Iva. COMPOSITiE. 247 



obovate-oval, tnrgirl. — Car. 232; Michx. Fl. ii. 184; Torr. & Oray, 1. c — Sands of the 

 sea-shore, ^'il■gillia to Florida and Louisiana. ( W. liid.) 



++ -H- Bracts of the simpler involucre 5 or 4 ; those among the several or rather numerous sterile 

 flowers reduced to linear filiform chaff: herl)age minutely or sparsely strigulose or nearly gla- 

 brous, rarely more pubescent: leaves opposite and alternate. 



I. frutescens, L. (Maksu Em>er, High-water Shrlu.) Shrubby, or on the northern 

 coast nearly herbaceou.s, erect, 3 to 8 feet high, much branched : cauline leaves oval or ob- 

 long, 3 to 5 inches long, serrate, 3-nervod at base, pctiolcd ; those of the branches lanceolate 

 aud tapering to each end, and iu the upper part of the inflorescence reduced to linear bracts 

 mostly surpassing the heads: bracts of the involucre distinct, orbicular-obovate. — Amwn. 

 Acad! iii. 2.j, & Spec. ii. 989; Walt. Car. 232; Lam. 111. t. 166, f. 2; Michx. Fl. ii. 184; 

 Torr. &. Gray, Fl. ii. 287. — Brackish muddy shores and beaches along the sea-coast, from 

 Massachusetts to Texas. 



I. Hayesiana, Gray. Suffrutescent, 2 or 3 feet high, -with ascending rather simple branches : 

 leaves obovate-olilong or spatulate, or the small uppermost lanceolate, obtuse, entire, nearly 

 sessile ; the larger 2 inches long ; upper little or not at all surpassing the heads : iuvolucral 

 bracts distinct, roundish. — Proc. Am. Acad. xi. 78, & Bot, Calif, i. 614. — Brackish soil, San 

 Diego Co., California, Sutton Hajes, Palmer, G. R. Vaseij. 



I. axillaris, I'itrsh. Herbaceous from somewhat woody creeping rootstocks ; the stems or 

 brandies nearly simple, ascending, a foot or two high : leaves from obovate or oblong to 

 nearly linear, obtuse, mostly entire, sessile, rarely over inch long, even the uppermost usually 

 much surpassing the mostly solitary heads in their axils : bracts of the hemispherical invo- 

 lucre connate into a 4-5-lobed or sometimes parted aud sometimes merely crenate cup. — 

 Fl. ii. 743; Nutt. Gen. ii. 185; Hook. Fl. i. 309, t. 106; Torr. & Gray, 1. c — /. axillaris 

 (bracts almost separate) & I.foliolosa (bracts much united), Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. 1. c. 

 346. — Sandy saline soil, Saskatchewan aud Dakota to New Mexico, and west to Brit. Colum- 

 bia and California. 



Var. pubescens, Gray. Villous with lax spreading hairs : involucre turbinate and 

 almost entire. — Bot. Wilkes Exped. xvi. 3,"j0, & Bot. Calif, i. 343. — California, along the 

 Bay of San Francisco. 



+- -f— Heads 3-6-flowered, small (about a line long), very numerous, subsessile, all surpassed 

 by the narrow-linear or filiform mostly nlternate subtending leaves: slender erect annuals, 

 with elongated or virgate flowering branches: chaffy bracts filiform. — § Monachmna, Torr. & 

 Gray, 1. c. 



I. microcephala, Nutt. Nearly glabrous, 2 or 3 feet high, even the lower leaves narrowly 

 linear (an inch or two long, a line wide), those subtending the loosely disposed hemisidierical 

 heads spreading : involucre of 4 or 5 distinct bracts : fertile and sterile flowers each about 3. 

 — Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. 1. c. ; Torr. & Gray, 1. c. — Dry pine barrens, E. aud Middle Florida, 

 Bahhrin, Chapman, Palmer, Curtiss. 



I. angustifolia, Nutt. Strigulose-scabrous or somewhat hirsute, 2 to 4 feet high : lower 

 leaves lanceolate, acute at both ends (lai-ger inch and a half long, 3 or 4 lines wide), some 

 of them sparingly serrate ; tho.se of the branches from linear to filiform, the bracteal ones 

 ascending : heads more crowded and spicate, turbinate : iuvolucral bracts united by scarious 

 edges into a cup : fertile flowers usually solitary ; the sterile 2 to .'5 : anther-tips cuspidate- 

 apicnlate. — DC. Prodr. v. 529, & Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. 1. c. ; Torr. & Gray, 1. c. — Gravelly 

 banks or beds of streams, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas. (Adj. Mcx.) 



§ 3, Chorisi'va. Hearls scattered, lateral and ebracteate on leafy branches : 

 fertile flowers with evident corolla. 



I. Nevadensis, M. E. Joxes. Low and diffusely branched annual, leafy to the top, cine- 

 reously hirsute-pubescent: leaves obovate in outline, pinnately 3-7-parted into oblong or 

 obovate obtuse lobes : heads small, .sessile along the branches or rarely in the axil of a leaf : 

 involucre of 3 nearly distinct ovate-oblong and very obtuse foliaceons bracts, considerably 

 surpassing the 8 to 10 male and 3 or 4 female flowers ; the latter subtended aud akene partly 

 enwrapped by as many roundish and hyaline interior bracts; their truncate corolla beset and 

 fringed by long hairs. — Am. Naturalist, xvii. 973, but akeues not "finely .striate." — Near 

 Hawthorne, Nevada, ,1/. E. Jones. — Insignificant but singular species, with the aspect of 

 Franseria Hookeriana. 



