186 COMPOSITE. (COMPOSITE FAMILY.) 



5. KITIINIA, L. KUHNIA. 



Heads 10 25-flowered : flowers perfect. Scales of the involucre few and 

 loosely imbri( ated, lanceolate. Corolla slender, 5-toothed. Achenia cylindrical, 

 many-striate. Pappus a single row of very plumose (white) bristles. A peren- 

 nial herb, resinous-dotted, with mostly alternate lanceolate leaves, and panicu- 

 late-corymbose heads of cream-colored flowers. (Dedicated to Dr. Kuhn, of 

 Pennsylvania, who brought the living plant to Linnasus.) 



1. K.. eupatorioides, L. Leaves varying from broadly lanceolate and 

 toothed, to linear and entire. Dry soil, New Jersey to Wisconsin and south- 

 ward. Sept. 



6. EUPAT6RIUM, Tourn. THOROUGHWORT. 



Heads 3 - many-flowered : flowers perfect. Involucre cylindrical or bell- 

 Bhaped. Receptacle flat. Corolla 5-toothed. Achenia 5-angled. Pappus a 

 single row of slender capillary barely roughish bristles. Perennial herbs, often 

 sprinkled with bitter resinous dots, with generally corymbose heads of white 

 bluish, or purple blossoms, appearing near the close of summer. (Dedicated to 

 Eupator Mithridates, who is said to have used a species of the genus in medicine.) 



* Heads cylindrical, 5 - \Q-flowered ; the, purplish scales numerous, closely imbricated 

 in several rows, of unequal length, slightly striate : stout herbs, with ample mostly 

 whorled leaves, and flesh-colored flowers. 



1. E. piirpiireiim, L. (JOE-PYB WEED. TRUMPET-WEED.) Stems 

 tall and stout, simple ; leaves 3 - 6 in a whorl, oblong-ovate or lanceolate, pointr 

 ed, very veiny, roughish, toothed ; corymbs very dense and compound. Varies 

 greatly in size (2 -12 high), &c., and with spotted or unspotted, often dotted 

 stems, &c., including many nominal species. Low grounds, common. 



* * Heads 3 - 20-Jlowered : involucre of 8 - 15 more or less imbricated and unequal 



scales, the outer ones shorter: flowers white. 

 - Leaves all alternate, mostly dissected : heads panicled, very smatt, 3 - ^-flowered. 



2. E. faeniculaceum, Willd. Smooth or nearly so, paniculately 

 much-branched (3 -10 high); leaves 1 - 2-pinnately parted, filiform. Vir- 

 ginia, near the coast, and southward. 



<- - Leaves mostly opposite and sessile : heads 5 - S-flowered, corymbed. 



3. E. hyssopifolium, L. Minutely pubescent (l-2 high); leave* 

 narrow, linear or lanceolate, elongated, obtuse, 1 - 3-nerved, entire, or the lower 

 sparingly toothed, often crowded hi the axils or whorled, acute at the base ; scales 

 of the involucre obtuse. Sterile soil, Massachusetts to Virginia, E. Kentucky 

 and southward. 



4. E. leucdlepiS, Torr. & Gr. Minutely pubescent, simple (l-2 

 high) ; leaves linear-lanceolate, closely sessile, l-nerved, obtuse, serrate, rough both 

 sides ; corymb hoary ; scales of the involucre with white and scarious acute tips. 

 Sandy bogs, Long Island, New Jersey, and southward. 



5. E. parviflorum, Ell. Minutely velvety-pubescent, branching (2- 

 3Idgh); leaves lanceolate or oblong, triple-ribbed and veiny, serrate above th 



