490 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. 



Europe. June-Aug. On alpine summits becoming more rigid and 

 browner than in sheltered situations. 



++ -H- Perigynia 4 to 5.5 mm. long, distinctly less than half as broad. 



= Leaves very narrow (1 to 2.5 mm. broad) : spikelets lanceolate : perigynia 



1 to 1.3 mm. wide. 



33. C. bromoides, Schkuhr. — Figs. 125, 126. — Very slender and 

 lax, green, scarcely glaucous, the culms 3 to 8 dm. long, mostly exceed- 

 ing the soft flat leaves : spike loosely subcylindric, 2 to 5.5 cm. long, of 

 2 to 6 approximate or slightly scattered spiikelets 0.5 to 2 cm. long : beak 

 of the perigynium one-half to two-thirds as long as the strongly nerved 

 body, slightly exceeding the oblong pointed scale. — Riedgr. Nachtrag. 

 8, t. Xxx, fig. 17G; Willd. Sp. iv. 258; Schwein. & Torr. Ann. Lye. 

 N. Y. i. 300 ; Torr. 1. c. 391 ; Carey in Gray, Man. 539 ; Chapm. PL 

 533; Boott, 1. c. ii. 82, t. 227; Bailey, Proc. Am. Acad. xxii. 146; 

 Macoun, 1. c. 114 ; Britton, 1. c. 354, fig. 857 ; Howe, I. c. 47. — Rich 

 low woods and swamps, Nova Scotia, southern New Brunswick and 

 central Maine to western Ontario and Michigan, south to Florida 

 and Louisiana. 1 May-July. 



= = Leaves broader (2 to 5 mm. broad) : spikelets ovoid : perigynia 1.6 to 



1.9 mm. wide. 



34. C. Dewetana, Schweinitz. — Figs. 127, 128. — Very lax, glau- 

 cous, the culms 2 to 12 dm. long, much exceeding the soft, flat leaves : 

 spike jlexuous, 2 to 6 cm. long, of '2 to 5 (in very luxuriant individuals 

 rarely G or 7) 3- to 12-flowered spikelets 5 to 12 mm. long, the upper sub- 

 approximate or scattered, the lowest very remote, usually subtended by an 

 elongate slender bract : beak about one-half as long as the obscurely nerved 

 or nerveless body of the perigynium, somewhat exceeding the ovate acumi- 

 nate or short-cuspidate pale scale. — Ann. Lye. N. Y. i. 65 ; Dewey, Am. 

 Jour. Sci. ix. 62, t. 3, fig. 11 ; Schwein. & Torr. 1. c. 310; Torr. 1. c. 

 392 ; Carey, 1. c. 544 ; Boott, 1. c. i. 27, t. 70 ; W. Boott in Wats. Bot. 

 Calif, ii. 236 ; Bailey in Coulter, Man. Rocky Mt. Reg. 394, & Proc. 

 Am. Acad. xxii. 146; Macoun, 1. c. 124; Britton, 1. c. fig. 856; Howe, 

 1. c. 36. C. remota, Richards, in Frankl. 1st Journ. ed. 2, App. 35, ace. 

 to Boott, not L. — Rich open woods and banks, Nova Scotia and 



1 Californian and other northwestern specimens referred here seem much better 

 placed with the 6touter broader-leaved C. Bolanderi, Olney. 



