104 COMPOSITiE. Brichellia. 



reach Florida) is widely tropical American, and there is an anomalous sj^ecies in 

 Brazil. — Sk. ii. 290 ; Benth. Bot. Sulph. 22 ; Gray, PI. Wright, i. 84, & Proc. 

 Am. Acad. xvii. 206 ; Benth. & Hook. Gen. ii. 247. Coleosant]ms, Cass. Diet. 

 X. 36. liosalesia, Llave & Lex.? Clavigera & Bulbostylis, DC. Prodr. v. 127, 



138. 



B. iiastAta, Benth., is a well-marked species of Lov/er California, described in Bot. Su-lpli. 

 21. In that work the genus was first extended to its proper limits, but made to rest on the 

 bulbous base of the style (which is of little account) instead of the 10-costate akene. 



* Heads 35-50 flowered, large or middle-sized: pappus-bristles merely scabrous or densely serru- 

 late. 



-1— Herbage white-tomeutose : leaves rounded, pointless. 



B. incana, Gray, a foot or two high, loosely branched from a suffrutescent base; dense 

 and fine tomentum somewhat deciduous : leaves alternate, sessile, subcordate-rotund or 

 ovate, entire (less than inch long) : heads solitary terminating the branchlets, inch high, 

 pedunculate : involucre broadly campauulate, pluriserial ; its bracts firm-chartaceous ; short 

 outer ones ovate, inmost lanceolate-linear : akenes (5 lines long) cinereous-pubescent. — Proc. 

 Am. Acad. vii. 350, & Bot. Calif, i. 300. — S. E. California along the Mohave River, Cooper, 

 Parry, Parish. 



■^~- -f— Puberidont to ahnost glabrous: leaves sessile or subsessile, all alternate, not cordate, 

 •H- Rigid-coriaceous, spinulose-pointed and toothed: fruticulose. 



B. atractyloides, Gray. A foot or less high, woody except the new shoots, much 

 branched : leaves ovate, acuminate, bright green, minutely scabrous-atomiferous, 3-nerved 

 and reticulate-veined (an inch or less long) : branchlets terminating in a solitary (half-inch 

 long) and slender-pedunculate head: involucre campauulate; its bracts firm-chartaceous; 

 outer ovate, acuminate, little shorter than the linear-lanceolate innermost. — Proc. Am. 

 Acad. viii. 290. — Rocky ravines, St. George, S. Utah, Palmer, Parrij. 



++ ++ Leaves not coriaceous, pointless, seldom an inch long, sometimes viscidulous: stems her- 

 baceous from a lignescent base or stock, a span to a foot or so high, leafy to the top: heads 

 mostly singh' terminating corymbose leafy branches. 

 == Heads three fourths of an inch long, involucrately surrounded or subtended by small upper- 

 most leaves. 

 B. Greenei, Gray. Very viscid : leaves ovate, obtuse, minutely more or less serrate, and 

 tlu! lower sliort-petioled ; upper oblong and often entire, uppermost forming accessory loose 

 bracts to the involucre : proper involucral bracts lanceolate and linear, acuminate, glabrous : 

 akenes not glandular, glabrous, or at the upper part hirtellous with a few scattered short 

 bristles on the ribs. — Proc. Am. Acad. xii. 58. — N. E. California, on Scott River, Greene. 



= = Heads two-thirds or over half inch long, naked at base, commonly somewhat peduncled: 

 leaves entire, rarely with a tooth or two, obscurely 3-uerved, pubcndent and nunutely some- 

 Avhat grandular-granulose or atomiferous, graveoleut, becoming slightly viscidulous. 



B. oblongifolia, Nutt. Leaves oblong or some upper ones lanceolate, obtuse or mucro- 

 iiate : involucral bracts all acute or mucronate-pointed ; outer and short ones oblong-lanceo- 

 late; inner narrowly linear: akenes sprinkled with minute sessile and stipitate glands, 

 toward .summit often a few bristles. — Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. 1. c. 288 ; Torr. in Wilkes 

 Pacif. Exp. xvi. t. 9; Eaton, Bot. King Exp. 137. — In gravelly or dry soil, E. Oregon to 

 Brit. Columbia, first coll. by NutlaJl. 



Var. abbreviata, Gray. Dwarf: leaves seldom half-inch long: involucral bracts 

 less acute : akenes minutely and sparsely glandular on the ribs, otherwise glabrous. — Eaton, 

 1. c, t. 15, f. 7-10. — W. Humboldt Mountains, Nevada, Watson. 



B. linifolia, Eaton. Rather more pubescent: leaves oblong-lanceolate to almo.st linear: 

 involucre of the preceding, or bracts more attenuate-acute : akenes minutely hispid on the 

 ribs, not glandular. — Bot. King Exp. 137, t. 15, f. 1-6. — Sandy banks of streams, &c., 

 Sierra Nevada, California, to Utah and borders of Arizona ; first coll. by Walson. 



B. Mohavensis. Low, more cinereous-pubescent, brachiately branched : leaves narrowly 

 oblong : bracts of the involucre obtuse, rather broadly linear, outermost oblong : akenes 

 cinereou.s-hispidulous : pappus-bristles approaching barbellulate. — Rocky washes in the 

 Mohave Desert, S. E. California, Parish. 



