144 FESTUCEAE 



Agricultural College farm and at »{\nv places in the State; in the 

 Sonoran Zones. 



4. Bromus polyanthus Seril)ii. One of the commonest of 

 the bromes or Wild Oats grasses of the timbered mountain areas 

 throughout the State, in the Transition Zone. 



5. Bromus polyanthus panicUlatUS Shear. Much like the last 

 but usually somewhat stoulei'. occuri'ing in the same regions and 

 Zone. 



6. Bromus hordeaceus glabrescens (Coss) Shear. Record- 

 ed from but a single locality in the Mogollon Mountain region, in 

 the Canadian Zone. 



7. Bromus racemoSUS L. Another common cultivated Brome 

 grass, introduced in tlu' ^tesilla Valley. 



8. Bromus secalinus L. A cultivated species often sold 

 by seedsmen in ''grass mixtures" for lawns or meadows. Not 

 common in New Mexico. 



9. Bromus inermis L. i inarmed Brome Grass. A 



cultivated species growing on the Agricultural College farm. 



10. Bromus richardsonii Link. Occurs in the higher parts 

 of the tiniber covered mountains at elevations of 8500 feet and over 

 not uncommonly, in the Canadian Zone coming down into the Trans- 

 ition. 



11. Bromus lanatipes (Shear) Kydb. One of the common 

 species occurring in the Transition and coming down into the Up- 

 per Sonoran Zones. 



12. Bromus porter! (Coult.) Nash. Common in the timber 

 covered areas cf the mountaips. in the Transition Zone: occas- 

 sionally lower. 



13. Bromus frondoSUS- (Shear). Similar to the last except 

 that it i-anges a little lower; in the Upper Sonoran, occasionally in 

 the Transition. 



