Amphicarpum GRAMINEAE Eulalia 



Amphicarpum Kunth 

 A. Purshii Kunth. 



Locally abundant in open, sandy soil, Sussex County and 

 southward. Late Aug., Sept. 



Andropogoneae 



Miscanthus Anderss, 



M. sinensis Anderss. Eulalia. 



Escaped from cultivation, and well established in fields and on 

 roadsides in New Castle and Cecil Counties. July to Oct. 



Erianthus Mx. Plume Grass. 



See Fernald: Rhodora 45, 246-255. 1943. 



E. contortus Ell. 



Infrequent, in sandy meadows and pinelands, Sussex County 

 and southward. Aug. to Oct. 



E. coarctatus Fern. {E. hrevibarhis Mx.) 



Infrequent; roadsides and ditches, Kent County, Del., and 

 southward. Sept., Oct. 



E. saccharoides Mx. {E. giganteus (Walt.) Hubbard.) 



This southern grass has been collected in Dorchester County, 

 11 mi. s. w. of Cambridge, Earle, 1636, 5 Sept. 1937 (P). 



Var. compactus (Nash) Fern. (E. compactus Nash.) 



Common in ditches, low ground and maritime sands, Coastal 

 Plain. Aug., Sept. 



E. ravennae (L.) Beauv. Ravenna Grass. 



A rare escape from cultivation as an ornamental: sandy roadside 

 at edge of field near Chester River, about 2 miles above Crumpton 

 (QA), Samuel C. Palmer, 24 Oct. 1945 (A). Introd. from Europe. 



Eulalia Kunth. 

 E. viminea (Trin.) Kuntze var. variabilis Ktze. 



Locally abundant: wet meadow along Pike Creek, 1 mi. e. by s. 

 of Pleasant Hill (NC), R. R. Tatnall, 5053, 20 Oct. 1942 (T A, G, P), 

 and below this point on Pike Creek, 13^ mi. n. of Choate, etc. 

 Also abundant along White Clay Creek (NC), near the Pennsylvania 

 line. Introd. from tropical Asia. 



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