792 COMPOSITAE (COMPOSITE FAMILY) 



tapering into winged petioles, partly sheathing at the base, sparsely serrulate oi 

 entire, the uppermost 3-8 cm. long ; racemes much crowded and oppressed in 

 a dense wand-like panicle; involucre 4-6 mm. long, its bracts linear-oblong; 

 rays 5-6, small. Bogs and wet shores, Nfd. to Keewatin, s. to Minn., Pa., and 

 in the mts. to N. C. July-early Sept. 



20. S. speci6sa Nutt. Stem stout, 0.5-2 m. high, smooth below, often 

 roughish above ; leaves thickish, smooth, with rough margins, oval or ovate, 

 slightly serrate ; the uppermost 2-4 cm. long, oblong-lanceolate ; the lower 1.5-3 

 dm. long, 5-10 cm. wide, contracted into a margined petiole ; heads somewhat 

 crowded in numerous erect racemes, forming an ample pyramidal or (hyrsifnnn 

 panicle ; peduncles and pedicels rough-hairy ; involucre cylindric, often gluti- 

 nous, 4.5-6 mm. long, its firm bracts oblong; rays about 5, large. Dry open 

 woods and thickets, local, Mass, to Minn., and southw. Sept.. Oct. 



Var. angustata T. & G. Lower, rarely 1 m. high ; leaves lanceolate to ovate- 

 lanceolate, more nearly uniform, the lower 8-12 cm. long, 2-3 cm. wide; 

 inflorescence usually smaller. (S. rigidiuscula Porter.) Dry open ground, 



0. to S. Dak. , and southw. Aug.-Oct. 



= = Heads paniculate, in mostly spreading or recurved-ascending secund 



clusters. 



a. Leaves fleshy ; plant maritime. 



21. S. sempe'rvirens L. Smooth and stout, 0.3-2.5 m. high ; leaves entire, 

 lanceolate, slightly clasping; the lower ones lanceolate-oblong, 1.5-6 dm. long, 

 obscurely triple-nerved ; the uppermost 4-15 cm. long ; racemes short, in an 

 open or contracted panicle ; involucre 4-6 mm. long, many-flowered; rays showy 

 7-10. Salt marshes, or rocks on the shore, Gulf of St. Lawrence, and southw.. 

 Aug.-Nov. (rarely Dec.). Varies, in less brackish swamps, to forms with 

 thinner elongated linear-lanceolate leaves tapering to each end, and more erect 

 racemes in a more slender panicle. 



6. Leaves not fleshy ; plants not maritime. 



1. Basal leaves long-petioled, conspicuously larger than the 10-30 (-40) remote 



or subremote cauline ones. 



o Stems strongly angled; leaves shagreen-scabrous on the upper surface ; heads 



lo-'2()-Jlowered. 



22. S. patula Muhl. Stem sharply 1-angled, smooth, 0.5-2 m. high ; lower 

 leaves 1-4 dm. long, ovate, acute, serrate, pale, very smooth and veiny under- 

 neath, but the upper surface very rough, like shagreen ; uppermost leaves lanceo- 

 late, 2-5 cm. long ; racemes rather short and numerous on the leafy-bracted 

 spreading branches ; heads rather large and full ; the involucre 3-4.5 mm. long, 

 nearly as broad, its linear-oblong bracts obtuse. Bogs and swamps, chiefly in 

 calcareous regions, w. Me. to Ont., and southw. Aug., Sept. 



oo Stems terete or nearly so; leaves smooth or smoothish (rarely scabrous} ; 

 heads 6-lo(-2Q)-Jlowered. 



4- Leaves mostly serrate, the lower and middle cauline (as well as the basal} 

 rather abruptly narrowed to the petiolar base. (Extreme forms of S. 

 nlmifolia might be sought here.) 



23. S. arguta Ait. Smooth ; stem 6-15 dm. high, obscurely angled above; 

 leaves usually thin, sharply double-serrate ; the lower ovate or ovate-lanceolate, 

 1.5-4 dm. long, pointed at both ends, their petioles margined; the upper 

 elliptical-lanceolate, 3-9 dm. long ; racemes pubescent, spreading, disposed in 

 an elongate open panicle ; involucre about 4 mm. long, its thin bracts bluntish ; 

 rays 6-7, large; achenes glabrous. Open woods and thickets, w. Me. to Out., 

 and southw. - Aug., Sept. 



24. S. Bo6ttii Hook. Smooth, or scabrous-pubescent or below hirsute, 

 slender, often branched, 0.5-1.5 m. high ; leaves rather finely serrate, ovate to 

 oblong-lanceolate, pointed ; the lower 6-15 cm. long ; the upper small, oblong tc 

 narrowly lanceolate, often entire ; heads loosely racemose at the tips of the very 



