Blake — New and Noteworthy Compositae 43 
publication in a list of new species chiefly collected by Anthony 
in 1897 leads me to consider that Anthony 339, from San José del 
Cabo, may be taken as typifying the form to which the name A. 
fruticosa should be applied. The latter differs from A. angusta 
chiefly in its ovate leaves 1.3-3 cm. broad, its 2-3-flowered heads, 
and the longer more nearly equal pappus-awns. 
Ence.i pilosiflora, sp. nov. “ Suffruticosa,” radice et parte 
caulis inferiore invisis. Caulis validus ramosus procumbenti- 
adscendens dense longe submolliterque tomentoso-pilosus pilis 
laxis albis. Folia alterna late ovata basi truncata vel rotundata 
rare cuneata apice subacuta integra vel rare irregulariter subden- 
tata utrinque dense mollissime incano-tomentoso-pilosa trinervata 
5.5-8 em. longa 3.5-7 em. lata, in petiolis dense pilosis 2-2.5 cm. 
longis insidentia. Pedunculi terminales 1—2-cephali pilosi 1-1.7 
dm. longi; capitula 3-4.5cm. lata; discus purpureus 12 mm. 
altus 16-25 mm. diametro. Involucri phyllaria 2-3-seriata subae- 
qualia lanceolata vel oblongo-lanceolata acuta dense mollissimeque 
tomentoso-pilosa laxe patentia margine plerumque repando-in- 
voluta 1—1.5 em. longa 3-3.5 mm. lata. Radii flavi ca. 12 oblongi 
vel late cuneati 1-1.5 cm. longi dorso pubescentes apice leviter 
3-lobati vel 1-dentati; corollae disci apice purpureae infra pu- 
berulae in dentibus pilosae 5mm. longae. Paleae dorso pilosae 
6.8 mm. longae. Achenia margine et in medio latere villosa 
5.5 mm. longa 2.5 mm. lata. — Peru: Tablada de Lurin, August, 
Mathews 1014 (rypes: hb. Kew, hb. Univ. Cambridge, fragm. & 
photographs in Gray Herb.); same locality, McLean (hb. Kew); 
sandy ground in the Loma-formation, 300 m., mountains of Bar- 
ranco near Lima, 23 Oct. 1902, Weberbauer 1658 (hb. Berlin). 
Horr.: 20 Apr. 1825, Barclay (hb. Univ. Cambridge). — This new 
species is nearly related to the variable Z. canescens Lam., but 
unlike the various plants of that relationship already described 
seems not to intergrade with that species. Its larger size and 
peculiarly soft pubescence distinguish it from all its near relatives. 
I am indebted to Dr. C. E. Moss of the Cambridge Botanical 
School for fragments and photographs of the material at Cam- 
bridge. . 
Ric. annectens, sp. nov. Herbacea elata. Caulis validus us- 
que ad 1.1 cm. diametro multistriatulus dense minute glanduloso- 
puberulus et tuberculato-hispido-pilosus. F olia inferiora opposita 
