126 COMPOSITE. Aplopappus. 



heads few terminatiug the branches, one-tliird inch high : invohicre hemispherical ; the 

 bracts fewer-ranked and with slightly spreading greenish tips : akenes short, sericeous- 

 canescent. — Erioairpum grindeliuides, Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. 1. c. .321. — Rocky Moun- 

 tains and adjacent plains, north to Idaho and Saskatchewan, south to New Mexico and 

 Arizona ; first coll. by Nuttall. , 



* * Heads radiate, with rays not rarely neutral or stei'ile, or in one species commonly discoidal 

 by the diminution of tlieligiiles: involucre well imbricated, of firm texture, the bracts either 

 coriaceous with herbaceous tips or coriaceo-foliaceous : akenes (with two exceptions) glabrous 

 and narrow: pappus capillary but rigid: style-appendages long and slender, acute or acutish: 

 perennials, rigid-leaved. — § Pyrrocoma. Gray, PI. Wright, i. 98. Pijrrocoma & Homopappus, 

 in part, Nutt. Tians. Am. Phil. Soc. vii. 3.30, 333. 



-)— Shrubby: rays conspicuous but sterile : appendage of the slender st3^1e-branches of the length 

 and breadtli of the stigmatic portion: akenes verv glabrous, narrow, compressed, 4-nerved. 



A. Berberidis. Suffmticose, a foot or two high : flowering branches somewhat virgate, 

 wlien young tomentose-pubescent, equably leafy, bearing numerous and racemose or some- 

 times solitary heads : leaves oval, very obtuse, spiuulosely and evenly multidentate, half- 

 clasping l)y an abrupt somewhat adnate base (half to full inch long), coriaceous, with 

 conspicuous midrib but obscure veins : involucre broadly turbinate ; its bracts numerous, in 

 successively sliorter ranks, liroadly linear or outermost oblong, smooth, all with very obtuse 

 and short rather appressed green tips : rays numerous, a quarter to nearly half au iiudi long, 

 seldom styliferous : pappus merel}^ sordid. — All Saints Bay, Lower California, so near that 

 it mtiy be expected within tl)e U. S. border. Parry, Miss Fish. 



-)— -t— Herbaceous: style-appendages from subulate-filiform to narrowly subulate, much longer 

 than the stigmatic portion. 



-H- Heads large and discoid, the sterile raj's being hardly apparent or very small for the .'ize of 

 the head (when styliferous the style-branches sometimes tipped witli a liispid appendage!): 

 akenes completely glabrous and smooth, slender but flattish, 4-costate or nerved, often finely 

 striate: rigid leaves commoiTly spatulate or lanceolate, on the same plant either entire or sparsel}' 

 spinulose-toothed. — Pyrrocoma, Hook, 



A. carthamoides, Gray. Commonly a foot high, rather stout and leafy, scabro-puberu- 

 len.t when young, becoming smooth, bearing a solitary terminal large head and sometimes 

 one or two in axils : leaves from spatulate to oblong or lanceolate : involucre hemispherical, 

 half to three-fourths inch high, often leafy-subtended at base ; its proper bracts coriaceous- 

 rigid, from oblong to broadly lanceolate or innermost linear, more or less scarious-nuxrgined, 

 most of them tipped with an abrupt mucro or cusp, the outer commonly loose and becoming 

 leaf-like, either entire or spinulose-denticulate : rays almost always present and rather 

 numerous; but their ligules inconspicuous, being short, involute, and concealed in the at 

 length rufous or fulvous pappus. — Proc. Acad. Philad. 18C3, 65. Pyrrocoma carthamoides. 

 Hook. Fl. i. .306, t. 107 ; Torr. & Gray, Fl. ii. 243. — Dry plains and hills, Oregon, Wash- 

 ington Terr., and Idaho; first coll. by Douglas. Polymorphous species: the extremes are 



Var. maximus. Robust, leafy, sometimes 2 feet high : radical leaves obovate or 

 oval, 3 to 7 inches long ; cauline oblong, witli partly clasping base : heads ample, in fruit an 

 inch high and l)road : involucre of very numerous and broad or broadish bracts : ra\'s some- 

 times more evolute, but small. — Pijrrocoma radiata, 'Nntt. Traus. Am. Phil. Soc. vii. 333; 

 Torr. & Gray, 1. c. — Of the same district, first coll. by Nuttcdl. 



Var. Cusickii. Smaller : stems only a span or two high, ascending, few-leaved : 

 leaves mostly spatulate-lanceolate : head three-fourths to nearly inch high in fruit, but nar- 

 row and much fewer-flowered : bracts of the involucre correspondingly fewer, lanceolate, 

 mostly acute or acuminate. — Union Co., Oregon, flowering earlier (in June), Cusic/c. Per- 

 haps a distinct species, but appears to pass into the smaller forms of the type. 



++ -H- Heads middle-sized (o small, evidently radiate ; the exsevted rays often infertile but 



styliferous: plants comparatively slender and more capituliferous. 

 = Pubescence either cottony-tomentose and deciduous or none: leaves firm-coriaceous or rigid; 



cauline and nu)stly the radical lanceolite, the former disposed to be spar.se or small at the 



upper part of stem : akenes or ovaries not rarely with some villous pubescence. — Ilomopcippus, 



Nutt., cxcl. //. unijlorus. 



A . racemosus, Torr. stems usually virgate and simple, rigid, a foot or tAvo high, leafy: 

 leaves lanceolate or radical, sometimes obloug-spatulate (4 to 6 inches long, tapering into a 



