232 COMPOSITE. [Crepis. 



6. C, paludo'sa, Mcench ; radical leaves obovate-laneeolate, petiole 

 slender, cauline sessile amplexicaul auricled. Hieracium paludosum, L. 



Moist mountain meadows, copses, &c.,from S. "Wales and Salop to Caithness; 

 ascends to 2,000 ft. in the Highlands ; N. Ireland ; fl. July-Sept. — Perennial ; 

 glabrous, inflorescence covered with black glandular hairs. Stem 1-3 ft., 

 slender, furrowed. Leaves membranous, ruucinate-toothed, long-acuminate ; 

 radical 3-5 in.; cauline contracted in the lower third. Heads few, §-1 in. 

 diam., corymbose ; bracts of peduncles minute, subulate with toothed 

 bases ; ligules yellow ; styles livid. Fruit cylindric, strongly ribbed, 

 obscurely contracted at the top, pale. — Distrib. Europe (Arctic), W. 

 Siberia. —A Crepis with the pappus of Hieracium. 



36. HIERACIUM, L. HAWKWEED. 



Perennial herbs, often covered with glandular or stellate hairs ; juice 

 milky. Leaves radical and cauline, alternate. Heads solitary corymbose 

 or panicled ; invol. bracts many, imbricate, unequal ; receptacle flattish, 

 naked, pitted, margins of the pits toothed or hairy or fimbriate. Corollas 

 all ligulate, yellow, rarely orange ; anther-cells not tailed ; style-arms 

 slender, and upper part of style hairy. Fruit angled or striate, not beaked ; 

 pappus-hairs 1-seriate, simple, rigid, unequal, tawny or brownish, brittle, 

 often girt with a short crenulate ring. — Distrib. N. temp, and Arctic 

 regions ; species about 150. — Etym. Upa£, a hawk. 



In the following attempt to classify the British Hieracia, I have been guided 

 by Mr. Baker. I believe that there are no characters whereby the 9 forms, 

 from alpinum to boreale inclusive, can be more than approximately defined ; 

 of these 9 Bentham makes 4, Nyman 21, and Backhouse, followed by 

 Babington (having regard to a considerable amount of constancy under 

 cultivation), makes 30, of which only 16 bear the same name in Nyman. 

 Variable as the genus is, the sequeuce of its forms is so natural as to have 

 been recognised by all botanists. This sequence represents to a considerable 

 extent the spread of the forms in altitude and area in the British Isles. 



Section 1. Piloselloi'dea. Kootstock stoloniferous. Stem scape- 

 like. Invol. scales irregularly imbricate. Ligules glabrous. Fruit minute, 

 furrowed, crowned with a crenate disk ; pappus-hairs slender, equal. 



1. H. Pilosel'la, L. ; stolons long, scape leafless, heads solitary, invol. 

 bracts acute, ligules pale yellow, styles yellow. Mouse-ear Haxukiuecd. 



Banks, wall- tops, &c, N. to Orkney ; ascends to 2,400 ft. in Yorks. ; Ireland ; 

 Channel Islands ; fl. May- Aug. — Villous with long soft hairs. Stolons 

 creeping. Leaves 2-4 in., oblong-lanceolate or obovate-spathulate, stellately 

 downy beneath. Scapes 2-10 in., with 1-3 leaves or 0. Heads j-1 in. 

 diam. ; involucre subcampanulate and top of scape stellately downy and 

 with glandular hairs ; ligule often striped with brown on the back. Fruit 

 T J ff in., dark. — Distrib. Europe, N. Africa, 1ST. and "W. Asia. 



H. Peleteria'num, Mer. (H. pilosis'simum, Fries), is a more densely silky form, 

 with stolons shorter, heads larger. 



