SoUdago. COMPOSIT,E. 149 



rouuded at apex, these sliarply serrate, below long-attenuate into a margined petiole : heads 

 4 lines long : involucral bracts oblong and broadly linear : akenes- silky-pubescent. — Prodr. 

 V. 339 ; Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. xvii. 191. S. petiolaris, Less, in Linn. vi. 502 ; Hook. & Arn. 

 Bot. Beech. 145, in part. <S'. spicijbrmis, Torr. & Gray, Fl. ii. 202. Iloinopappus? sjmthulatus, 

 Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. vii. 332. — Monterey, California, first coll. by Ilceule, Chamisso, 

 Coulter. Not " Mexico," where, however, is the somewhat related S. simplex, HBK., recently 

 rediscovered by Schaffner. 



* 4(: * * Heads; small or middle-sized (2, 3, or rarely 4 lines long), not in a terminal corymbi- 

 form cyme, but in paniculate or racemiform clusters, whicli when well developed are collected 

 in a terminal and more or less naked compound panicle or set of panicles (a few species tend to 

 have axillary clusters, or the panicle leafy below) ; when the clusters are racemiform and spread- 

 ing thev are apt to be secund: stems generally simple or branching only at summit. — {Ercclce 

 in part and Unilaterales, DC.) PANicuLATyE. 



-«— Confined to the sea-coast or the vicinity of brackish water, very smooth and glabrous, and 

 with firm and thickish or even somewhat flesliy bright-green foliage; but occasionally varying 

 with some minute pubescence in and toward the inflorescence, &c. («S. lithospermifoUa is mani- 

 festly pubescent, but that species is not known as an indigenous plant) : leaves obscurely punc- 

 ticulate, entire, or some lower ones a little serrate, with a prominent midrib, but inconspicuous 

 veins and veinlets in a fine reticulation; the lower leaves sometimes with one or two pairs of 

 low-lateral or basal ribs or veins: inflorescence thj'rsoidal, but the clusters sometimes racemiform 

 and even secund. — Maritimte. 



■H- Flowering rather early, commonly stout and middle-sized or tall: general inflorescence panic- 

 ulate or hardly strict, leafy at the base: upper leaves not notably unlike the lower ones, and 

 not appressed. 



S. COnfinis, Gkay. Apparently pale green : leaves lanceolate and rather short (cauline 

 2 to 3 inches long), or the radical obovate : heads small (2 lines long), crowded in a dense 

 oblong panicle, not secund, on glabrous pedicels : rays small, not surpassing the disk-flowers : 

 akenes canescently pubescent. — Proc. Am. Acad. xvii. 191. S. sempervirens, Gra^^ Bot. 

 Calif, i. 319, as to pi. coll. Palmer. — S. California; in San Diego Co., Palmer, Cleveland, 

 Vasey. San Bernardino Co., at hot springs on the lower mountains, Parish. 

 S. sempervirens, L. Bright green, leafy to the top, 2 to 8 feet high : leaves lanceolate 

 or varying to linear and mostly acute or the lower obtuse, lowest often oblong and spatulate, 

 of firm or rather fleshy texture : heads commonly large (4 or 5 lines long, or in slender forms 

 only 3 lines long) and showy, numerous in short racemiform or corymbulose and somewhat 

 secund clusters collected in an open thyrsus, or when fewer loosely paniculate : flowers golden 

 yellow; rays 7 to 10, mostly large. — Spec. ii. 878; Ait. Kew. iii. 214; DC. Prodr. v. 335; 

 Torr. & Gray, Fl. ii. 211. S. Mexicana, L. 1. c. 879, & authors. S. carnosa & Novehoracensis , 

 Mill. Diet. S. Icevigata, Ait. Kew. 1. c. 215 ; Nutt. Gen. ii. 159. S. limonijbliu, Pers. Syn. ii. 

 249. S. Azorica, Hochst. in Seubert, Fl. Azor. 31. — Along and near the sea-coast and tidal 

 streams, New Brunswick and Canada to Plorida, in wet or dry soil. Also San Francisco 

 Bay, &c., on the Pacific. Inflorescence occasionally pubescent, and when away from salt 

 water not rarely the upper part of the stem also, and leaves duller, so approaching the fol- 

 lowing cultivated variety. (Mex., Bermuda, Azores.) 



Var. viminea, Gray, Proc. 1. c. 192. Cultivated form, with duller-green leaves, which 

 have lost the somewhat fleshy-coriaceous texture : upper part of stem and the inflorescence 

 appressed-puberulent : racemiform clusters hardly developed, but the heads more scattered 

 in a leafy panicle. — S. integerrima, Mill. Diet. S. viminea. Ait. Kew. I.e. 215; Wilkl. Spec, 

 iii. 2064. S. intec/ri/olia, Desf. Cat. 1804, 103, & ed. 3, 402 ; DC. Prodr. 1. c, excl. syn. Nutt. 

 5. carinata, Schrad. in DC. 1. c. 337. — Common in European Botanic Gardens; passes into 

 S. LiTiiospERMiFOLiA, Willd. Euum. 891, and S. elata, Pursh (vSolander, mss.), Fl. ii. 

 543). Taller, robust, larger-leaved, even the leaves somewhat puberulent. Unknown as in- 

 digenous, obviously 5. sempervirens, var. viminea, more altered; but so unlike the sjjecies that it 

 demands separate mention. 



++ ++ Late-flowering, wholly glabrous, virgate; the upper portion of the stem beset with small 

 appressed leaves : heads (commonly 3 lines long) in a strict and narrow naked panicle. 



S. stricta, Ait. Stem simple, slender, very strict, 3 to 8 feet high : leaves all entire or the 

 lowest cauline and radical rarely a little serrate ; these oblong or spatulate and very obtuse j 

 cauline very numerous, approximate, small aud becoming bract-like, appressed, from oblong 



