THE GRASSES OF LINNJEUS'S HERBARIUM. 89 
P. brizoides, Mant. 184, is P. colonum. See above. 
P. conglomeratum, Mant. 324, is, I suppose, the same as P. Indicum ; 
there is, however, no specimen so marked. 
P. distachyon, L.! Mant. 183. Closely allied to P. Petiverii, Trin., 
with only two spikes. 
P. ramosum, L.! Mant. 29, from the Upsal Garden. A common spe- 
cies in India, closely allied to P. grossarium. 
P. coloratum, L. ! Mant. 30, from Upsal Garden. This approaches 
P. virgatum very closely, and is unlike any uncultivated plant I 
have seen. Smith quotes Jacquin, Icon. Rar. i. t. 12. 
P. curvatum, L.! Syst. Nat. xii. /32, is a loosely flowered state of 
what is usually called P. interruptum, Wild. The specimen is 
marked by Smith as ** Holcus striatus.” 
P. Indicum, L.! Herb. Linn., Mant. 184, from Koenig. This is also 
marked Panicum Johanne. A very small simple state. 
P. incurvum, Linn. Herb., is a hairy-glumed state of the preceding, 
also marked by Smith as Holcus striatus. 
P. musciparum, Linn. Herb., which I cannot find described anywhere, 
is P. miliare, Lam. 
P. oryzoides, Herb. Linn., marked “ Ard. Spec. 2, t. 5," is Echinochloa 
stagnina, P. de B. 
No. 516, placed in Panicum, is Sporobolus Indicus, R. Br.; and 
No. 513, also so placed, is Eragrostis brizoides, N. ab E. 
PnurEvM, Sp. Pl. 1st edit. p. 59. 
1. P. pratense, L. ! 
- P. alpinum, L.! 
IN 
P. arenarium, L. ! 
P. schænoides is Crypsis schænoides, Lam. 
P. nodosum, Sp. Pl. 2nd edit. p. 88, is only a form of P. pratense. 
P Ie 
ALOPECURUS, l. c. p. 60. 
1. A. pratensis, L. ! 
A. geniculatus, L. ! 
A. hordeiformis is Gymnothrix cenchroides, R. et Sch. 
PRO [M | 
A. Monspeliensis is Polypogon Monspeliensis, Desf. 
A, agrestis, L.! 2nd edit. p. 89. 
A. paniceus, 2nd edit. p. 90, is called Cynosurus paniceus in lst edit., 
and is Polypogon maritimus, Willd. 
