. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions, from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia, and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102d meridian. Botany; Botany. 45° COMPOSITAE. Vol. Antennaria canadensis Greene, dian Cat's-foot. Fig. 4395- Cana- Antennaria canadensis Greene, Pittonia 3 : 275. 1898. Stems 8-12' high, slender. Basal leaves and those of the ends of stolons spatulate to oblan- ceolate, obtuse or apiculate, l'-li' long, 6" wide or less, gradually tapering from above the middle to a long narrow ba


. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions, from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia, and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102d meridian. Botany; Botany. 45° COMPOSITAE. Vol. Antennaria canadensis Greene, dian Cat's-foot. Fig. 4395- Cana- Antennaria canadensis Greene, Pittonia 3 : 275. 1898. Stems 8-12' high, slender. Basal leaves and those of the ends of stolons spatulate to oblan- ceolate, obtuse or apiculate, l'-li' long, 6" wide or less, gradually tapering from above the middle to a long narrow base, i-nerved or with two faint lateral nerves, bright green and glabrous above, lanate beneath; stolons short, leafy, assurgent; stem-leaves linear-lanceolate, distant, about I' wide; inflorescence capitate to racemose-corym- bose; fertile involucre about -4!" high, its outer bracts oblong, obtuse, the inner lanceolate, acute to attenuate; bracts of the staminate involucre white-tipped. In dry soil, Newfoundland to Connecticut, Mani- toba and Michigan. May-July. The Old World Antennaria dioica (L.) Gaertn., with stem leaves close together and rose-colored in- volucral bracts, is recorded as long ago found at Providence, R. I. 4. Antennaria Parlinii Fernald. Parlin's Cat's-foot. Fig. 4396. Antennaria Parlinii Fernald, Gard. & For. 10: 284. 1897. A. amoglossa Greene, Pittonia 3: 318. 1898. A. Parlinii amoglossa Fernald, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist. 28: 243. 1898. A. propinqua Greene, Pittonia 4: 83. 1899. More or less glandular-pubescent; stems of fertile plant i°-il° tall. Leaves bright green and devoid of tomentum on the upper surface from the time of unfolding, or very slightly floc- cose when very young, the basal ones obovate or spatulate to elliptic, obtuse or acutish, gradually contracted into a narrow base about as long as the expanded part, 2'-3i' long, i'-ij' wide; stem- leaves lanceolate or the lower narrowly oblong; heads corymbose; involucre 34"—5&q


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbotany, bookyear1913