553 
SALICACEA. 
Salix fluviatilis Nutt. Sylva, i, 73 (1842); S. longifolia Muhl. Neue Schrift Gesell. 
Naturf. Freunde Berlin, iv, 238 (1803), not Lam. The author states: ‘‘ This species 
lines the immediate border of the Oregon a little below its confluence with the 
Wahlamet.” 
Syracuse, Hamilton County (No. 113), Abundant in lowland along the Arkansas 
River. 
IRIDACEZ. 
Sisyrinchium bermudiana L. Sp. P1). ii, 954 (1753). Type collected “in Virginia.” 
Syracuse, Hamilton County (No. 118). Abundant in meadow land; Collier’s ranch. 
LILIACEH. 
Yucca glauca Nutt. Fraser’s Cat. 119, No. 89. The type was “collected 1,600 
miles up the Missouri, about lat. 49°.” 
Hamilton County, 14 miles south of Syracnse (No. 75). Abundant throughout 
southwestern Kansas, especially on the sand hills. 
COMMELINACES. 
Commelina virginica L. Sp. Pl. ed. 2,i,61 (1762). Type collected ‘‘in Virginia.” 
Syracuse, Hamilton County (No. 91). Common; north slope of sand hills. 
CYPERACES. 
Cyperus schweinitzii Torr. Ann. Lyc. N.Y. ili, 276 (1836) 5 C. alternifolius Schwein. 
in Keating, Nar. Long’s 2d Exp. ii, 881 (1824), not R. Br. Type locality not given in 
the above, which is ‘a Catalogue of Plants collected in the Northwestern Territory 
by Mr. Thomas Say in the year 1823,” Localities given by Torrey: “ Dry sand in the 
shore of Lake Ontario, near Grace, Monroe County, New York, Dr, Samuel B, Bradley '5 
on the Arkansas River, Nuttall!; on the river St. Peter?, Mr. Say!.” 
Ulysses, Grant County (No. 8). On uplands; scarce. 
Scirpus americanus Pers. Syn. i, 68 (1805); Scirpus triqueter Mx. FI. i, 30 (1803), 
not L. Type collected “in Carolina inferiore.” 
Ulysses, Grant County (No, 35). Abundant in marshy places. 
Scirpus lacustris L. Sp. Pl. i, 48. Type distribution, ‘(In Europe aquis puris 
stagnantibus & fluviatilibus.” 
Syracuse, Hamilton County (No. 117). Abundant in swampy land; Collier’s ranch. 
POACES. 
Andropogon hallii Hack. Sitz. Akad, Wiss. Wien. Ixxxix, 127 (1884). 
Moonlight, Stevens County (No, 182); Ulysses, Grant County (No. 13). Rare; in 
spots on high uplands, forming small patches a few feet in diameter. 
Andropogon nutans avenaceus (Mx.) Hack. in DC. Monog. Phan. vi, 530 (1889) ; 
Andropogon avenaceum Mx. Fl. Bor. Amer. i, 58 (1803). Type distribution, ‘In 
vastissimus pratis I]linoensibus.” 
Moonlight, Stevens County (No. 181). Common in the Cimarron Valley. 
Andropogon saccharoides glaucus (Torr. ) Scribn. Mem. Torr. Club, v, 28 (1894) ; 
A, glaucus Torr. Anu. Lye. N.Y. i, 153 (1824). Type collected ‘‘on the Canadian 
River.” 
Ulysses, Grant County (No. 54). Valley lands, rare. 
Panicum capillare L. Sp. Pl. i, 58 (1753). Type locality, ‘Virginia, Jamaica.” 
Ulysses, Grant County (No. 56); Syracuse, Hamilton County (No. 134). Rare; in 
the valleys. 
