15€ GEAMINEAE 



ligula 1-11/2 lin- longa; laminae planae vel couduplieatae, i/^-l lin. latae, 1-3 pol. 

 loiigae, eaulinae plerumque 2; panienla oblouga, coarctata, 1-2 pol. longa, ramis 

 brevibus, teuuibus, ascemleDtibus, paiicifloris ; spieulae eirca 3 lin. longae, 3-5 

 florae ; glumae iuaequales, latisculae, aeutae, carinis seabrae, prima l-nervia, IV2 

 lin. longa, altera 3-nervia, 2 lin. lata; lemmata 2V2 lin. longa, subacuta, basi 

 valde viUosa inter uervos scabra, carina nervisque marginalibus prope basin 

 breviter pilosis, uervis intermediis obseiiris; palea carinis ciliatis.) 



Type specimen, Biitlcr 120;"), Oro Fino, Siskiyon Co., in damp shady woods, 

 Apr. 21, 1910. The onlj' other sijeeimeus seen from California are Butler 1206 

 from Siskiyou Co., and Hatton 43 from Modoc National Forest. The species also 

 occurs in Idaho (Beaver Canon, Shear 297). The above description is drawn 

 from the type specimen in the National Herbarium. 



14. P. fendleriana Vasey. Tufted pereunial ; culms erect, smooth, scabrous 

 below panicle, 1 to 1% feet high; sheaths somewhat scabrous; ligule less than 

 y^ line long; blades mostly basal, involute or folded, scabrous, firm; panicle 

 long-exserted, narrow, contracted, \ to 3 inches long; glumes broad, 11/2 lines 

 long, the first 1-nerved; lemmas 2 lines long, long-pilose on the lower portion of 

 keel and marginal nerves, the intermediate nerves obscure. 



Mesas and hills, Great Basin from Washington to Wyoming, south to New 

 Mexico and southern California. Panamint, Hall & Chandler 7009; San Bernar- 

 dino 'Mis., Parish 3307. 



Eefs. — POA FENDLERIANA Vasey, U. S. Dept. Agr. Div. Bot. Bull. 13': pi. 74. 1893; Williams, 

 U. S. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Circ. 10: 5. 1899; Aliraiiis, Fl. Los Ang. 50. 1904. Eragrostis 

 fendleriana Steud. Syn. PI. Glum. 1: 278. 1854. Atropis cali f ornica Munro; Thurb. in Wats. 

 Bot. Cal. 2: 309. 1880. 



15. P. longiligula Seribn. & Williams. Tufted perennial, similar to P. fend- 

 leriana; culms smooth, 1 to 2 feet high; sheatlis and blades smooth; ligule 

 21/2 to 31/^ lines long, or on the innovations somewhat shorter; panicle looser 

 and often longer ; spikelets as in P. fendleriana. 



Caiions and banks of streams, Sa7i Bernardino Mts. and from Montana to New 

 Mexico. San Bernardino Mts., Parish 5043, 5045 ; Mt. Davidson, Bloomer 2269 ; 

 Graybaek Mt.. Peed 2768. 



Refs.— PDA L0NGILIGUL.\ Scribn. & Williams, U. S. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Circ. 9: 3. 1899; 

 Williams, U. S. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Circ. 10: 3. 1899. 



16. P. scabrella Benth. Tufted perennial; culms erect, 2 to 3 feet high, 

 usually scabrous, at least below panicle; sheaths scabrous; ligule rather long; 

 blades mostly basal, flat, narrow, usually about I/2 line wide, lax, more or less 

 scabrous; panicle narrow, usually contracted, sometimes rather open at base, 

 2 to 5 inches long; spikelets narrow. 3 to 5 lines long; glumes scabrous, 1^^ 

 lines long; lemmas 2 lines long, puberident or scabrous on back, and more or 

 less crisp-pubescent at base. 



A common species throughout the state in meadows, woods, rocks and hills, 

 and extending into Oregon, Nevada, Arizona and Mexico. As here limited the 

 species includes a number of rather diverse forms which with our present knowl- 

 edge can not be satisfactorily separated into distinct species. The following 

 are some of the numbered specimens referred to this species : Abrams 1162, 1475, 

 3105, Bolander 1547, 1550, Brewer 233, 1024, 1122, Davy 6650, Hall 1439, 1661, 

 2064, 2973, 2974, 30S9, 6360, 7811, Heller 5245, 5249, 7584, 8007, 8038, 8188, 

 8267, 8304, 8706, Hitchcoch 2725, 3320, 3328, 3329, Jepson 4241, Parish 1548, 

 3304, 3348, 5044, Parish Bros., 1641. The following have an unusually open 

 panicle: Santa Barbara, Elmer 4153; Ventura, Hubby 25. 



