TENNESSEE FLORA. 97 



EragTOstis reptaiis Nees. Wet, sandy soil on river banks. 

 September-October. 



E. pOtCoides Beauv. Cultivated ground. Common. August- 

 September. (Eragrostis Brovvnei Xees is indistinguishable from 

 poseoides, and occurs in. the cedar glades. Very common.) 



Var, iiiegastachya. Cultivated ground. With the former. 



E. Fraukii Meyer. Exceedingly copious in dry lands and 

 glades of Middle Tenn. July-August. 



E. pectinacea, var. refracta Chapm. Common in the cedar 

 glades. July-August. 



E. Pnrshii Schrad. Streets of Nashville. In dry and wet 

 soil. Exceedingly frequent. August-September. 



E. tenuis Gray. Harpeth Hills and highlands. July-August. 



E. oxylepis Torr. Vicinity of Memphis. Dr. G. Egeling. 



Andropogou daudestiims Hale {Androp. ElliottH Chap.). 

 Barrens at Tullahoma. October. 



A. dissitiflorus Michx. [A. Virginicus L.). Common. Sep- 

 tember-October. 



Var. vaginatus Chap. With the former. 



A. macrourus Michx. Sandy old fields. Over the State. 

 September-October. 



A. provincialis Lam. Edge of roads and fence rows. Com- 

 mon. August-October. 



A. scoparius Michx. Old fields. September-October. 



Var. multiramea Hack. Banks of Cumberland. Septem- 

 ber-October. 



Sorghum Halepense L. Naturalized in vicinity of Nashville. 

 August-September. 



Clirysopogon avenaceus Benth. Open barrens. Over the 

 State. July-September. 



Phalaris Canariensis L. Near dwellings. Introduced. Au- 

 gust-September. 



Ph. arundinacea L. The garden variety, Ph. arundinacea 

 picta, sometimes found escaped. 



Anthoxanthum odoratum L. In meadows, in East Tenn. 

 Naturalized. July. 



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