Bidens. COMPOSITiE. 297 



or even 6 lines long, in the same plant either smooth with sparing bristles, or the outer becoming 

 tuberculose and rough. 



B. leucantha, Willd. Leaves of rather firm texture^ some undivided and ovate; these 

 and the 3 or occasionally 5 ovate or oblong-ovate divisions evenly serrate, more or less lin- 

 eately veiny : heads corymbosely paniculate on rather short peduncles : rays obovate, bright 

 white, 5 to 8 lines long, rather showy. — Spec. iii. 1719; Torr. & Gray, 1. c. B. striata, 



■ Sweet, Brit. Fl. Gard. t. 237; Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 3155. Coreopsis leucanthema, L. Ama-n. 

 Acad. iv. 291. C. leucantha, L. Spec. ed. 2, ii. 1282; Desc. Fl. Ant. t. 583. C. coronata, 

 L. 1. c. 1281, as to syu. Plum. t. .53, f. 2. — Common in S. Florida. (W. lud., Mex.) 



B. pilosa, L. Stem sometimes tall, usually weak: leaves thin; leaflets 3 to 5, irregularly 

 serrate, sometimes incised, or the lower divisions occasionally 3-lobed : heads fewer and 

 scattered : rays commonly none, at most inconspicuous and yellowish-white. — Spec. ii. 832 

 (but the cited figure, Dill. Elth. t. 43, probably belongs to B. frondosu) ; Willd. 1. c. Core- 

 opsis alba, L. Spec. ii. 908 (Herm. Parad. t. 124 ? excl. syu. Pink.). Bidens Californica, DC. 

 Prodr. V. 599 ; Torr. & Gray, Fl. ii. 354. Varial)le, and the slender forms in warm coun- 

 tries seeming to pass into B. hipinnata. — S. California and Arizona, introduced 1 (Mex. to 

 Chili, W. lud., and all tropics.) 



* * Leaves all once to thrice 3-5-nately parted or divided into oblong or linear ultimate lobes: 

 root in ours annual. 



■i— Heads narrow: rays inconspicuous and yellowish or none: akenes long and .slender, at least 

 the central ones much surpassing the involucre. 



++ Lobes of the thin leaves from oblong to lanceolate: heads slender-peduncled. 



B. bipinnata, L. (Spanish Needles.) Primary and secondary divisions of the leaves 

 rather ovate or deltoid-lanceolate in circumscription, and the lobes mostly acute : akenes all 

 slender, the inner ones 5 to 9 lines long, outermost moderately shorter and thicker : awns 

 3 or 4, sometimes only 2. — Spec. ii. 832 ; Michx. ii. 135 ; Torr. & Gray, 1. c. — Damp 

 thickets and waste ground ; a common and disagreeable weed, New England to Florida and 

 Arizona. (Trop. Am., &c.) 



B. Bigelovii, Gray. Lobes of the leaves linear-oblong, mostly obtuse: innermost akenes 

 5 or 6 lines long, 2-3-awned ; outermost of half that length or less, stouter, 2-corniculate, or 

 with a pair of short awns, or even with none. — Bot. Mex. Bound. 91. B. tenuisecta, in part. 

 Gray, PI. Wright, i. 109. — S. W. Texas to S. Arizoua, first coll. by Wright and Bicjdow. 

 •H- -H- Lobes of the leaves linear. 



B. tenuisecta, Gray. A foot or two high, branched from the base, sparsely hirsute or 

 glabrous : leaves 2-3-ternately or pinnately dissected into narrow linear lobes (of a line or 

 more in width): heads on naked rather long and stout peduncles, many-flowered, 4 or 5 

 lines high in flower : involucre hirsute, especially at base : akenes glabrous, 2-awned ; inner 

 5 lines long, with tapering summit ; outermost 3 lines long, stouter and with broad summit 

 and usually short awns : rays yellow, mostly surpassing the disk. — PL Fendl. 86. — Along 

 water-courses, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona ; first coll. by Fendler. 



B. Lemmoni. A foot or less high, slender, with short branches, smooth and glabrous : 

 leaves twice ternately parted into entire obtuse rather broadly linear lobes (a line or two 

 wide) ; the uppermost simply 3-5-parted, subtending the mostly sessile 5-9-flowered cylin- 

 draceous and glabrous heads: akenes nearly of the preceding, but the outer nearly like the 

 inner : rays a]ipareutly none. — S. Arizona, in Apache Pass, Lemmon. 



B. heterosperma, Gray. Slender, glabrous, paniculately much branched : leaves once 

 or twice ternately parted into filiform-linear (half-line wide) lobes : heads on slender pe- 

 duncles, few-flowered, in flower barely 3 lines long : rays apparently none : akenes 2-3-awned, 

 smooth ; the inner 4 or 5 lines long, outermost only 2 lines long and their short awns cadu- 

 cous. — PI. Wright, ii. 90. — S. Arizona: raised from seed coll. by Wright (thought to come 

 from New Mexico) : rediscovered in Apache Pass by Lemmon. 



•i— -i— Heads broader, many-flowered, and with comparatively large deep yellow rays : akenes all 

 short, hardly surpassing the involucre. 



B. procera, Dox. Erect and tall from an annual or biennial root, glabrous : leaves twice 

 or thrice parted into narrow linear lobes (mostly of an inch or more in length and less than 

 a line wide) : heads corymbosely paniculate : outer involucre small and inconspicuous. 



