Glyptophura. COMPOSIT.E. 423 



M. Cleveland!, Gray. Akenes oblong-Hnear, minutely striate-costate, 4 or 5 of the ribs 

 slightly more promineut : outer pappus of one persistent bristle and a conspicuous circle of 

 narrow Avhite setulose teeth : leaves narrow, only some of the radical pinnatifid. — Bot. Calif. 

 i. 433. — From Antioch [Mrs. Curran) to Santa Barbara and San Diego in California (first 

 coll. by Cleveland) ; also mountains of Arizona. 



M. obtusa, Benth. Akenes obovate-oblong, obtusely angled by 5 rather prominent ribs, 

 the others delicate or ob.'scure, the ape.x somewhat contracted and its border entire : no per- 

 sistent pappus-bristles : remains of tomentum in axils of leaves, &c. : radical leaves thickish, 

 spatulate-oblong, sinuate-dentate or pinnatifid ; the teeth or lobes short-oblong, sometimes 

 very obtuse: corollas (white?) in dried specimens purplish-tinged. — Gray, 1. c. M. obtusa, 

 & M. parvijlora, Benth. PI. Hartw. 321. Senecio Jiocciferus, UC. Prodr. vi. 426. — Cali- 

 fornia, from Monterey to Humboldt Co. and in the Yosemite ; first coll. by Douglas and 

 Hartweg. 



* * Suffrutescent-perennial: "flowers j'ellow." — Malacomer-is, 'Snit. 



M. incana, Torr. & Gray. Low, white-tomentose : leaves in tufts on short basal shoots, 

 pinnatifid, with short lobes: flowering branches scape-like, a few inches high, bearing one 

 or two rather large heads: involuci-e broadly campanulate: no persistent pajjpus-bristles. — 

 Fl. ii. 486. Malaromerls incana, Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. vii. 435. — Island in the bay at 

 San Diego, California, Nuttall, who only has collected it, and in imperfect specimens. 



* * * Somewhat suffrutescent and leafy paniculately branching perennials: flowers white 

 (changing to rose-color?): involucre broadly campanulate (nearly half-inch high), nianj-- 

 flowered; the loose calyculate bracts numerou.«, subulate, passing into similar bractlets on the 

 peduncle: receptacle obscurely dentate-alveolate, no bristles detected: no persistent exterior 

 pappus-bristles. — Leucoseris, Nutt. 



M. saxatilis, Torr. & Gray. Minutely tomentose when young, soon glabrate, somewhat 

 succulent, a foot or two high : leaves lanceolate or the lower spatulate, either entire or lacini- 

 ate-piunatifid : heads terminating tlie paniculate branches- akenes narrowly ol)long, 10-15- 

 costate, at maturity somewhat 4-5-angled by the stronger ribs : apex slightly contracted, 

 bearing a very short multidenticulate white border. — Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. & Bot. Calif. 1. c. 

 M. saxatilis & Af. co)nmutatu, Torr. & Gray, I.e., excl. iyn. Senecio Jiocciferus. Leucoseris 

 saxatilis & L. Californica, Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. vii. 440, 441. Ilierucium? Califor- 

 nicmn, DC. Prodr. vii. 235. Sonclius? Californicus, Hook. & Arn. Bot. Beech. 361. — Coast 

 of California at Santa Barbara and southward ; first coll. by Coulter. Passes on the moun- 

 tains and in the interior district into 



Var. tenuif olia. -Early glabrate or glabrous : stems slender, not succulent, 2 to 4 

 feet high, with long and .^lender loosely-paniculate branches, bearing slender-jjedunculate 

 heads (of erpial or smaller size) : leaves narrowly lanceolate to linear, or on branchlets 

 almost filiform. — M. tennifolia, Torr. & Gray, 1. c. ; Gray, Bot. Calif. 1. c. Leucoseris ttnui- 

 folia, Nutt. 1. c. — Mountain-sides and canons, Santa Barbara to San Diego, also Tejon, San 

 Bernardino, and Arizona; first coll. by Coulter. 



224. G-LYPTOPLEtTRA, Eaton. (rAwro's, carved, TrXevpa, side, from 

 the sculpturing of the akenes.) — Winter annuals of the Utah-Nevada desert, 

 many-stemmed and dej^ressed, forming flat and leafy tufts, only an inch or two 

 high ; with thickish and oblong runcinate leaves on margined j^etioles : heads 

 rather large for the size of the plant: fl. spring. — Bot. King Exp. 207, t. 20; 

 Gray, Pro'^c. Am. Acad. ix. 209, & Bot. Calif, i. 431. 



G. marginata, Eaton, 1. c. Corollas white, turning pink in fading, little exserted : lobes 

 and mostly whole margin of the leaves densely scarious-fringed, this wliitc liorder mainly cut 

 into short obtuse teeth, only pectinate-setiform on the leaves subtending the heads. — West- 

 ern borders of Nevada, from the Truckee to Candelaria ( Watson, Lemmon, Shochleij), and to 

 the Mohave desert in California, Parish. 



G. setulosa, Gray, 1. c. Corollas yellow changing to pink, much exserted (half to three- 

 fourths inch) : white margin of the leaves less conspicuous, mainly composed of distinct sub- 

 ulate or acicular white teeth. — St. George, S. Utah, to the Mohave desert, Parri/, Palmer, 

 Parish, &c. 



