202 COMPOSITE FAMILY. 



C. Drummondii, of Texas, is low and spreading, rather hairy, with leaves 

 of 3-7 oval leaflets, or some of them simple, heads on long peduncles, and very 

 broad rays golden yellow with small dark spot at base. 



* # (i) Disk-flowers i/el/ow : rays yellow with a darker and jnirplish-streaked spot 



near the base : akenes winged and 2-toothed. 



C. COronata, of Texas, is low, with slender-petioled leaves oblong or spatu- 

 late, or some of them 3 - 5-parted, and very long peduncle ; rays broad and 

 handsome. 



* * # 11 Disk-flowers and rays (!' long) entirely yellow ; akenes orbicular, much 

 incurved and broadly winged when ripe, crowned with '2 little teeth or scales. 



C. lanceolata. Wild W. & S., and cult, in gardens ; 1 -2 high, smooth 

 or sometimes downv, in tufts, with lanceolate or oblanecolate entire leaves 

 mostly crowded at "the base, and long slender peduncles : flowers in early 

 summer. 



C. auriculata. Wild W. & S., and in some gardens ; taller, sometimes 

 with runners or suckers at base, leafy to near the top ; upper leaves oblong, 

 lower roundish and sometimes auricled at base or with 3-5 lobes or leaflets. 



2. Rays entire or nearly so, oblong or lanceolate : akenes oblong, with a very 

 narrow wing or border, not incurved, and obscurely if at all 2-toothed at the 

 apex : scales of outer involucre narrow and entire : heads rather small, the 

 flowers all yellow, y. 



* Low, l-3 high, leafy to the top: leaves really opposite and sessile, but divided 



into 3 leaflets, thus seeming to be 6 in a whorl. Wild chiefly in S. States, 

 all bat theflrst are cult in gardens. 



C. senifolia, has seemingly 6 lance-ovate and entire leaflets in a whorl, 

 (i. c. two, but each 3-divided) smooth or downy. 



C. verticillata, has the pair cut into once or twice pinnate almost thread- 

 shapcd divisions, smooth. 



C. delphinifblia, very like the last, but with fewer lance-linear divisions. 



* * Tall, leafy to the top, with evidently opposite petioled leaves. 



C. tripteris. Rich ground W. S., with simple stems 4 -9 high, leaves 

 of 3-0 lanceolate entire leaflets, corymbed heads, very short outer involucre, 

 and blunt rays. 



3. Rays oval or oblong, golden yellow, slightly notched : akenes wingless, not in- 

 curved, bearing 2 awns or teeth for a pappus : outer involucre conspicuous 

 and resembling leaves : branching plants of wet grounds, with thin leaves 

 mostly of 3-7 pinnate toothed or cut veiny leaflets ; resembling the next 

 genus, but the awns not downwardly barbed. (T) (2) 



C. trichosperma. Swamps mostly near the coast, 1 -2 high, with 3-7 

 lanceolate or linear cut-toothed leaflets or divisions, numerous heads, and nar- 

 row-oblong or linear wedge-shaped inar^inless akenes with 2 stout teeth. 



C. aurea, only S., has upper leaves often simple, lower nearly as in the fore- 

 going, and shorter wedgc-obovate akenes with 2 or 4 short chaff-like teeth. 



C. aristosa, from Illinois S., has more compound leaves with oblong or 

 lanceolate often pinnatifid leaflets, and broad -obovate very flat akenes slightly 

 margined and bristly ciliatc, the pappus of 2 long and slender awns, or some- 

 times 3 or 4, or in one variety none at all. 



53. BIDENS, BUR-MARIGOLD, BEGGAR-TICKS. (Latin for two- 

 toothed, from the usually 2 awns of the pappus.) Our species or ; 

 fl. summer and autumn. The akenes adhering to the dress or to the fleece 

 of animals by their barbed awns. 



1. Akenes broad and flat, with bristly ciliate margins. 

 *- Coarse and very homely weeds, commonly without any rays. 

 B. frond6sa, COMMON BEGGAR-TICKS. Coarse weed in low or manured 

 grounds, 2 -6 high, branched, with pinnate leaves of 3-5 broad lanceolate 



