180 COMPOSITiE. Aster. 



DC. Prodr. v. 233. A. ciliutus, Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. vii. 295, not Walt. — Prairies, 

 W. Louisiana and Texas ; first coll. by Drummond. 



-(— -1— Heads smaller, usually numerous and racemosely disposed on virgate simple stems: involu- 

 cre closer and of small bracts : akenes silky-villous. 



A. COncolor, L. Stems slender, 2 feet liigli, sometimes from a tiiberous-tliickened root- 

 stock, very leafy: leaves small, canescent with minute pubescence, rarely glabrate, from 

 oblong to sliort-liuear ; the lower on fertile stems only inch long, above gradually reduced in 

 ' the inflorescence to small bracts : heads rather narrow (4 lines liigli) : bracts of tiie iuvolucrer 

 lanceolate, erect, sericeous-canescent ; the tips short and narrow, or sometimes more pro- 

 longed: rays 10 to 15, 3 or 4 lines long, violet-purple. — Spec. ed. 2, ii. 1228; Walt. Car. 

 209 ; Torr. & Gray, Fl. ii. 113; Bertol. Misc. Bot. vii. t. 6. — Sandy or gravelly soil, mostly 

 in pine barrens, toward the coast, Rhode Island to Florida and Louisiana. 



* 5. Involucre turbinate, phiriserial, not glandular; the appressed coriaceous whitish bracts with 

 detinite and short (mostlj- ovate) and sliglitly squarrose green tips, outer successively sliorrer: 

 heads rather small, but large in proportion to the minute {line or two long) crowded and nniforvi 

 cnuline haves; radical leaves rosulate, subsessile, abruptly larger and very unlike the cauline, 

 sometimes an inch long: herbage scabrous: rays violet, 3 or 4 lines long: akenes short, pubes- 

 cent: flowering late in autumn. — Bhachyphylli. 



A. Squarrosus, Walt. Stems rigid, slender, paniculateiy much branched, a foot or two 

 high, bearing .scattered heads : branches tliroughout nniforndy squarrose with the minute 

 recurved-spreading rigid leaves; these mostly ovate-subulate and a line long; lowest on 

 sterile shoots 2 or 3 lines long, lanceolate-subulate, mucroinite-cuspidate : bracts of tlie obo- 

 vate-tnrbinate involucre with very obtuse or roundish green tips. — Car. 209; Michx. Fl. 

 ii. 112; Ell. Sk. ii. 5-30; Torr. & Gray, Fl. ii. 114. — Dry pine barrens, N. Carolina to 

 Florida. 



A. adnatus, Nutt. More hispidulous-scabrous and virgately branched : leaves almost im- 

 bricated on the stem ,ind branches, lanceolate-oblong, with clasping base, appres.sed and by 

 the midrib adnate to tlie stem for most of their length, only the lowest larger and free : 

 heads ratlier .smaller and involucral bracts acutish. — Jour. xVcad. I'liilad. vii. 82; Hook. 

 Comp. Bot. Mag. i. 97 ; Torr. & Gray, 1. c. A. microphyllns, Torr. e.x Lindl. in DC. Prodr. 

 V. 244 ; Bertol. Misc. Bot. vi. t. .5. — Pine barrens of Alabama and W. Florida. 



* 6. Involucre ovoid with turbinate base or campanulate, appressed-imbricated, phiriserial; the 



bracts narrow, coriaceous, minutely granulose or scabrous, but not glandular, acute, with indi>- 

 tinctly marked green tips, the outer successively shorter: whole herbage scabrous-pubescent : 

 cauline leaves nil with sessile and completely cordat e-claspiwj base, the basal lobes generally 

 meeting or overlapping around the stem ; radical not cordate; all entire: heads showy: akenes 

 many-striate, sericeous-pubescent, narrow. — Patentes. 



A. patens, Ait. Stems 2 or 3 feet high, with long and slender rigid divergent branches, 

 mostly bearing single heads : leaves from oblong to broadly lanceolate, rather rigid, scabrous, 

 rarely with obscure serratures, rouglily liispidulous-ciliolate ; the cauline an incli or two long, 

 sometimes nari'owed above the broad auriculate clasping base ; those of the branchlets grad- 

 i^ally reduced to small subulate bracts : heads half-inch or less high : rays a third to half an 

 inch long, about 24, deep violet. — Ait. Kew. iii. 201 ; Pursh, Fl. ii. 5.51 ; Torr. & Gray, Fl. 

 ii. 114. A. undulatus. Ell. Sk. ii. 361, not L. A. amplexicaalis, Michx. Fl. ii. 114; Bigel. 

 Fl. Bost. ed. 2, 312, not Lam. ^1. pateiitissimtis, Lindl. in DC. Prodr. v. 232, a rigid and long- 

 branched form. — Dry open grounds, Massachusetts lo Florida, west to Michigan, Arkansas, 

 and Texas. 



Var. gracilis, Hook. A foot or two high, more slender: heads and oblong to oval 

 leaves smaller and more scabrous. — Comp. Bot. Mag. i. 97. — Alabama to Texas, &c., a 

 common Si )ut]i western form. 



Var, phlogifolius, Nees. Tlie other extreme : leaves larger (cauline 3 or 4 inches 

 long, an inch or more wide, softer and membranaceous), hardly scabrous, sometimes con- 

 tracted above an auricul.ate-dilated base : heads paniculate on shorter branches : involucral 

 bracts in fewer ranks, almost glabrous. — Ast. 49 ; Torr. & Gray, 1 c. A. plilo(/ifolii(s, Mulil. 

 in Willd. iii. 20.34; Nutt. Gen. ii. 156. A. olatiis, Aikin in Eaton & Wright, Man. 146 ? 

 ' A. auritus, Lindl. in DC. 1. c, cultivated form, with thinner and lax involucre. — In woods 

 or shady moist ground, New York to North Carolina and Tennessee. A part of A. undulatus, 

 L., may belong here. 



