12 FLORA OF VERMONT 



C. GLAUCA, Scribn. Yellow Foxtail. Fields ; common. 

 C. VERTiciLLATA, Scribii. Old garden, Burlington, Jones. 

 C. viRiDis, Scribn. Green Foxtail. Fields and waste places ; common. 



CINNA 

 C. arundinacea, L. Moist woods ; frequent. 



C. pendula, Trin. (C. latifolia, Griseb.) Moist woods, especially on moun- 



tain sides ; frequent. 



DACTYLIS 



D. GLOMER.\TA, L. Orchard Grass. Common, preferring partial shade. 



DANTHONIA 

 D. compressa. Aust. Dry banks and woods; occasional. 

 D. spicata, Beauv. Dry sterile soil ; common. 



DESCHAMPSIA 



D. atropurpurea, Scheele. A single specimen collected on Mt. Mansfield 

 by Joseph Torrey, probably before 1853, is in the University of Vermont 

 herbarium. Later botanists have failed to rediscover it. 



D. caespitosa, Beauv. Rocky banks and shores ; frequent. 



D. flexuGsa^ Trin. Dry soil, ascending to highest mountain tops ; common. 



EATONIA 



E. Dudleyi, Vasey. (E. nitida, Nash.) Colchester, Torrey. 



E. Pennsylvanica, (jiray. Moist rocky woods and marshes ; freciuent. 



ELYMUS 



E. Canadensis, L. Low thickets and river banks ; common. 



E. Canadensis, L. var. glaucifolius, Gray. Dry banks ; occasional. 



E. robu&tus, Scribn. and Sm. Burlington, Jones. 



E. striatus, Willd. Middlebury, James, Brainerd; ledges of Winooski River, 

 Pringle. 



E. Virginicus, L. Moist thickets of river banks ; frequent. 



ERAGROSTIS 



E. M.\.JOR, Host. Burlington. Woodstock, Jones; Pownal, , Bennington, 

 Eggleston; railroad >ard, Middlebury, £romerd. 



E. pectinacea, Steud. Dry sandy soil ; frequent in tlie lower Connecticut 



valley. 



