NEW OR NOTEWORTHY SPECIES. 347 
sterile joint especially slender and subterete, the upper twice 
as long, indistinctly angled, the seminiferous body tapering 
to a beak of nearly its own length. 
Mangrove Key, off the coast of Florida, C. L. Pollard, 10 
March, 1898. Perhaps the same as C. maritima var. xqualis, 
Chapm., though it does not answer to his description ; and 
his plant is far from being the equivalent of the true C. 
equalis of the West Indies, which has almost linear silicles, 
and leaves merely toothed. 
ANTENNARIA FARWELLII. Stoutish and rather low, the 
immature (not yet flowering) leafy stems 5 or 6 inches high ; 
basal leaves of the preceding year about 2 inches long, with 
broadly spatulate very obtuse blade tapering cuneately to a 
short and narrow linear petiole, the blade traversed by three 
distinct and rather prominent veins, both faces permanently 
(the upper thinly) tomentose: heads few and large: bracts 
of the involucre in several series, all with long white tips, 
those of the outer linear-oblong, obtuse, of the inner linear- 
lanceolate, some acutish, others obtuse. 
In dry woodlands at Clifton, Keweenaw Co., Michigan, 
15 May, 1884, O. A. Farwell. Imperfectly known; the spec- 
imens being too young, scarcely in flower; but in the ehar- 
acters of its foliage the species is exceedingly well marked. 
ANTENNARIA CALOPHYLLA. Stolons short and stout, leaf- 
less except at the end; the tuft of leaves rather full, the leaf 
very large and of remarkably thin texture for the genus, 
the broadest full 2 inches in diameter and not much longer - 
than broad, mostly of oval outline, some rhombic-ovate, 
others broadly elliptical, usually very obtuse, searcely mucro- 
nate, some with blade rounded at base, others more cuneately 
tapering to the relatively short winged petiole, conspicu- 
ously 3-veined beneath, but the venation scarcely appearing 
on the upper surface, densely silvery-tomeutose beneath, 
dark green and flocculent above: flowering stem very short 
(only the male known), oniy 3 to 5 inches high: heads 4 to 
