658 CXLIV. GRAMINER, T Glyceria. 
Lodieules usually connate.—Hook. f. Fl. Tasm. ii. 122; Reichb. Ic. 
Fl. Germ. t. 80; Festuca fluitans, Linn. ; F. Muell. Fragm. viii. 129. 
N. S. Wales. Port Jackson, R. Brown, Woolls; New England, Leich- 
hardt 
. Black Forest, Curdie's River, pe Loddon, etc., F. Mueller ; 
Ballarat, Bacchus. 
Tasmania. Common in wet places, J. D. Hook : 
ustralia.  Porroteranthe Vm . Glum. i. 287, from 
Drummond’ E — 2 390 and 9 27! in He Es Took, A appears s to be a variety 
or small ven vues of G. fluitans, nh the flowering glumes more distant than 
usual along t 
zw species is punt in the northern hemisphere, in the New as well as the 
Old rld. 
3. G. latispicea, F. Muell. Fragm. viii. 127. —Stems erect, ii ataia 
2 or3 ft. Leaves flat, glabrous, the ligula long and jagged. Panicle 
N. S. Wales. Gwidir }River and Myall Creek, Leichhardt ; New England, 
C. Stuart. The Us sm Seen are few and the species requires further elucidation. 
It seems in some respects to approach Schedonorus, and the grain is rather narrower 
than in most Glyceria, but not seen quite ripe. 
stricta, Hook. f. Fl. Nov. Zel. i. 304, Fl. Tasm. ii. 123, t. 162. 
i iod glabrous erect annual of 1 to 14 "E Led very narrow, 
erect, with broad loose sheaths. Pakis narrow, 3 to 6 in. long, the 
branches clustered, erect or at length spreading, the lower ones often 
s as Spikelets narrow, 3 to 4 lines long, 5- to 8- lowered, iis rhachis 
delicate. Grain concave on the inner face.— — Pow a syrtica, . Muell. 
— ie: Inst. 1855, 45; Festuca syrtica, F. Mue Il. Fr rag. 
: €— ground, Melbourne, Adamson. 
Tasmania. Marshes, Launceston n, Gunn 
re pertes Sandy Shores of dietus s and St, Vincent's Gulfs, F. Mue «i 
Drummond, n. 60, 150, 219; Busselton, Pries (with the spikele 
branches es). 
a a a eei a. Mort 
G. tenuispica, Steud. Syn. Glum. i. 285, is founded on small specimens of Drum- 
mond s, n. 347, in i in fruit with many of the ste m uel veral of the fruits 
fallen awa way. 
The species is also in New Zealand. 
