COMPOSITE. (COMPOSITE FAMILY.) 229 



leafy spreading tips. Receptacle flat or convex, chaffy. Achenia 4-anglcd, usu- 

 ally compressed. Pappus of 2 (rarely 3-4) caducous chaffy scales or awns. — 

 Annual or perennial herbs, with opposite or alternate, commonly 3-ribbed, undi- 

 vided leaves. Heads solitary, terminating- the stem or branches. Disk yellow 

 or dark purple. Rays yellow. 



* Annual: disk dark purple : chaff of the receptacle 3-toothed : leaves on loixj and 

 slender petioles: achenia pubescent. 



1. H. debilis, Nutt. Roughish; stem slender, decumbent, branching; 

 leaves rarely opposite, deltoid-ovate, acuminate, wavy-serrulate ; heads small; 

 scales of the involucre narrowly lanceolate, slender-pointed ; pappus 2-awned. 

 — Shores of East Florida. — Stem 1° - 2° long. Rays 10-14. 



2. H. prsecox, Gray & Engclm. Rough with scattered rigid hairs, villous 



when young ; stem erect, paniculately branched, somewhat spotted ; leaves thin, 



coarsely serrate, acuminate, undulate, the lowest deltoid-ovate, cordate, opposite, 



the upper ones ovate-lanceolate ; scales of the involucre lanceolate-subulate ; 



rays 1 5 - 20. — Sandy shores, West Florida, and westward. July - Sept. — Stem 



2° -3° high. 



# * Perennial: disk dark purple. 



+- Rays minute or leant ing. 



3. H. Radula, Torr. & Gray. Stem simple, ascending, leafy and hirsute 

 towards the base, naked and smoothish above ; leaves thick, entire, rugose, hir- 

 sute, the 4 radical ones large, roundish or rhombic ; spreading ; the lower ones 

 obovate, opposite ; the uppermost small, linear; scales of the involucre oblong- 

 ovate ; rays mostly wanting ; chaff of the receptacle acuminate. — Low sandy 

 pine barrens, Georgia, Florida, and Alabama. Oct. — Stem 2° high. Heads 

 rather large. 



♦- -»- Rays conspicuous. 



4. H. angUStifolius, L. Stem rough-hairy or smoothish, paniculately 

 branched ; leaves linear, elongated, entire, with the margins rcvolutc ; the lowest 

 ones opposite ; scales of the involucre lanceolate, acuminate ; chaff of the recep- 

 tacle 3-toothed ; rays 12- 18, showy. — Varies, with broader leaves, and the disk 

 at first yellow. — Low ground, Florida to Mississippi, and northward, common. 

 Oct. — Stem 2° - 6° high. Leaves 3' - 6' long. 



5. H. heterophyllus, Nutt. Hirsute or hispid ; stem slender, mostly 

 simple, naked above ; leaves opposite, thick, entire ; the lower ones lanceolate or 

 oblong, tapering into a petiole ; the others linear, remote ; scales of the invo- 

 lucre lanceolate, acuminate, ciliate ; chaff of the receptacle 3-toothed, the middle 

 tooth cuspidate; rays 15-20, elongated. — Pine-barren swamps, Florida to 

 North Carolina, and westward. Sept. and Oct. — Stem 2° - 4° high. Lowest 

 leaves 2' - 6' long. Rays 1 h' long. 



6. H. atrorubens, L. Hirsute or hispid; stem sparingly branched and 

 somewhat naked above ; leaves opposite, oval, serrate, the lowest large and long- 



I : the upper sm. ill. >e>sile, distant ; scales of the involucre oval or oblong, 

 obtuse ; -chaff of the receptacle acute; rays about 12; achenia pubescent at the 

 i II. sparsifolius, Ell ) — Dry soil, Florida to North Carolina. Sept and 

 Oct. — Stem 2° -5° high. Lowest leaves 4' - G' long. Heads rather small. 



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