GENUS 15. 



GRASS FAMILY. 



'3* 



14. Paspalum circulate Nash. Round- 

 flowered Paspalum. Fig. 301. 



Paspalum circulare Nash, in Britton. Man. 73. 1901. 



A tufted perennial with flat leaf-blades, and 

 orbicular glabrous spikelets. Culms ii-3i tall; 

 leaf-sheaths tuberculate-hirsute with spreading or 

 ascending hairs, compressed; blades erect, more 

 or less hirsute on both surfaces, i long or less, 

 2i"-4" wide ; racemes 2-4, erect or ascending, 

 2$'-4' long, the rachis about 2" wide; spikelets 

 singly disposed, about i*" in diameter, their thick- 

 ness about one quarter their diameter, the outer 

 2 scales thin and usually wrinkled when dry, 5- 

 nerved, the lateral nerves near the margin and 

 approximate, quite distinct. 



In fields, New York to Missouri, south to North 

 Carolina and Texas. July-Sept. 



15. Paspalum laeviglume Scribn. Smooth- 

 scaled Paspalum. Fig. 302. 



Paspalum remotum glabmm Vasey, Bull. Torrey 



Club 13: 166. 1886. Not P. glabrum Poir. 1804. 

 Paspalum pubiflorum glabrum Vasey ; Scribn. Bull. 



Tenn. Exp. Sta. 7 : 32. 1894. 

 Paspalum laeviglume Scribn. ; Nash, in Small, Fl. 



SE. U. S. 75- 1903- 



A stout glabrous perennial, usually rooting at 

 the lower nodes, with flat leaf-blades, and gla- 

 brous spikelets. Culms ii-4* tall, the nodes 

 pubescent; leaf-sheaths glabrous, excepting the 

 hirsute margins ; blades 4'-i6' long, 5"-io" wide, 

 linear, glabrous on both surfaces ; racemes 4-8, 

 spreading or ascending, the lower ones commonly 

 2'-4' long; spikelets in pairs, ii"-ii" long, about 

 i" broad, oval to broadly obovate, the first scale 

 3-5-nerved, the second s-7-nerved. 



In moist places, Maryland and Kentucky to North 

 Carolina and Texas. June-Oct. 



1 6. Paspalum Boscianum Fluegge. Bosc's 

 Paspalum. Fig. 303. 



Paspalum virgatum Walt. Fl. Car. 75. 1788. Not L. 



1753- 

 Paspalus Boscianus Fluegge, Gram. Monog. 170. 



1810. 

 Paspalum purpurascens Ell. Bot. S. C. & Ga. i : 108. 



1817. 



A rather stout glabrous perennial with com- 

 pressed culms, which often root at the lower 

 nodes, flat leaf-blades, and glabrous spikelets. 

 Culm ii-4 tall; leaf-sheaths compressed, gla- 

 brous, or the basal ones hirsute; blades of medium 

 texture, hirsute above near the base, linear, i 

 long or less, il"-s" wide ; racemes 2-13, spread- 

 ing or ascending, 1^-4' long, the straight rachis 

 \"-\\" wide; spikelets in pairs, i"-ij" long, f"- 

 i" wide, broadly obovate, the first scale 5-nerved, 

 the second 3-nerved. 



In meadows and moist places, Virginia and Ten- 

 nessee to Florida, west to Texas. Aug. and Sept. 



