PIjANTS OF SOUTHERN NEW JERSEY. 197 



Middle District. — Clenienton, Swedesboro, Dividing Creek. 

 Pine Barrens. — Atsion (H&C), Landisville. 



Panicum stipitatum Nash. Long Panic Grass. 



Panicuni stipitatum Nash., Britton's Manual 83. New name for P. elongatiim 

 Pursh nee Salisb. [New Jersey to N. Carolina]. 



Moist, sandy, open ground in the lower part of the Middle 

 district; not very common. 



Fl. — Mid-July to early September. 



Middle District. — Delair, Camden (H&C), Washington Park, Moorestown, 

 Medford (S), Mickleton, Tomlin, Swedesboro (CDL). 



Panicum condensum Nash. Clustered Panic Grass. 

 PI. XIL, Fig. I. 



Panicum condensum Nash, in Small's Southern Flora. 93. [South Carolina 



and Florida]. 

 Brachiaria digitarioides Keller and Brown Z2- — Stone Torreya 1907, 39 



[See Proc. A. N. S. Phila., 1908, 458]. 



Usually in shallow water, swamps and ditches, southern part 

 of the Cape May peninsula. 



First found September i, 1902, at Peermont, by the writer, 

 and erroneously recorded as Brachiaria digitariodes (see synon- 

 omy). 



Fl. — ^Early August to late September. 



Coast Strip. — Holly Beach, Piermont (S). 

 Cape May. — Cold Spring. 



Panicum longifolium Torr. Long-leaved Panic Grass. 



PI. vn.. Fig. 5. 



Panicum longifolium Torrey, Fl. V. S. 149. 1824 [Pine Barrens of New 



Jersey]. 

 Panicum anceps Britton 281 (in part). 



Sandy swamps throughout our region, except the upper part 

 of the Middle district ; probably most common in the Pine Bar- 

 rens and along the western border of the coast marshes. Dis- 

 covered in New Jersey in 1819 by James Goldie, a Scottish 

 botanist, wdio travelled and collected here at that time. 



Fl. — Early August to mid-September. 



