Milium. CLXI. GRAMINE^. 603 



very remote joints ; Ivs. lance-linear, 3 — 7' by 2 — 3", ciliate and hairy ; sheaths 

 pubescent, upper one very long ; spike generally solitary, often 2, on a long, 

 very slender peduncle, sometimes with another scarcely exserted from the sheaths ; 

 spikelets plano-convex, with the flat side out, |" diam., about 2 on each very 

 short pedicel, appearing 2 — 3-rowed in the 1-sided spike. — Dry fields, Mass. ! to 

 Car. W. to Ky. Aug. 



2. P. L5;vE (and precox. Michx.) 



St. erect, rather firm, 18' — 3f high, glabrous ; Ivs. generally smooth, pilose 

 only at the base, broadly linear ; lower 5/ica;As sometimes hairy; spikes 2 — 6, 

 alternate, spreading, with a few long, white hairs at the base ; spikelets in 2 

 rows; rachis flexuous, flat on the back; pedicels undivided, with one spikelet; 

 spikelets twice as large (1^" diam.) as in the preceding; glumes orbicular-ovate, 

 1-veined. — Grassy banks of rivers, Penn. to Ky. and Ga. Aug. 



3. P. STOLONIFERUM. BOSC. 



St. about 2f long, procumbent at base, geniculate, stoloniferous and 

 branched ; Ivs. short, subcordate ; spikes very numerous (30 — 50), subverticillate, 

 spreading, in elongated, terminal and lateral racemes; common rachis 4 — 5' 

 long, angular, smooth, partial ones 3 — 15" long; spikelets ovate, alternate. — Ce- 

 dar swamps, N. J., Pursh. July, Aug. 



18. DIGIT ARIA. Haller. 

 Lat. digitus, a finger; alluding to the digitate form of the inflorescence. 



Inflorescence digitate or fasciculate ; spikes linear, unilateral ; 

 spikelets in pairs, on short, bifid pedicels, 2-flowered ; glumes 2, the 

 lower very small, sometimes wanting ; lower flower abortive, with a 

 single, membranaceous palea ; upper flower 5 , with 2 cartilaginous, 

 subequal palece ; caryopsis striate. 



1. D. SANG0INALIS. Scop. (Panicum sanguinale. Linn.) Purple Finger 

 Grass. Crab Grass. — Sts. decumbent at base, radiating and branching at 



the lower joints, ] — 2f long; Ivs. linear-lanceolate, on long, loose sheaths, softly 

 pilose, the sheaths strigosely hairy ; spikes 3 — 5' long, fasciculate at the top of 

 the stem, 5 — 9 together ; spikelets in pairs, oblong-lanceolate, closely appressed 

 to the flexuous rachis, in 2 rows. — ® Common in cultivated grounds, N. Eng., 

 W. Ind.! Aug.— Oct. 



2. D. GLABRA. Roem. & Schultz. (Panicum. Jand!) 



St. generally decumbent, rarely rooting at the joints, a foot long ; Ivs. short, 

 flat, nearly glabrous; spikes digitate, spreading, 3 — 4; spikelets crowded, ovoid; 

 ghmie equaling the abortive flower, both hairy. — (T) Sandy fields, N. Y., Penn. 

 to Ohio ! Spikes rather more slender than in the foregoing. 



3. D. SEROTINA. Michx. (D. villosa. Ell.) 



Rl. creeping; st. decumbent, 12 — 18' long, terete, hairy at the joints, form- 

 ing a dense carpet where it grows ; Ivs. linear-lanceolate, thin, and with the 

 sheaths, very pubescent with long hairs; .•jp/fes numerous, setaceous, 2 — 3' long; 

 spikelets all pedicellate ; lower glume very minute, the margin ciliate. — (I) N. Y. 



4. D. FiLU'ORMis. Ell. (Panicum. Willd.) 



St. erect, filiform, simple, 12 — 18' high ; Ivs. short, nearly smooth, narrow- 

 lanceolate ; lower sheaths very hairy, upper glabrous ; spikes 2—4, filiform, erect ; 

 racAis flexuous ; spikelets in 3s, all pedicellate; glume soXiiaxy, as long as the 

 abortive flower.—® Dry, gravely soils, N. Y. to Ky. Aug. 



19. MILIUM. 



Celtic mil, a pebble ; alluding to its hard, turgid &uit. 



Inflorescence paniculate ; spikelets 1 -flowered ; glumes 2, without 

 involucre or awns ; paleje 2, shorter than the glumes, awnless, ob- 

 long, concave, persistent and cartilaginous, coating the caryopsis. 

 1. M. EFFUSUM. Spreadijig Millet Grass. 



St. erect, simple, smooth, 5^f high, bearing a compound, diffuse panicle ; 

 Ivs flat, 8—12' by J — 1', on smooth, striate sheaths; branches of the panicle clus- 

 51* 



