132 COMPOSITE. Aplopappus. 



A. Brandegei. A span high from a tafted caudex, cinereons-pubescent or puherulent, and 

 the involucre lanuginous-tomentose : radical leaves obovate or spatulate or roundish (half- 

 inch long), contracted- into a slender petiole; cauline few and sparse, small (quarter-inch 

 long), obloug or lanceolate : head one-third inch high and broad : bracts of involucre loose, 

 lanceolate, nearly equal : young akenes hirsute-ijubescent : jJ^Ppus rather scanty : style- 

 appendages triangular-subulate. — Mountains of Washiugton Terr., in the Yakima district, 

 Brandegee. — Aspect of an alpine Erigeron ; but rays deep yellow and style-appendages 

 acute. 



-}— H— Depressed-cespitose from a multicipital lignescent caudex, glabrous or puberulent-sca- 

 brous: leaves rigid and persistent, crowded on the crowns of the caudex or on short shoots, and 

 a few on the lower part of the scapiform flowering stems: rays 6 to 15, rather broad: style- 

 appendages subulate: akenes canescently villous. — Stenoius, Nutt. 



A. acaiilis, Gray. Leaves from spatulate (and inch or less long) to oblauceolate or linear 

 (and 2 or .3 inches long), mucronate, more or less 3-nerved and the broader ones veiny, com- 

 monly scabrous : scapiform flowering stems an inch to a span high, mostly mouocephalous : 

 bracts of the involucre from ovate to ovate-lanceolate, mucrouately acute or acuminate, desti- 

 tute of greenish tips; the outer a little shorter than the inner. — Proc. Am. Acad. vii. 353; 

 Eaton, Bot. King Exp. 161. Chrysopsis acaulis, Nutt. in Jour. Acad. Philad. vii. 33, t. 3. 

 Stenotus acaulis, Nutt. in Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. 1. c. 334 ; Torr. & Gray, 1. c. — Dry rocks 

 on the mountains (at 6,000 to 8,000 feet, and extending to the alpine region), from Sas- 

 katchewan and N. Wyoming to E. Oregon, and south to Utah and the Sierra Nevada, Cali- 

 fornia. Passes into 



Var. glabratus, Eatox, 1. c. Glabrous and smooth or almost so : flowering stems 

 disposed to be leafy above and to branch, so bearing 2 or 3 heads. — Chrysopsis aespitosa, 

 Nutt. in Jour. Acad. Philad. 1. c. Stenotus c(esj)itosus, Nutt. in Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. 1. c. ; 

 Torr. & Gray, 1. c. — Wyoming to Nevada and N. Arizona. 



A. armerioides, Gray.' Smooth and glabrous : flowering stems naked above (for 1 to 3 

 inches), sometimes nearly scapiform : bracts of the campauulate involucre broadly oval, 

 rounded-obtuse or retuse, muticous, of about three lengths ; the outermost much shorter, 

 most of them greenish at apex. — Stejiotus armerioides, Nutt. 1. c. ; Torr. & Gray, 1. c. — 

 Rocks on mouutains, from Wyoming to New Mexico and S. Utah; first coll. by Nuttall. 

 Too near the preceding. 



A. stenophyllus, Gray. More suffruticnlose, hirtellous-scabrous : leaves very narrow, 

 linear-spatulate to filiform-linear (commonly inch or less long and half a line wide), one- 

 nerved : scapiform peduncles inch or two long : involiicral bracts linear, glandular-puheru- 

 lent, equal, in one or two series. — Wilkes Ex. Exped. xvii. 347. — Mountains and stony hills, 

 W. Idaho and Washington Terr, to northeastern borders of California, Pickering and Brack- 

 enridge, Burke, Nevius, Howell, Lemnion. 



* * * Anomalous species, shrubby, a transition to the following section, of which it has the 

 foliage and habit, but with broad rather large heads and little-imbricated involucre. 



A. linearifolius, DC. Undershmb, a foot to a yard or more high, fastigiately much 

 branclicd, with licrbage often resinous-dotted and balsamic-viscid : branches thickly leafy : 

 leaves all narrowly linear (an inch or less long, a line or less wide), sometimes almost filiform, 

 many in axillary fascicles : heads solitary terminating the corymliiform branchlets, on pedun- 

 cles bearing one or two setaceous-subulate bracts : involucre fully half-incii liigh ; its bracts 

 thin, lanceolate, acute or acuminate, somewhat scarious-margined (at least when dry), in 

 about 2 series of nearly eqiial length : rays about 12, ol)long or broadly lanceolate, in largest 

 heads nearly three-fourths inch long, in smaller only lialf tliat length : style-appendages 

 from ovate- to lanceolate-subulate : akenes densely silvery-villous : pappus white, rather de- 

 ciduous. — Prodr. V. 347; Gray, Bot. Calif, i. 311. Stenotus linearifolius, Torr. & Gray, Fl. 

 ii. 238. — Dry hills, coast ranges of California from San Francisco Baj' southward ; and 

 mountains of San Bernardino Co. to S. Utah and adjacent Arizona. Southward it bears 

 more numerous and smaller heads than at the north. 



§ 5. Ericameria, Gray. Heads small or barely middle-sized, paniculately or 

 corymbosely disposed : involucre oblong or campanulate, of well-imbricated bracts ; 

 these all chartaceous or thinner, appressed, and wholly destitute of herbaceous 



