12 



solitary in growth and scattered. Recorded as occurring from " east- 

 ern Texas and eastward to the Atlantic." 



May 16 (1752). 

 Panicum obtusum H.B.K. Nov. Gen. i : 98 (1815). 



Abundant in limestone at Kerrville, altitude 1625-1650 feet; grow- 

 ing in cultivated fields, waste places about the streets and in yards. 



May 14 (1741); type locality, Mexico, near Guanaxuato. 

 Panicum pedicellatum Vasey, Bull. No. 8, U. S. Dept. Agric. Div. 



Bot. 28 (1889). 



Common on stony wooded hillsides about Kerrville, altitude 1625- 

 1800 feet, growing in scattered tufts. The most northern station ob- 

 served by myself was along the banks of Wolf Creek, fifteen miles north 

 of Kerrville (No. 1726). 



May 15 (1636, 1736, 1766). 

 Panicum Hallii Vasey, Bull. Torr. Club, n : 61 (1884). 



Growing in gutters at Kerrville, and on flat exposed rocks on the 

 Guadalupe, just below the town; altitude 1600-1650 feet. At Corpus 

 Christi it was found in a sandy, open field. This plant was distributed 

 as P. pro life rum. 



Corpus Christi, March 23 (1490); Kerrville, Kerr county, June 18 



(.883). 



Panicum Reverchoni Vasey, Bull. No. 8, U. S. Dept. Agric. Div. of 

 of Bot. 25 (1889). 



Very little seen, and apparently not plentiful in Kerr county. Grow- 

 ing on a bank along the roadside, on Town Creek, altitude 1625 feet. 



April 19 (1603). 

 Panicum sanguinale L. Sp. PI. 57 (1753). 



Digitaria sanguinalis Scop. Fl. Cam. Ed. 2, I : 52 (1772). 

 Syntherisma praecox Walt. Fl. Car. 76 (1788). 

 Paspalum sanguinale Lam. Tabl. Encycl. i : 176 (1791). 

 About the streets of Kerrville, and growing very luxuriantly in wet 

 places on the Guadalupe, where it occurs in tangled mats, the culms 

 weak and reclining ; altitude, 1600-1650 feet. Altogether much stouter 

 and coarser than the plant found in waste places in the North. 



June 27 (1917). 

 Panicum scoparium Lam. Encycl. 4: 744 (1797).? 



Panicum paudflorum Ell. Bot. S. C. & Ga. i : 120 (1817). 

 Growing in rich, shaded ground along Town Creek, at Kerrville, 

 altitude 1600 feet. 

 May 19 (1759). 



