Chrysopsis. COMPOSIT.'E. 121 



with subcordate-clasping base : involucre 3 to 5 lines high : rays abont 20 ; their akencs 

 mostly glabrous and obscurely crowned : outer pappus of the disk-flowers conspicuous. — 

 H. Lamarckii & //. scahru (also apparently //. ChrysopsiJis & //. leptofjloasu), DC. 1. c. 317. 

 H. scabra (var. Calycium & var. nuda, which are confluent), Torr. & Gray, Fl. ii. 251. 

 U. latifoUa, Buckley in Proc. Acad. Philad. 18G1, 459. Inula subaxi/larts, Lam. Diet, 

 iii. 259, fide Ca.ss. /. scabra, Pursh, Fl. ii. 531. Chrysopsis scabra, Nutt. Gen. ii. 151 ; Ell. 

 Sk. ii. 339 ; Bcrtol. Misc. vii. t. 4. — Sandy or barren dry soil, coast of Carolina to Texas, ■ 

 Ai'kansas, S. Arizona, and perhaps within the bordei's of California. (Mex. In original 

 specimens of //. Chrysopsidis, DC, and otliers from Saltillo, &c., a setose pappus to the ray- 

 flowers only abnormally occurs. H. kpto/j/ossa, DC, has the crown of the ray akenes with 

 a sharp and sometimes undulate edge. In Parry & Palmer's no. 373 the crown is more 

 salient and setulose-denticulate !) 

 H. grandiflora, Nutt. Villous-hispid or hirsute : stem stout, from a foot to 6 feet high, 

 bearing rather large (sometimes rather small) heads : cauline leaves not clasping, or hardly 

 so, and clasping base of petioles of the lowest occasionally wanting : involucre 4 or 5 lines 

 high : rays about 30 ; their akenes minutely pubescent or glabrate : outer pappus of the 

 disk-flowers less conspicuous : style-appendages shorter, mostly obtuse. — Trans. Am. Phil. 

 Soc. vii. 315 ; Torr. &. Gray, 1. c. Diplopappus scaber. Hook. Fl. ii. 22. llderotheca Jlori- 

 bunda, Benth. Bot. Sulph. 24. H. Jlorihunda (excl. pi. Coulter, which belongs to the pre- 

 ceding and is probably from Arizona) & II. (jrandijlorn, Gray, Bot. Calif, i. 308. — California 

 from Santa Barbara southward and east to the borders of Nevada. — Heads always smaller 

 than those of //. iniduides, sometimes no larger than of the preceding species. 



27. CHRYSOPSIS, Nutt. (X>i;o-o9, o^i?, of golden aspect, from the 

 color of the blossom.) — Herbs (N. American, extending into Mexico), mostly 

 perennials ; with silky, lanate, hirsute or hispid pubescence, or rarely glabrous, 

 entire or sometimes few-toothed leaves, the cauline sessile, and middle-sized heads 

 of yellow flowers terminating the stem and branches ; in late summer and 

 autumn: pappus commonly fuscous or ferruginous. — Gen. ii. 150, under Inula ; 

 DC. Prodr. v. 326 ; Torr. & Gray, Fl. ii. 252. 



§ 1. EuciiRYSOrsis. Heads radiate : outer short' pappus mostly manifest. 



* Leaves narrow, elongated and nervose, gramineous or rather Luzula-likc: whole herbage seri- 

 ceous- lanate, or in age glabrate: root perennial: akenes compressed-fusiform: outer pappus 

 squamellate-setulose. — Pityopsis, Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. n. ser. vii. 317. 

 C. graminifolia, Nutt. Stem a foot or two high, slender, generally leafy, stoloniferous 

 underground : leaves 3-5-nerved or striate, silvery-sericeous, at least when young, lanceolate 

 to linear; radical a span to a foot long; cauline successively shorter and becoming linear- 

 subulate, erect: heads few or several and paniculate: involucre (half-inch or less higli) 

 somewhat turbinate ; its regularly imbricated bracts many-ranked, glabrate, sometimes 

 granulose-glaudular on the back: peduncles when glabrate often hirtellous-glandular. — 

 Torr. & Gray, Fl. ii. 252; Bertol. Misc. Bot. vii. t. 3. C. (jraminifoHa & C. anjentea, Nutt. 

 Gen. ii. 151 ;'e11. Sk. ii. 234; DC. Prodr. v. 326. C. oligantha, Chapm. Fl. 216, an early- 

 flowering form with few leaves and heads. Innla graininifolin, Michx. Fl. ii. 122. /. argenUn, 

 Pers. Syn. ii. 452. Eriijeron nervosum, Willd. Spec. iii. 1053. E. glandulosum, Poir. Diet, 

 viii. 487. Diplopappus (jraminifolius, Less, in Linn. v. 310. D. sericeus, Hook. Comp. Bot. 

 Mag i. 97. Pityopsis {Scricophyllum) graminifolia & urgcnUa, Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. 

 1. c. — Dry pine barrens or sandy ground, Maryland to Florida and Texas; fl. autumn. A 

 characteristic but variable species : leaves from 1 to 9 lines wide, and heads when numerous 

 smaller than when few. (Mex. Probably IJcciorea villosissima, DC.) 



Var. aspera (C aspn-a, Shnttlew. in distrib. coll. Pngel), a glabrate rigid and poly- 

 cephalous state, near St. Marks, Florida (probably on the very coast), the stem and leaves 

 sparsely glandular-hispidulous ! 

 C. pinifolia, Ei.l. A foot high, slender (the flowering branches almost filiform); very 

 early glabrate, appearing glaljrous, smooth throughout : lowest leaves narrowly linear and 

 2-3-nerved (at most a line and a half wide, 2 to 6 inches long) ; cauline filiform : heads 

 solitary terminating the branches, or corymbose pedunculate, nearly as large as the average iu 



