WOOTON AND STANDLEY—FLORA OF NEW MEXICO. 97 
Y »%. Bromus racemosus L. Sp. Pl. ed. 2. 114, 1762. 
Type Locauity: ‘‘Habitat in Anglia.”’ 
RanGeE: Native of Europe, adventive in many places in the United States. 
New Mexico: Albuquerque; Mesilla Valley. 
6. Bromus secalinus L. Sp. Pl. 76. 1753. CHEAT. 
. Type Locauity: ‘‘Habitat in Europae agris secalinis arenosis.’’ 
Rance: Native of Europe, a common weed in many parts of North America, espe- 
cially in grain fields. 
New Mexico: Mangas Springs. 
7. Bromus inermis Leyss. Fl. Hal. 16. 1761. HUNGARIAN BROME GRASS. 
Type Locaity: ‘‘Habitat in pratis succulentis fertilissimis im Fiirstengarten in 
den Pulverweiden frequens.”’ 
Rance: Native of Europe, locally established in the United States. 
New Mexico: Farmington; Mesilla Valley. 
8. Bromus richardsoni Link, Hort. Berol. 2: 281. 1833. 
Bromus ciliatus scariosus Scribn. U. 8. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Bull. 18: 46. 1898. 
Type Locauity: Described from plants grown from seed sent from western North 
America. 
Rance: British America to Arizona and New Mexico. ; ; 
New Mexico: Sandia Mountains; Rio Pueblo; Trout Spring; Beulah; Tunitcha 
Mountains; Hillsboro Peak; Organ Mountains; Cloudcroft; White Mountains. Thick- 
ets in the mountains, in the Transition and Canadian zones. 
9. Bromus lanatipes (Shear) Rydb. Colo. Agr. Exp. Sta. Bull. 100: 52. 1906. 
Bromus portert lanatipes Shear, U. 8. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Bull. 23: 37. 1900. 
Type Loca.iry: Idaho Springs, Colorado. 
RanGeE: Colorado and New Mexico to California. 
New Mexico: Carrizo Mountains; Sandia Mountains; Glorieta; Johnsons Mesa; 
Santa Fe; Water Canyon; East Fork of the Gila; Organ Mountains; Gray; White 
Mountains. Damp thickets, in the Transition Zone. 
10. Bromus porteri (Coulter) Nash, Bull. Torrey Club 22: 512. 1895. 
Bromus kalmit porteri Coulter, Man. Rocky Mount. 425. 1885. 
Tyre LocaLiry: Twin Lakes, Colorado. 
RanGe: Montana and South Dakota to Arizona and New Mexico. 
New Mexico: Dulce; Chama; Albuquerque; Glorieta; Raton Mountains; Pescado 
Spring; Ramah; Johnsons Mesa; Mogollon Creek; Fort Bayard; Organ Mountains; 
Tularosa Creek; Gilmores Ranch. Damp thickets, in the Transition Zone. 
11. Bromus frondosus (Shear) Woot. & Standl. N. Mex. Agr. Exp. Sta. Bull. 81: 
144, 1912. 
Bromus porteri frondosus Shear, U. 8. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Bull. 23: 37. f. 20. 
1900. 
TypE Locality: Mangas Springs, New Mexico. Type collected by J. G. Smith. 
Rance: New Mexico and Arizona, 
New Mexico: Raton; Ponchuelo Creek; Santa Fe Canyon; Mangas Springs; Mogo- 
llon Creek; Organ Mountains; San Luis Mountains. Damp canyons, in the Upper 
Sonoran and Transition zones. 
64. DACTYLIS L. OrcHarp GRAss. 
Perennial with flat leaves and narrow glomerate panicles; spikelets 3 to 5-flowered, 
nearly sessile in dense fascicles; rachilla jointed above the glumes and between the 
florets; glumes unequal, 1 to 3-nerved, sharply keeled, acute; lemmas 5-nerved, 
shortly awn-pointed, strongly compressed and keeled, ciliate on the keel; palea a little 
52576°—15——-7 
