254 COMPOSITE. (COMPOSITE FAMILY.) 



7. RUDBECKIA, L. CONE-FLOWER. 



Heads many-flowered, radiate ; the rays neutral. Scales of the involucre 

 leaf-like, in about 2 rows, spreading. Receptacle conical or columnar ; the short 

 chaff concave, not rigid. Achenia 4-angular, smooth, not margined, flat at the 

 top, with no pappus, or a minute crown-like border. Chiefly perennial herbs, 

 with alternate leaves, and showy heads terminating the stem or branches ; the 

 rays generally long, yellow. (Named in honor of the Professors Rudbeck, father 

 and son, predecessors of Linna?us at Upsal.) 



* Disk columnar in fruit, dull greenish-yellow : leaves divided and cut. 

 1. R. laciniata, L. Stem smooth, branching (3 -7 high); leaves 

 smooth or roughish, the lowest pinnate, with 5 - 7 cut or 3-lobed leaflets ; upper 

 leaves irregularly 3 - 5-parted ; the lobes ovate-lanceolate, pointed, or the upper- 

 most undivided ; heads long-peduncled ; chaff truncate and downy at the tip ; 

 rays linear ( I' - 2' long), drooping. Low thickets : common. July - Sept. 



* * Disk globular, pale brownish : lower leaves 3-parted: receptacle sweet-scented. 



2. R. SUbtomentbsa, Pursh. Stem branching above (3 -4 high), 

 downy, as well as the lower side of the ovate or ovate-lanceolate serrate leaves ; 

 heads short-peduncled ; chaff downy at the blunt apex. Prairies, Wisconsin, 

 Illinois, and southward. 



# # * Disk broadly conical, dark purple or brown : leaves undivided, except No. 3. 



3. R. triloba, L. Hairy, biennial, much branched (2 -5 high), the 

 branches slender and spreading ; upper leaves ovate-lanceolate, sparingly toothed, 

 the lower 3-lobed, tapering at the base, coarsely-serrate (those from the root pin- 

 nately parted or undivided) ; rays 8, oval or oblong ; chaff of the black-purple 

 disk smooth, owned. Dry soil, Penn. to Illinois, and southward. Aug. 

 Heads small, but numerous and showy. 



4. R. specidsa, Wenderoth. Roughish-hairy (1- 2 high), branched; 

 the branches upright, elongated and naked above, terminated by single large 

 heads ; leaves lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate, pointed at both ends, petioled, 3 - 5-nerved 

 coarsely and unequally toothed or incised ; involucre much shorter than the numer- 

 ous elongated (l'-l|') rays ; chaff of the dark purple disk acutish, smooth. 

 Dry soil, W. Penn. to Ohio and Virginia. July. 



5. R. ffclgida, Ait. Hairy, the branches naked at the summit and bear- 

 ing single heads ; leaves spatulate-oblong or lanceolate, partly clasping, triple-nerved, 

 the upper entire, mostly obtuse ; rays about 12, equalling or exceeding the involucre ; 

 chaff of the dark purple disk nearly smooth and blunt. Dry soil, Pennsyl- 

 vania to Kentucky and southward. Variable, l-3 high : the rays orange- 

 yellow. Nearly approaches the next. 



6. R. hirta, L. Very rough and bristly-hairy throughout ; stems simple 

 or branched near the base, stout (l-2high), naked above, bearing single 

 large heads ; leaves nearly entire ; the upper oblong or lanceolate, sessile; the lower 

 spatulate, triple-nerved, petioled ; rays (about 14) more or less exceeding the 

 involucre; chaff of the dull brown disk hairy at the tip, acutish. Dry soil, W. 

 New York to Wisconsin and southward. Now common eastward, as a weed 

 in meadows, of recent introduction, with clover-seed from the West. June- 

 Aug. 



