HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. . 221 
Rug. 187;” the other is Wright 748 from eastern Cuba. The type collected by March 
in Jamaica is also here. Another specimen (Wright, western Cuba in 1863) is marked 
by Grisebach as f stenostachyum. These last two specimens appear to be the ordinary 
form of P. divaricatum. The pubescent form can scarcely be separated even as a 
variety. 
Hamilton’s species is based on ‘‘P. bambusoides Herb. Prof. Desv. Porto Rico.’’ A 
specimen so marked in the Desvaux Herbarium in the Museum at Paris is P. divari- 
catum. The type of P. chawvinii Steud. is also in the Museum at Paris. 
13. Panicum erectifolium Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 28: 148. 1896. 
Panicum sphaerocarpon floridanum Vasey, U.S. Dept. Agr. Div. Bot. Bull. 8: 33. 
1889, not P. floridanum Trin. 1835. 
Wright 3462. 
The specimen in the Grisebach Herbarium is from western Cuba, 1862, and is 
numbered ‘‘896=3462.”? The specimen in the Gray Herbarium is labeled ‘‘ Lagunas, 
Vueltabajo, July 24.” 
14. Panicum exiguiflorum Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 234. 1866. 
Panicum minutiflorum Rich. in Sagra, Hist. Cub. 11: 305. 1853, not Rasp. 1825. 
Panicum tricolor Hack. Oesterr. Bot. Zeitschr. 51: 370. 1901. 
Wright 755, 3450, 3877 in part, 756 in Gray Herbarium; Pinar del Rio, Earle & 
Wilson HC 1550; Herradura, Tracy 9075, Hitchcock in 1906; La Magdalena Baker 1; 
Isle of Pines, Taylor 35. The following are in the Herbarium of the New York 
Botanical Garden: Isle of Pines, Taylor 35, Curtiss in 1904; Madruga, Shafer 452. 
Wright’s 3450 in the National Herbarium is labeled ‘‘ Low savannas, Chirigote, Oct. 
26;”’ the same number in the Gray Ierbarium, *‘ Pinales, Almacigos, July 26.”’ The 
type in the Grisebach Herbarium is labeled *‘In bushy savannas, Hanabana, May 
16,’’ 1865. The type of Richard’s species is at Paris. Grisebach has two other speci- 
mens of this, one from western Cuba, 1863, numbered **909=3450,’’ which is the type 
of his P. larum variety variegatum,” and the other, also from western Cuba, numbered 
89—3450."? Wright’s 755, ‘‘ Pinales, San Juan de Buena Vista, Nov. 21, 1860-64,” and 
no. 756, from eastern Cuba in 1856-57, both in the Gray Herbarium, are P. exiguiflorum. 
The type of Panicum tricolor, Eggers 3978, from Fortune Island, Bahamas, was exam- 
ined at Hackel’s herbarium. 
15. Panicum fasciculatum Sw. Prod. 22. 1788. 
Panicum fuscum Sw. Prod. 23. 1788. 
Panicum flavescens Sw. Prod. 23. 1788. 
Panicum illinoniense Desv. Opusc. 91. 1831. 
Santiago de las Vegas, Van Hermann HC 2445, Baker HC 2678, 5110, Wilson 593; 
La Magdalena, Baker HC 3636; Herradura, T'racy 9091; Cienfuegos, Pringle 74, 124, 
Combs 252 in Gray Herbarium; Ruge! 881 in Gray Herbarium; Habana, Leon 573. 
In the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden are the following: Santiago 
de Cuba, Taylor 28; Baracoa, Underwood d& Earle 839; Santiago de las Vegas, Van 
Hermann 2698b. 
This appears to be a recent introduction into Cuba, where it occurs as a weed. 
The type specimens of Swartz’s three species differ only as to size of panicle. 
The specimen in the Grisebach Herbarium is from eastern Cuba in 1859 and is 
numbered 754. Wright's 754 in Gray Herbarium is from ‘‘ Roadsides near Saltadero, 
Aug. 4,’’ Monte Verde, 1859. 
The published source of P. i//inoniense Desv. is ‘‘America boreali.’’ The speci- 
men in Desvaux’s herbarium in the Museum at Paris, marked with this name in 
Desvaux’s handwriting, is P. fasciculatum Sw. The sheet is also marked ‘‘ hab. 
, 
a Cat. Pl. Cub. 233. 1866, 
