Tnticum.] ci.xxni. gramine^. (J. D. Hooker.) 367 



. Sect. I, Tbiticum, proper. Ohmes keeled. 



, ,!'• lE.^'^f ^E' VUl. Hist. PI. Dauph. ii. 153; Host Gram. Amir. iii. 18. 

 TV n ^^*- "• 233i: Kunth Enum. PI. i. 438, Suppl. 360. t. 34; 

 ^^^MGeM. Fl. Germ. Monoc. i. t. 79; AitcUs. Gat. Panjab PI. 171. 



\'f}-''^'P^- ^^- -^'•- "i- 625 ; ia»». Encycl ii. 554; Z)i*//i?e (?rfl*8. N. W. 

 M 4a, 2^(,c?cZ. Qmss. N. Ind. 68. 



esw n'""*^'! '" "'""^ P^""*^^ °^ Northern India and the Deccav Peninsula, 

 •spwially in the N.VV., and up to 13,000 ft. in the Himalaya and Tibet. 



ladi i^ V ^^^ ^''^P® °^ *^''^ ^^'^^'^ ^'f* d'^tail the races of wheat cultivated in 

 CM, tor which I must refer to Murray's article in Watts' " Dictionary of the Economic 



ii.209 %n '^''''''.' *"<^ to Koernecke & Werner's "Haadb. der Getreide Arten," 

 nfTi, p , „ ™ believed to have been derived from T. monococcum, Linn., a native 



jffL r, ^".-.cu. v,u uiive ueeu ueriv* 



•IiJ ,f"^ ;■■<*'« Greece to Mesopotamia. Hackel, the latest botanical writer on the 

 ;^ts(iaEngler& Prant. Plaiizenfam. ii. 



Aft^r.'- '"''"°^,''/'''*'**' sativum, & polonicum, Linn, (the last is not cult, in India). 

 •h?,."?n*° ^^."™y «°'l others tL followin -- • 



80), regards all as nferable to three 



g races are cultivated in India as ehc- 



PlMi"^^***^'^"'"' ^'"''•^/'•-^^•SS; Roxh. FL Ind. i. 359; Grah. Cat. Bomb. 

 T.'cnmn , ^ ^'**- ^0"^^- ^^- Sup^l. 97. T. amyleum, Ser. Mel. Bot. i. 124. 



T-compactmn, Host Grains A 



M<. I. e. t. 28. 



Bomb'ri*^'^^",^''''*' '^^'O' '^^ cultivated in the Concan, a T. pilosum, Dalz. A Gihc. 



Jeennao • PP'" ^'^' <^''e " Bnckshee wheat" with tomentose spikelets. I have 

 " "° specimens of it. 



ect. H. ^Gicops. Glumes dorsal ly rounded, not keeled. 



eloniflt?^!?*'?*'' -Seawu. Agrost. 180; annual, leaves linear flat, spike 

 mJw, nfT"'^"'' ^^^g^le. spikelets oblong turgid 3-5-fld. half sunk in 

 fl-gls rafV. 1 '■^'^^^^' 8^- I and II similar oblong-quadrate many-nerved, 

 iwn ■ ap -f ^^°S^^ awnless or in the tipper spikelets with one strict erect 

 (1837nna^ i!i^ squ^rrosa, Linn. Sp. PL 1051; Tmseh. in Flora, xxxix. 

 O'.iv 19 ; "Jf^^ ^»«»^- -P^- i- 458, Suppl. 371; /awfe. ^ S'i)ac;5. HI. PJ. 

 ^OM iv\;«^i' '^'■^''«^- ^^^^^-^ "• ^- 27, f. 2; Caw. /c. t. 90; Ledeb. Jl. 

 ^lQaunil\ ^'^'''^- ^^- Orient, v. 676. M. cylindrica, G. A. Mey. Verz. 

 ^ ««^- ^6 {non Linn ). M. Tauschii, Coss. Notes Grit. 69. 



'*Spain"aJrv/'.'''"^'''"*«'" J Wazuristan, alt. 45C0 ft., Stewart.— Disx&lh. Westward 



Leaves acunnnato, 

 orale very short, 

 lose succession ; 



'' ^^^i'^\^''''TT > ^^P truncate o~fteu'creuulaterfl^- g^^- l^^'^^b^ lo"ger, truncate 



*»>vns ^-1^ ijj_ 



T ^ DOUBTFUL SPECIES. 



enus Manisuro proximus) 



4nn"5i^=^«=, ^0.7 



*o- cohLI r"' '^''^'^- ''* ^'^w'^- ^- '•• -i^^ (/sc-Zirt-mi SI'., Trin.). 



""*. Unn., Aitoh. Cat. Panjab. FL 560. 



4„ , 129. AGROPVBON 



*%-lld Lr*P'''^^^^*^ grasses. 2/eare« flat or convolute. bpikeletsS- 

 "^^koil^^'^V' '^««"e. distichously arranged opposite to hollows in the 



^ simple spike, with the sides of the glumes opposite the rachis ; 



