GRAMINE.E. (grass FAMILY.) 641 



about half the length of the inner, which is 8-10" long ; awns 2-4" long. — 

 Minn, and the Dakotas to Tex. — Very variable. 



•*■+ •*■+ Middle glume shorter than the lower ; perennials, simple-stemmed, 2 - 4° high. 



8. A. purpurascens, Poir. (PI. 8.) Glabrous; leave? long, rather 

 involute ; spikelets in a (10-18') long spiked panicle ; lower glumes i-nervcd; 

 awns much longer than the spikelet, the middle one about 1' long. — Mass, to 

 Mich., Minn., and southward; common. 



9. A. lanata, Poir. Tall and stout ; leaves tardily involute, rough above, 

 rigid; sheaths woolly ; panicle (1 -2° long) spike-like or more compound and 

 open; glumes 1 -nerved, 6-8" long; middle awn V long. — Del. to Fla. 



* * Awns united below into one, jointed with the apex of the glume; root annual 



10. A. tuberculosa, Nutt. Culm branched below (6-18' high), tumid 

 at the joints ; panicles rigid, loose, the branches in pairs, one of them short and 

 about 2-tlowered, the other elongated and several-flowered ; lower glumes (T 

 long, including their sleuder-awned tips) longer than the upper, which is 

 tipped with the common stalk (about its own length) of the 3 equal diver- 

 gently-bent awns (li-2' long) twisting together at the base. — Sandy soil, E. 

 Mass. to X. J. ; also Wise, Minn., and southward. 



20. STIPA, L. Feather-Grass. (PI. 8.) 



Spikelets 1 -flowered, terete ; the flower falling away at maturity (with the 

 conspicuous obconical bearded and often sharp-pointed callus) from the mem- 

 branaceous persistent lower glumes. Fertile glumes coriaceous, cylindrical- 

 involute and closely embracing the smaller palet and the cylindrical grain, 

 having a long and twisted or tortuous simple awn jointed with its apex. 

 Stamens mostly 3. Stigmas plumose. — Perennials, with narrow involute 

 leaves and a loose panicle. (Name from aTvirr], tow, in allusion to the flaxen 

 appearance of the feathery awns of the original species. In our species the 

 awn is naked.) 



* Callus or base of the flower short and blunt ; lower glumes pointless. 



1. S. Richardsonii, Link. Culm (11-2*^ high) and leaves slender; 

 panicle loose (4-5' long), with slender few-flowered branches; lower glumes 

 nearly equal, oblong, acutish (2^-4'' long), about equalling the pubescent 

 linear-oblong fertile one, which bears a tortuous awn 6 - 9" long. — Pleasant 

 Mountain, near Sebago Lake, Maine, Mt. Marcy, N. Y., north shore of L 

 Superior, Mont., and northward. 



* * Callus pungenthf pointed, at maturitjj villous-bearded ; flowering glume sleti' 



der and minutehj bearded at the tip ; empty glumes taper-pointed. 



2. S. aven^cea, L. (Black Oat-Grass.) (PI. 8.) Culm slender (1 - 

 2° high); leaves almost bristle-form; panicle open; fertile glume blackish, 

 nearly as long as the lower ones (about 4" long) ; the awn bent above, twisted 

 below (2-3' long). — Dry woods, S. New Eng. to Wise, and southward. 



3. S. sp^rtea, Trin. (Porcupine Grass.) Culm rather stout (U- 3° 

 high); panicle contracted ; fertile glume linear, f-1' long (including the long 

 callus), pubescent below, shorter than' the lanceolate slender subulate-pointed 



