146 COMPOSITE. (COMPOSITE FAMILY.) 



Var. foliosa, Eaton. Canescent with appressed sericeous pubescence, 

 mostly soft and destitute of hispid bristles; but stem often hirsute or villous: 

 leaves short, oblong or elliptical : heads small, rather numerous and clustered. 

 — Bot. King Exp. 1G4. Mountains of Wyoming to Utah and Arizona. 



Var Rutteri, Rothrock. Most like the preceding, equally sericeous- 

 canescent with usually longer soft hairs : heads of double the size, fully 

 i inch high and wide, solitary or few in a cluster, foliose-bracteate : rays 30 

 to 40, i inch long. — Wheeler Rep. vi. 142. S. Arizona ; also Colorado, where 

 the leaves are slightly canescent. 



9. APLOPAPPUS, Cass. 



A large and polymorphous genus ; mostly herbaceous, some suffruticose : 



the flowers all yellow, and occasionally rayless, thus making them undistin- 



guishable from the following genus. 



* Involucre ofjirm well-imbricated or rigid bracts: rays numerous, several, or 



wanting : pappus common! y fuscous or rufous, and more or less rigid. 



•i- Heads rayless : akenes sericeous-canescent : leaves coriaceous, dentate. 



1 . A. Nuttallii, Torr. & Gray. Herbaceous from a woody stock, a span 

 to a foot high : leaves from spatulate-oblong to almost lanceolate : heads few 

 terminating the branches, one third inch high : involucre hemispherical ; the 

 bracts with slightly spreading greenish tips. — From New Mexico and 

 Arizona to Idaho and the Saskatchewan. 



-4- h- Heads conspicuously radiate, large and showy : rays very numerous, \ to 



1 inch long: akenes wholly glabrous: leaves coriaceous, entire. 



++ Stems equably and very leafy up to the sessile or subsessife heads. 



2. A. Fremoriti, Gray. A foot or less high, simple or fastigiately 

 branched above : leaves lanceolate, 2 to 4 inches long, obscurely 3 to 5-nerved ; 

 lower narrowed and upper partly clasping at base: involucre (inch or less 

 high) broadly campanulate ; its bracts broadly lanceolate, conspicuously and 

 often cuspidately acuminate : rays ^ inch long : akenes obovate, striate-nerved, 

 almost as long as the rigid pappus. — Proc. Acad. Philad. 1863, 65. Colorado. 



Var. Wardi, Gray. Dwarf: fascicled stems only a span high: leaves 

 proportionally small, linear-lanceolate, destitute of lateral nerves : heads 

 one-half smaller, 2 or 3 in a terminal glomerule : akenes double the length 

 of the scanty pappus. — Synopt. Fl. i. 128. Wyoming, L. F. Ward. 

 t-e *+ Stems simj)le, above icith decreasing or sparse leaves and solitary or few 



naked and usually pedunculate heads, at base a tuft of ample lanceolate- or 



spatulate-oblong radical leaves. 



3. A. croceus, Gray. Stem stout and erect, commonly a foot or two 

 high, and with radical leaves afoot or less long (including the petiole) : cauliue 

 leaves ovate-oblong to lanceolate, partly clasping: head mostly solitary: invo- 

 lucre a full inch in diameter; its bracts ovate to spatulate-oblong; very obtuse, lax, 

 inner with scarious erose-denticulate margins : rays saffron-yellow, sometimes 

 inch Inna : akenes narrowly oblong, nearly the length of the pappus. — Proc. 

 Acad. Philad. 1863, 65. Mountains of Colorado. 



4. A. integrifolius, T. C. Porter. Stems several from the caudex, 

 ascending, a foot or less high: radical leaves 3 to 8 inches (including short 



