318 COMPOSITE. Biddellia. 



Var. sparsiflora. Heads more scattered and slender-pednncled : paleoe of the pappus 

 linear-lanceolate, niostly acute. — S. Utah, Bishop, Mrs. Thompson. 

 R. Cooperi, Gray. Cauescent with close and matted tomentum, no villous hairs, or the 

 wholly entire narrow leaves glalirate : stems much branched from a ligneous base : heads 

 scattered, slender-pednncled : paleaj of the pappus from broadly oblong to lanceolate, erose- 

 laciniate at summit or nearly entire, less than half the length of the disk-corolla. — Proc. 

 Am. Acad. vii. S.'jS, & Bot. Calif, ii. 373. — Gravelly plains and banks, S. E. California to 

 S. Utah and Arizona; first coll. by Dr. Cooper. 



* * Rays at maturity only a quarter of a)i inch in lengtli: akenes and pappus long-villous : bien- 

 nial or annual V 



R. arachnoidea, Gr.4y. Loosely lanate: stem and branches rather .strict : foliage of R. 

 tagetina: heads clustered, short-peduncled : arachnoid hairs even longer than the somewhat 

 turbinate akenes : paleaj of the pappus subulate-lanceolate, their margins and apex more 

 or less deliquescent into long and arachnoid hairs. — PI. Fendl. 94. Psilostrophe gnapha- 

 lioidcs, DC. I.e. — Western Texas along the Kio Grande, Wright, &c. (Adj. Mex., iJer- 

 landicr, Gregg, &c.) 



132. BAIL]£YA, Harvey &. Gray. (Jacob Whitman Bailey, the pioneer 

 in microscopical researcli in U. S.) — Soft and densely floccose- woolly annuals or 

 biennials, of the Texano-Arizonian district ; with alternate leaves, the lower 

 once or twice pinnatifid, and terminal long-pedunculate solitary heads of yellow 

 flowers, the large and persistent rays deflexed in age : fl. summer. — PI. Fendl. 

 105; Proc. Am. Acad. ix. 195. 



B. pauciradiata, II.\ev. & Gray, 1. c. Villosely and floccosely lanate, a foot or so high, 

 loosely ])aniculately branched, leafy : leaves sparingly laciniate-pinuatifid or the upper entire, 

 linear : heads small, short-peduncled : involucre quarter-inch high and broad : ligules 5 or 6, 

 roundish-oval, 3 or 4 lines long: disk-Howers 10 to 25 : akenes subclavate, with slightly nar- 

 rowed summit, strongly many-nerved, muriculate-scabrous, obscurely resinous-atomiferous. 



— Gray, Bot. Calif, i. 373. — Sandy deserts, S. E. California and adjacent Arizona, Coulter, 

 Schott, Cooper, Parish. Still rare. 



B. multiradiata, Harv. & Gray, 1. c. Densely floccosely white-tomentose, at length much 

 branched from the base and leafy : radical and lower leaves spatulate or broader, mostly 

 laciniate-pinnatifid or sparingly bipinnatifid ; uppermost small, spatulate-linear, entire : heads 

 on slender and often long peduncles : involucre mostly half-inch broad : ligules 25 to 50, 

 cuneate-oblong or at length broader and nearly quadrate, 5 or 6 lines long : disk-flowers 

 very numerous : akenes oblong-prismatic and obscurely striate, broadest at the truncate 

 apex, minutely scabrous and resinous-atomiferous. — Torr. in Emory Rep. t. 6 ; Rothrock in 

 Wheeler, Rep. vi. 175. B. pleniradieita & B. midtiradiatn, PI. Fendl. 1. c, Bot. Calif. 1. c. ; 

 the former the commoner form, branching and leafy, with more numerous and smaller heads. 



— Plains, from W. Texas to S. Utah, Arizona, and the borders of S. E. California; first coll. 

 by Coulter. (Adj. Mex.) 



Var. nudicaulis. IMore simple-stemmed, or branched only from a stout (biennial?) 

 base : leaves more divided : peduncles elongated, sometimes scapiform : head larger. — 

 B. muhiradiata, Harv. & Gray, 1. c, mainly. — Same range, or more southern. (Adj. Mex.) 



133. "WHITNEY A, Gray. {Josiah D. Whitney, Director of California 

 Geological Survey.) — Proc. Am. Acad. vi. 549, ix. 195, <& Bot. Calif, i. 374. — 

 Single species, yellow-flowered ; perhaps most related to Arnica. 



"W. dealbata, Gray, 1. c. Low perennial herb, from filiform rootstocks, with aspect of 

 Arnica, cauescent with minute and close tomentum : stems simple or sparingly branched, 

 bearing 2 to 4 pairs of opposite entire leaves, and solitary few slender monocephalous pedun- 

 cles : radical leaves obovate or oblong-spatulate, obtuse, 3-nerved, 2 or 3 inches long ; upper 

 email, lanceolate : head half-inch high : rays inch or more long. — Sierra Nevada, California, 

 in Mariposa Co., at 5,000 feet or higher ; first coll. by Brewer and Bolander. 



