COLOMBIAN EUPATORIUMS 291 
Huta: Neiva, Rusby & Pennell, no. 658 (N. Y.). 
Eu Vatte: in shady places near Buga, alt. 900 m., Lehmann, no. 796 (Gr.); 
shrubby spots of savannahs near Tocotd, alt. 1600 m., Lehmann, no. 3429 
(Gr.) 
Cauca: forests in highlands of Popayan, alt. 1300-2000 m., Lehmann, no. 
B. T. 598 (Gr.); in densely shrubby places of the high plains about Popayan, 
alt. 1600-2000 m., Lehmann, no. 6081, ace. to Hieron. 1. ¢. xxviii. 572 (1901). 
WirHovut Locauity: Triana, no. 1180 (K., N. Y.); Linden, no. 861 (K.). 
34. E. pseudoglomeratum Hieron. Perennial, herbaceous or 
somewhat woody, 1 m. high; stems several, erect, terete, leafy, when 
young finely sordid-pubescent; leaves opposite, short-petioled, ovate- 
lanceolate, attenuate-acuminate, sharply serrate at the sides, entire 
toward the rounded or somewhat cuneate base, 3-nerved, glabrous 
or early glabrate and with depressed nerves above, below pubescent 
on the nerves, 2.5-6.5 cm. long, half as wide, firm-membranaceous, 
drying dark; heads 6-7-flowered, sessile or nearly so in spherical 
glomerules corymbosely disposed at the ends of the branches; scales 
about 12, glabrous, stramineous, pale toward the base, brownish 
toward the acute or acutish tip, imbricated in about 3 series, mostly 
4tibbed and 5-nerved; corollas glabrous.— Hieron. in Engl. Bot. 
Jahrb. xxix. 8 (1900). 
WITHOUT PRECISE LOCALITY: merely from ‘Nouvelle Grenade,” Triana, 
no. 16 (Gr.), 
[Ecuador.] 
35. E. inulaefolium HBK. Tall erect sparingly branched pale 
grayish-green shrub sometimes attaining 4 m. in height; stem when 
young and lower surface of the leaves densely tomentose; branches 
terete or obscurely hexagonal, velvety (tomentum often yellowish or 
even tawny in dried material); leaves opposite, rhombic-ovate to 
oblong-lanceolate, caudate-attenuate at the entire apex, cuneate at the 
entire but more abruptly narrowed short-petioled or subsessile 
» Coarsely few-toothed to finely crenate or subentire on the lateral 
margins, above grayish-puberulent, below canescent-velvety, 1 dm. 
long, 2-4 em. wide, thick-membranaceous, 3-nerved well above the 
base; heads 8-14-flowered, in terminal usually large flattish or convex 
compound corymbs, subsessile; scales about 12, oval to narrowly 
oblong, rounded at the tip, stramineous, the inner nearly or quite 
Smooth, the outer somewhat velvety on the back; florets pure white 
(Smith, P ennell) or ochroleucous or erubescent (Langlassé), often very 
