stems simple, from a branching caudex, not surculose-proliferous, 

 2, seldom 3, dm. high, slender; basal leaves broadly oblanceolate 

 or spatulate, white silky-tomentose, mucronate, evidently 3-nerved, 

 3—5 cm. long; stem-leaves similar, but slightly narrower, the upper- 

 most reduced and linear-lanceolate ; heads in a small corymb, small, 

 4-5 mm. high; involucre turbinate-campanulate, tomentose only at 

 the base, its bracts otherwise glabrous, brownish, only the inner 

 ones with a white tip, which in both kinds is oblong, in the sterile ob- 

 tuse, in the fertile acutish ; sterile pappus much dilated at the end. 



Intermediate between A. luzuloides and A. argentea, resembling 

 the former most in the size of the plant as w^ell as of the heads, in 

 the form of the involucre, and the pubescence and color of the 

 bracts ; and the latter in- the form of the leaves. The tomentum is 

 finer and more appressed than in either. It grows on hillsides. 



Montana: Bridger Mountains, June 18 and 11, 1897, Rydberg & 

 Bessey, 3168 (type) and 316^. 



Oregon: Siskiyou Mountains, 1887, Hozvcll; J. S. JVezvberry. 



California; Mt. Shasta, 1897, H. E. Brown, j^^. 



* Antennaria anaphaloides. 



Antennaria Carpatica fulclierrima Wats. King's Exped . 5- 185 5 



not Hook. 



Stems simple, not surculose, about 4 dm. high, stout; basal leaves 

 narrowly oblanceolate, 10-15 cm. long, acute, more or less distinctly 

 3-nerved, loosely tomentose ; stem-leaves linear, acuminate, the upper 

 ones small ; corymb many-flowered and usually rather open, heads 

 6-8 mm. high, almost hemispheric, tomentose at the base, its bracts 

 in 3-4 series, brown belows and in both sexes with oblong papery 

 tips, which in the sterile head are obtuse or truncate, in the fertile 

 obtuse or acutish ; sterile pappus moderately dilated above. 



It has hitherto been confused with A. pulcherrima, and is much 

 more common than that species in the United States and has 

 much narrower leaves. The pistillate heads of A. pulcherrima are 

 often I cm. high, more turbinate, with ovate to lanceolate brownish 

 bracts, which are almost always without white papery tips. The 



