(.KAM1M..T.. (grass FAMILY.) 57') 



oblong-obovato acute spikelets near the summit ; glumes papillose-hispid, the 

 upper one 5-nerved, longer than the pointed granular-roughened perfect flower; 



the lower minute, obtuse. — Dry soil, Florida to South Caroliua. — Culms 1°- 

 2° long. Spikelete U"long. 



* * * Spikelets single, oh a spreading pedicel, disposed in open panicles : sterile Jloiver 

 consisting of two unequal palece, neutral (except No. 17): perennials: culms at 

 length much broached. 



17. P. latifolium, L. Culms smooth, erect; leaves ovate-lanceolate, 



mostly Miiooth, the sheaths, especially at the joints, villous; panicle nearly sim- 

 ple; spikelets large (2" long), obovate; glumes pubescent, obtuse, the upper 

 2-3 times longer than the lower one ; sterile flower 3-androus. — 1 )ry rich soil, 

 Florida, and northward. May. — Culms l°-l£° high. Leaves and panicles 

 3' -4' long, the latter exserted. 



18. P. clandestinum, L. Culms rigid (1° high), branched, naked at 

 the joints ; leaves lanceolate, acuminate, the sheaths papillose-hirsute ; panicles 

 small, lateral and terminal, more or less included in the sheaths ; spikelets ob- 

 long, pubescent (H" long) ; lower glume half the length of the 7-nerved upper 

 one. — Dry sterile soil, North Carolina, and northward. Sept. 1J. — Varies 

 with the sheaths smooth, or merely pubescent, and the terminal panicle some- 

 times exserted. 



I 19. P. SCOparium, L. Hairy or woolly all over, except the upper sur- 

 face of the somewhat rigid lanceolate leaves ; culms stout (1°- 1^° high), mostly 

 simple ; panicle terminal, exserted ; spikelets obovate (1^" long), obtuse, pubes- 

 cent ; upper glume 9-nerved, three times the length of the lower one ; sterile 

 flower neutral. — Open woods and margins of fields, in dry soil, Florida to 

 North Carolina. May. 



20. P. pauciflorum, Ell. "Panicle expanding, few-flowered; flowers 

 very large ; leaves narrow-lanceolate, ciliate at the base ; sheaths hairy." Ell. — 

 In close damp soils, Georgia, Elliott. May. — Culm 12' -18' high, roughish 

 and branching at the joints. Leaves 3' -4' long, 3" -4" wide, smooth above. 

 Spikelets oval, the lower glume very small. Resembles P. scoparium in fruit, 

 and P. villosum somewhat in habit. ( *) 



- 21. P. divaricatum, L. Shrubby, smooth; culms reclining, with short 

 and spreading branches ; leaves lanceolate, faintly nerved, deciduous from the 

 persistent sheaths ; panicles small, simple, few-flowered, terminating the branches ; 

 spikelets (2" long) obovate, tumid, nodding ; glumes smooth, many-nerved, and, 

 like the lower palea of the sterile flower, tipped with a tuft of down ; paleaa of 

 the sterile flower nearly equal. — South Florida, Dr. Blodgett. — Leaves \\' -2' 

 long. Branches of the panicle short and diverging. 



22. P. viscidum, Ell. Soft-hairy or downy all over, except a narrow ring 

 below each joint of the culm ; leaves lanceolate ; sheaths viscid ; panicle (4' - 6' 

 long) compound, diffuse; spikelets (1" long) ovate, pubescent; upper glume 

 9-nerved, many times longer than the minute lower one. — Varies with the 

 leaves, sheaths, and purple spikelets smooth. — Wet swamps and bogs, near the 



