*m 



402 COMPOSITE. Cnicus. 



++ ++ Western species: leaves either green both sides or deciduously white-woolly beneath : invo- 

 lucral bracts plane : anther-tips narrow, very acute. 



C. quercetorum, Gray. Lightly villous-arachnoid when young, soon glabrate : stem 

 stout, a foot or less high, bearing few or several thick heads: leaves mostly jjetiolate (the 

 larger a foot long), pinuately parted aud the oblong divisions often 3-5-cleft, strongly or 

 weakly prickly; involucral bracts thickish-coriaceous, closely imbricated in numerous ranks ; 

 outer only mucronately cuspidate or with short prickle (outermost only about 3 lines long) ; 

 innermost obscurely scarious at tip : corollas purplish or whitish, the lobes equalling or 

 longer thau the throat. — Proc. Am. Acad. x. 40, & Bot. Calif, i. 418. — Dry hiUs, at Oak- 

 land and vicinity, California, Kellogg, Bolander, &c. 



C. Drummondii, Gray, 1. c. Green and somewhat villous-pubescent, or when young 

 liglitly arachnuid-woolly (at least the lower face of the leaves), either stemless and bearing 

 sessile lieads in a cluster on the crown, or caulescent aud e.en 2 or 3 feet high, with solitary 

 or several loosely disposed heads : leaves from sinuate or almost entire to pinuately parted, 

 moderately prickly : larger heads fully 2 inches high : involucral bracts thin-coriaceous or 

 chartaceous, mostly acuminate, weak-prickly pointed or innocuous, innermost with more 

 scarious and sometimes obviously dilated and erose-fimbriate tips : corollas either white or 

 sometimes rose-purple, with lobes usually shorter than the throat. — Carduus jutmilus, Hook. 

 Fl. i. 302, excl. syn. Cirsium Drummondii, Toit. & Gray, Fl. ii. 459. — From Fort Franklin, 

 near the Arctic Circle, to the Saskatchewan, along the Rocky Mountains to Colorado and 

 Utah, west to Oregon, and south along the Sierras to S. California. Polymorphous and of 

 very wide range. 



Var. acaulescens, Gray, 1. c. Smaller, with heads (solitary or several on the crown, 

 encircled by the radical leaves) only inch aud a half long, or less, and proportionally narrow : 

 outer involucral bracts with a longer liut rather weak prickle. — Cirsium ucaule, var. Ameri- 

 canum. Gray, Proc. Acad. Philad. 1863, 68. — Mountains of Colorado to the Sierra Nevada 

 in S. California. 



C. foliosus, (iRAY, 1. c. More woolly, usually also villous when young: stem stout, leafy 

 to the cluster of a few sessile heads, a span or two high : leaves commonly elongated, linear- 

 lanceolate, laciniately dentate, arachnoid-tomentose beneath : heads broad, inch and a half 

 high, leafy-bracteose : involucre nearly of the preceding : corollas pale or white, with lobes 

 etjualling or longer than the throat. — C<irduus foUosns, Hook. Fl. i. 303. Cirsium foli- 

 osum, DC. Prodr. vi. 654. — Prairies of the northern Rocky Mountains, Drummond. Idaho, 

 Burke, Spalding. 



C. scariosus. White with cottony tomeutum, at least the lower face of the leaves: stem 

 about a foot high : leaves of lanceolate outline, mostly pinuately parted into lanceolate long- 

 prickly lobes ; upper face sonietimes villous, sometimes only cottony and early glal)rate : 

 heads nearly of preceding, 2 or 3 in a sessile cluster, or solitary on short leafy branches: 

 innermost bracts of involucre commonly with more conspicuous erose or entire scarious tijjs : 

 corollas pale or white. — Cirsium scariosum, Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. vii. 420. — Rocky 

 Mountain plains, Wyoming and Utah, Nuiudl, Ward, Pcdmer, &c. Has been referred to 

 • C. Americanus and (in Proc. Am. Acad. xix. 56) to C.Joliusus. 



++++++ Species of Mexican border, with dense white tomeutum, smaller and obscurely cari- 

 nute outer involucral bracts, and blunt very scarious tips to the inner: anther-tips very acute. 



C. W^heeleri, Gray. Stem slender, 2 or 3 feet high, white with close cottony wool, as is 

 the lower face of the leaves : these narrowly lanceolate or linear, sparingly laciniate-pinnati- 

 fid, glaiirate and green above, slightly prickly; head solitary, nearly 2 inches high, naked at 

 base: outer involucral bracts firm-coriaceous, much ai)])ressed, carinate-thickened down the 

 middle of the back, abruptly tipped with a small weak prickle ; inner with conspicuous 

 scarious or scarious-edged and erose tip or appendage : corolla crimson-purple ; its lobes 

 much longer than throat. — Proc. Am. Acad. xix. 56. — Rocky Canon, south of Camp 

 Apache, Arizona, Rothrock, in Wheeler Exped., where it was referred to C. iindidatus. 



- -I— -1— Heads large or comparatively small • flowers usually rose or flesh-colored : involucral 

 bracts closely appressed, coriaceous or thickish, commonly with a glandular or viscid ridge, short 

 line, or a broader spot on the back near the summit. 



I- Canescent, at least the lower face of the leaves white-tomentose, very rarely glabrate in age: 

 heads naked, solitary or scattered. 



