Blennosperma. COMPOSITE. 395 



1. S. Fremontii, Gray. Two or three inches high, much resembUng Actino- 

 lepis Wali'iCL'i : leaves spatulate or narrow cimeate, S-lobed at the apex, or some- 

 times nearly entire : earliest head slender-peduncled, the others clustered : tlowers 

 golden yellow. 



In the desert region of the southeastern borders of the State (Soda Lake, Br. Cooper), and in 

 S. Nevada and Utah {Fremont, Newberry, Ccqjt. £is/w2). Palmer). Heads 3 hnes, rays barely 2 

 hnes long. 



82. TRICHOPTILIUM, (hay. 



Head many-flowered ; the flowers all perfect and tubular. Involucre hemisplier- 

 ical, of about 10 ovate-lanceolate thin-herbaceous almost equal scales, somewhat in 

 two series. Eeceptacle flat and naked. Corolla cylindraceous, with 5 short and 

 spreading ovate lobes : filaments inserted just above its base. Style-branches with 

 dilated and very obtuse or truncate tips, but no proper appendage. Akeues oblong- 

 turbinate, hirsute. Pappus of 5 broad hyaline or at length firmer nerveless chatiy 

 scales, which are dissected into slender but rather rigid bristles, the middle ones 

 little shorter than the corolla. — A single species. 



1. T. incisum, Gray. A small and depressed winter-annual, diff"usely branched 

 from the root, a span or less in height, clothed throughout with long and loose or 

 somewhat deciduous white wool, under which it is somewhat hirsute or glandular : 

 leaves alternate or the lower opposite, oblong-cuneate or spatulate, coarsely and 

 sharply toothed or cut-lobed : heads (about 4 lines long) solitary on slender pedun- 

 cles, the earlier ones scape-like: corolla "yellow." — Bot. Mex. Bound. *J7 ; Torr. 

 Pacif, E. Eep. v., t. 5. 



Gravelly hills, of the Colorado desert region near Fort Yuma, Mohave, &c., Fremont, Thurbcr, 

 Lieut. Du Barry, Cooper. The latter, who found it in ravines of the Caldo Valley, states that 

 the flowers are yellow. Akenes membranaceous, slightly 5 - 6-nerved, somewhat angular : pap- 

 pus-scales (including the bristles, of which the outer are regularly shorter) about the length of 

 the akene. 



83. BLENNOSPERMA, Less. 



Head many-flowered, with 5 to 12 pistillate rays, and sometimes as many apeta- 

 lous pistillate flowers ; the disk-flowers numerous, all sterile. Scales of the hemi- 

 spherical involucre 5 to 12, in a single series, equal, oblong, plane, membranaceous, 

 somewhat united at base. Eeceptacle flattish, naked. Eays an elliptical or oblong 

 entire ligule sessile on the ovary, without a tube. Corollas of the disk-flowers with 

 narrow tube abruptly expanded into the broadly campanulate 4 — 5-lobed limb. 

 Anthers oval. Style in the fertile flowers with flat linear or oblong stigmatic lobes, 

 in the staminate flowers undivided and capitate or disk-shaped at summit : these 

 flowers with barely a rudiment of ovary. Fertile (ray) akenes pyriform, obscurely 

 8-10-ribbed, destitute of pappus, powdered as it were with papillas which when 

 moistened apparently develop into jelly. — Low and diff"usely branching annuals 

 (of Chili and California), glabrous or nearly so ; with alternate leaves pinnately 

 parted into narrow linear divisions, and rather small pedunculate heads of light 

 yellow flowers, terminating the branches. — Torr. & Gray, Fl. ii. 272 ; Gray, Proc. 

 Am. Acad. ix. 200. 



1. B. Californicum, Torr. & Gray. About a span high : scales of the involu- 

 cre and rays 7 to 12 : a series of pistillate flowers within and alternating with the 

 rays : style-branches of the fertile flowers oval or oblong, flat. — Coniothele Cali- 

 fornica, DC. 



