Baeria. COMPOSITJE. 327 



B, Fremonti, Grat, 1. c. Erect, slender, a span or two high, somewhat hirsute-pubes- 

 ceut : leaves some narrowly linear and entire, the others palmately or pedately 3-5-parted 

 above into linear lobes : bracts of tlie broad involucre 10 to 12 : rays as many or fewer, with 

 oval ligules seldom surpassing the disk : pappus of about 4 slender awns and as many or 

 more numerous narrow small paleas, or rarely none. — Dichata Fremontii, Torr. in PI. Fendl. 

 102. Burrieliu (Dicluvta) Freiuontli, Benth. PI. Ilartw. 317. — Lower valley of the Sacra- 

 mento to San Francisco Bay ; first coll. by Fremont. 



B. uliginosa, Gray, 1. c. A span to a foot or more high, at length loosely branched and 

 diffuse, villyus-tomentose wheu young, commonly glabrate: leaves linear or ligulate (the 

 larger 4 to 10 inclies long), laciuiate-pinnatifid and the linear segments sometimes again 

 cleft, or the upper occasionally entire; involucral bracts and oblong exserted rays 10 to 13: 

 pappus sometimes none, commonly of 2 or 3 stout chaffy awns, and as many or twice as 

 many shorter broad and triuicate laciniate-fimbriate paleae. — Dtclacta uUginosa, Nutt. Trans. 

 Am. Phil. Soc. 1. c. 383 ; Torr. & Gray, Fl. ii. 380. — Wet ground or in shallow water, San 

 Francisco Bay to Santa Barbara ; first coll. by Coulter. 



Var. tenera, Gray. Depauperate, on drier soil, 2 to 6 inches high: leaves linear, 

 entire, or some of the lowermost laciniate : rays oval or oblong, little or not at all exceeding 

 the disk : paleaj and awns each usually 2, the former very broad and quadrate, or splitting 

 into 2 or 3. — Proc. Am. Acad. xix. 22. Dichata tenella, Nutt. 1. c; Torr. & Gray, 1. c. — 

 With the ordinary form : also at Tulare Station, Parry. 



§ 3. Ptilomeris. Pappus wholly of awned or of muticous and commonly 

 erose palea?, or sometimes wanting : receptacle not muricate-roughened, rather 

 scrobiculate : involucral bracts in fruit carinate at centre outside, plicate-concave 

 within, and at length deciduous with the subtended akene, as in § Dichceta : heads 

 of the same : leaves all pinnately or lower ones bipinnately parted into linear 

 and attenuate divisions : not woolly, mostly somewhat glandular, diffuse. — Proc. 

 Am. Acad. xix. 23. Hymenoxys (Hook.), Torr. & Gray, Fl. ii. 380, not Cass. 

 Ptilomeris, Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. vii, 382. Actinolepis § Ptilomeris, 

 Benth. & Hook. Gen. ii. 399 ; Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. ix. 197, & Bot. Calif, i. 378. 

 Baeria § Ptilomeris, Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. xix. 21, 23. 



* Rays 6 to 8, oblong, short-exserted : involucral bracts ovate-oval: receptacle either acutely or 

 obtusely conical, glabrous: heads small (barely 3 lines high): plants a span high, minutely 

 pubescent, obscurely if at all glandular, with filiform-linear divisions to the leaves: the two 

 following perhaps forms of one species. 



B. affinis, Gray. Pappus of 8 or 10 oblong or lanceolate palese with laciniate-setulose mar- 

 gins, fully equalling the corolla tube, some or most of them produced into an awn almost 

 equiilling disk-corolla, or in the ray blunt and awuless. — Proc. Am. Acad. xix. 23. Ptilomeris 

 affinis, Nutt. PI. Gamb. 174. — S. California, from Los Angeles to San Bernardino, Gamhel, 

 Nevin, Parish. 



B. tenella, Gray, 1. c. Pappus of 6 to 10 short and firm quadrate or broadly cuneate paleae, 

 with tlie truncate muticous summit denticulate or nearly entire, not surpassing the tube of 

 the corolla. — Ptilomeris tenella, Nutt. PI. Gamb. 173. Actinolepis tenella, Gray, Bot. Calif. 

 i. 378, mainly. — Los Angeles, California, Gamhel, Parry. 



# # Rays 10 to 15, elongated-oblong, exserted: involucral bracts oblong-lanceolate: receptacle 

 acutely conical, minutely and sparsely pubescent : plants minutely glandular-pubescent, diffusely 

 branched, a span to near a foot high, perhaps all varieties of one, the difference being mainlj- in 

 the pappus. 



B. COronaria, Gray, 1. c. Pappus of 8 to 12 lanceolate or oblong denticulate paleae, all 

 tapering into awns, little shorter than disk-corollas, or some in the ray awnless: rays nearl}^ 

 half-inch long. — Ptilomeris coronaria & P. anstata, Nutt. in Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. vii. 382. 

 Shortia Californica, Nutt. in garden catalogues. Hi/meno.ri/s Californica, Hook. Bot. Mag. 

 t. 3828; Torr. & Gray, 1. c, with var. coronaria. Actinolepis (Ptilomeris) coronaria. Gray, 

 Proc. Am. Acad. ix. 198, & Bot. Calif. 1. c. — California, Nuttall. Not since collected, but 

 common in cultivation, especially in France. 



