210 REPORT OF NEW IlCRSl- V STATIC MUSEUM. 



Middle District. — Kaighns Pt., National Park, So. Wcstville, 8 miles west 

 Micklelon. Centcrton (S), Bridgeton (S), Dividing Creek. 



Pine Barrens. — Williamstown Jnc, Winslow Jnc, Folsom, Woodbine (S), 

 DennJsville. 



Coast Strife. — .Avon (H&C), Pt. Pleasant. Manahawkin, Spray Beach (L) 

 Tuckerton (H&C). Palermo, Ocean City, Estclville, Mays Landing (S), 

 Anglcsea, Wildwood (H&C), Peermont (S), Manumuskin (S). 



Caf>e May. — Cold Spring, Court House, Cape May. 



Panicum cryptanthum Ashe. Sheathed Panic Grass. 



Panicum cryptanthum Ashe, N. C. Agr. Sta. Bull. 175, 115. 1900 [Wilson's 

 Mill, n". C.]. 



Known only from Twelfth St. (Folsom), Atlantic Co., near 

 where it crosses Hospitality Branch in the Pine Barrens. It was 

 collected here July 27, 1909, by Mr. Bayard Long, and thereby 

 its range was extended far northward. 



Plitchcock and Chase* have recorded this specimen as from 

 Atlantic City, a locality thirty miles to the east in a totally differ- 

 ent floral district. 

 Pine Barrens. — Twelfth St. Folsom. 



Panicum aculeatum Hitchcock & Chase. Chase's Panic Grass. 



Panicum aculeatum Hitchcock and Chase, Rhodora VHI. 209. 1906 [Tacoma 

 Park, D. C.]. 



Just as the work is passing through the press Mr. O. H. 

 Brown sends a Panicum from Cape May, which agrees in all 

 respects with this species, except that the spikelets are a little 

 smaller and the leaves shorter than a specimen from the District 

 of Columbia collected by Mr. House. If not identical it repre- 

 sents a form exceedingly close to P. aculeatum. Mr. Long has 

 apparently the same thing from Albion, September 7, 19 10. 



Panicum scabriusculum Ell. Elliot's Panic Grass. 

 Panicum scrabriusculum Elliot, Bot. S. C. and Ga. I. 121 T Savannah]. 



Confined to moist ground in the Pine Barrens. First dis- 

 covered in the State by Mr. Bayard Long on Hospitality Branch, 

 where it crosses Twelfth St. (Folsom), July 27, 1909. 



Not previously known from north of Virginia. 



Fl. — Early July to mid-August. 



* N. A. Panicum. Contrib. U. S. Nat. Herb. 15, p. 299. 



