WOOTON AND STANDLEY FLORA OF NEW MEXICO. 695 



5. Gnaphalium wrightii A. Gray, Proc. Amer. Acad. 17: 214. 1882. 



Type locality: "'Common from S. Arkansas and W. Texas to New Mexico." 

 Range: Colorado and New Mexico to California and Texas. 



New ^Iexico: Hiirrali Creek; Bear Mountains; Fort Bayard; Dona Ana Mountains; 

 Organ Mountains; Capitan Mountains. Upper Sonoran and Transition zones. 



6. GnaphaHum chilense Spreng. Syst. Veg. 3: 480. 1826. 

 Type locality: California. 



Range: Oregon and Montana to California and Texas. 



New Mexico: Ramali; Ojo Caliente; Gila; Mogollon Creek; Kingston; Rincon; 

 mountains southeast of Patterson ; Mesilla Valley ; Roswell. Low moim tains and hills, 

 in the Lower and Upper Sonoran zones. 



7. Gnaphalium sulphurescens Rydb. Mem. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 1: 415. 1900. 

 Type locality: Yellowstone Park. 



Range: Washington and Wyoming to northern New Mexico. 



New Mexico: Stinking Lake (Standlcy 8272). . Meadows in the mountains, in the 

 Transition Zone. 



49. ANAPHALIS DC. Pearly everla.sting. 



\Miite-tomentulose perennial herb with very leafy, usually simple, erect stems; 

 leaves entire, naiTOwly lanceolate; heads numerous, corymbose, dioecious, usually 

 with a few perfect flowers in the center of the pistillate heads ; bristles of the pappus 

 of stamina te flowers little or not at all thickened at the tips. 



1. Anaphalis subalpina (A. Gray) Rydb. Mem. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 1: 415. 1900. 



Anaphalis margaritacea subalpina A. Gray, Syn. Fl. 1^: 233. 1884. 



Type locality: Mountains of Colorado. 



Range: British Columbia and South Dakota to California and New Mexico. 



New Mexico: Santa Fe and Las Vegas mountains; West Fork of the Gila; Eagle 

 Creek. Open woods in the mountains, in the Transition and Canadian zones. 



50. ANTE NN ARIA Gaertn. Indla.n tobacco. 



Perennial white-woolly herbs with mostly basal, broad, entire leaves and corymbose 

 or racemose heads; heads many-flowered, dioecious, the flowers all tubular; involucre 

 dry, scarious, white or colored, imbricated; receptacle naked; achenes terete or flat- 

 tish; pappus a single row of bristles, in the fertile flowers capillary, in the staminate 

 ones clavellate-thickened at the tips. 



key to the species. , 



Leaves glabrous on the upper surface. 



Bracts and peduncles densely viscid; heads subtended by 



large bracts 1. A. marginata. 



Bracts and peduncles not \T.scid or only obscurely so; bracts 

 mostly wanting. 

 Stems 12 to 16 cm. high; heads large, about 10 mm. high; 



all the bracts obtuse 2. A.fendleri. 



Stems less than 10 cm. high; heads smaller, 6 to 8 mm. 



high; inner bracts very acute 3. A. peramoena. 



Leaves tomentose on both surfaces. 



Plants acaulescent ; heads subsessile among the rosettes of basal 



leaves 4. A. rosulata. 



