gramim:.k. (grass family.) 581 



flower fringed with closely appressed white h:iir^ ; Bpikeleta awnless ; glumes 

 hispid above ; sterile flower of 2 palcae, 3-androus. (Rottbccllia ciliata, Nult.) — 

 Low pine barrens, Florida and the lower districts of Georgia. Sept. — Spikes 

 3' - 6' long. 



2. A. oligostachyus. Culms rigid, erect ; leaves linear, smooth, glau- 

 cous ; spikes 3-4, on short mostly included peduncles, hoary with short spread- 

 ing hairs; lower glume pubescent, £-$ as long as the contorted awn ; sterile 

 flower neutral, short-awncd. — Dry Band-ridges, Middle Florida. Aug. and 

 Sept. — Culm 2° - 3° high. Spikes 2' - 3' long. 



3. A. tener, Kunth. Culms filiform, like the smooth soon involute leaves ; 

 spikes terete, with the joints bearded at the base, otherwise smooth ; spikelets ap- 

 pressed, half as long as the bent awn ; glumes rough above ; upper palea minute ; 

 pedicel of the awnless neutral flower braided at the apex. — Dry grassy pine 

 barrens, Georgia, Florida, and northward. Sept. — Culms 2°-3° long. Spikes 

 slender, 1 ' - 2' long. Upper leaves short, bearded at the throat. 



* * Peduncles clustered, each bearing a single spike. 



4. A. SCOparillS, Michx. Leaves smooth or rough-hairy ; spikes numer- 

 ous, on ex.serted peduncles, the slender flexuous rachis, and pedicel of the awned 

 or awnless staminate or neutral sterile flower fringed with spreading hairs ; per- 

 fect flower half as long as the awn, the glumes often roughened with elevated 

 points. — Dry sterile soil, Florida, and northward. Aug. and Sept. — Culms 

 2° - 3° high. Spikes 1' - 2' long. 



* * * Peduncles or branches mostly clustwed, bearing 2-4 rigid (green) digitate 



spikes : rachis and pedicel of the triandrous awnless sterile flower fringed with 



scattered hairs, and short-bearded at the base. 

 ~f- 5. A. furcatus, Muhl. Culm stout, rigid, 3° - 5° high ; leaves rough, 

 fringed at the base ; peduncles or branches commonly several at each upper 

 joint; spikelets appressed; glumes hispid on the nerves, half as long as the bent 

 awn. — Open woods and margins of fields, Florida, and northward. Sept. — 

 Spikes compressed, 2' -3' long. 



# * # * Peduncles or branches 1 -several from each upper joint, often included in the 



dilated sheaths : spikelets slender, hoary with long silky spreading hairs : sterile 

 flower reduced to an awn-like glume at the apex of the very slender pedicel, or 

 obsolete: stamen 1. 



6. A. tetrastachyus, Ell. Culms 3° - 4° high ; leaves and sheaths very 

 hairy ; branches short, the lower ones by pairs, the upper single ; spikes 4 ; 

 glumes bristly-serrulate, one fourth as long as the straight awn ; pedicel of the 

 awn-like sterile flower barely exceeding the fertile flower. — Var. distachyus. 

 Leaves and sheaths less haiiy or smoothish ; spikes by pairs, more rigid, on 

 long-exserted branches ; pedicel of the sterile flower much longer than the 

 smoother glumes. — Low pine barrens, Florida to North Carolina. Sept. 



7. A. Elliottii. Culms 1°- 2° high, bearded at the upper joints ; leaves 

 purplish, narrow, hairy at the base ; sheaths hairy, the upper ones inflated and 

 often crowded or imbricated ; branches single or by pairs ; spikes by pairs (rarely 



49* 



