Indiana Plants 101 
PLANTS NEW TO INDIANA. X. 
CHARLES C. DEAM. 
Specimens of all of the plants referred to in this paper are de- 
posited in the Deam herbarium. The grasses were determined by Agnes 
Chase. The Carices were determined by K. K. Mackenzie. The deter- 
Minations of the remainder have been checked by specialists in the 
respective genera. 
Muhlenbergia capillaris (Lam.) Trin. 
Harrison County, October 7, 1921. No. 35257. Rocky, wooded slope 
about three miles east of Elizabeth. This open wooded slope borders 
the road in its descent over the bluff to the Ohio River. Growing in 
tufts in hard ground, closely associated with Quercus velutina, Viburnum 
rufidulum, Smilax bona-nox, Agave virginica, Liatris scariosa, Andropo- 
gon scoparius, Allium cernuum and many others. 
Sporobolus clandestinus (Spreng.) Hitche. 
Fulton County, September 14, 1921. No. 34717. On a roadside 
sandy knoll two and a half miles northeast of Leiter’s Ford. Marshall 
County, September 14, 1921. No. 34762. On a roadside sandy knoll 
just north of Yellow River, about six miles southwest of Plymouth. 
Poa Wolfii Scribner. 
Jay County, May 14, 1921. No. 33861. On the flood plain of a 
small rivulet in a white oak woods about eight miles northeast of Port- 
land. Closely associated with Quercus macrocarpa, Ulmus americana, 
Fraxinus nigra, Aesculus glabra, Phlox divaricata, Claytonia virginica 
and others. 
Carex aggregata Mackenzie. 
Franklin County, May 17, 1921. No. 33972. Low alluvial bank 
of the west fork of White Water River two miles south of Laurel. 
Carex gravida Bailey. 
Fayette County, May 16, 1921. No. 33931. On the low bank of 
the old canal about one mile south of Connersville. Associated with 
Phacelia Purshii. 
Smilax bona-nox Linnaeus. 
This species has the base of the stem covered more or less with 
a dense stellate pubescence. I found the first specimens of this species 
in 1915 on the wooded bluff of the Ohio River in Crawford County 
near Leavenworth. I was not able to determine it to my satisfaction, 
so I set to work to find other locations for this species and collect in 
quantities until I had over a hundred specimens. I have found also a 
few specimens on the VanBuren Ridge in Perry County, about seven 
miles east of Cannelton. It is frequent in Harrison County on the 
bluff of the Ohio River east of Elizabeth. 
