GRAMINEAE (GHASS FAMILY) 105 



direrye.nt densely flowered branchlets mostly from the lower side ; spikelets 2 mm. 

 Inmj, cri>\rtl<-d ; a few long hairs on the short pedicel ; second glume and sterile 

 lemma subequal. Wet meadows and shores, Me. to Minn., 

 and south w. Aug., Sept. FIG. 62. ^ 



14. P. stipitatum Nash. Similar to the preceding ; leaves /T\ 

 and panicles commonly dark purple, the latter narrower and H7 

 closer ; lateral panicles short-peduncled from the upper nodes ; 

 a))iki'l<-ts narrower, more pointed, distinctly secund upon the 



hnnichli'ts ; wond glume longer than the sterile lemma; fruit 62 - P- agrostoldes. 

 xti/'itate; no hairs at base of spikelets. Moist soil, N. J. to Spikeletxs. 

 Ky., and south w. 



15. P. condensum Nash. Culms stout, 0.8-1.3 m. high, sometimes geniculate 

 below ; leaves 2.5-5 dm. long, 8-12 mm. wide, flat or folded ; panicle 1-8 dm. 

 long, narrowly oblong, the densely flowered branches erect or narrowly ascending, 

 the lower ones naked at the base ; smaller long-peduncled panicles often 

 produced from the upper nodes; spikelets 2.6 mm. long, rather turgid ; second 

 glume and sterile lemma subequal, the points usually spreading at maturity. 

 Borders of streams and wet places, Pa. (Porter) ; Alexandria Co., Va. ; S. C. 

 and southw. 



-*- Plants from stout scaly rootstocks, not conspicuously compressed at base. 



16. P. anceps Michx. Erect or ascending, 6-12 dm. high ; sheaths subcom- 

 pressed, glabrous or sparsely pilose ; blades 1.5-5 dm. long, 6-10 mm. wide, flat ; 

 panicles 2-5 dm. long, very loose and open, the slender remote branches spread- 

 ing ; small long-peduncled panicles produced from the upper nodes ; spikelets 

 more or less secund, 3.5 mm. long ; the acuminate second glume and sterile 

 lemma curved at the apex, about $ longer than the fruit which bears a minute 

 tuft of hairs at the apex. (P. rostratum Muhl.) Moist sandy soil. R. I. to 

 Kan., and southw. July-Sept. 



****** DICHOTOMA. Perennials producing simple culms in the spring which 

 later branch more or less profusely, this autumnal state often strikingly 

 different in habit from the spring state; winter rosettes of basal leaves per- 

 sistent in spring and usually different in shape from culm-leaves ; primary 

 panicles produced in spring or early summer seldom perfecting seed, the 

 secondary panicles smaller, often much reduced, the latest included in the 

 sheaths, usually cleistogamous and fruitful ; the secondary leaves usually 

 much reduced, often crowded by the dwarfing of the lateral internodes. 



+- 1. Depauperata. Culms tufted, slender, sparingly branching at the base, 

 simple above; leaves long-linear, scabrous above, the basal ones shorter but 

 not forming a distinct flat rosette in the autumn; the reduced secondary 

 panicles, produced from short branches from the lowest nodes, more or less 

 concealed in the leaves at the base; ligule a ring of hairs about 0.5 mm. 

 long. 



17. P. depauperatum Muhl. Erect or ascending, 2-4 dm. high ; nodes 

 ascending-pubescent ; sheaths except the lowest shorter than the internodes, 

 glabrous or pilose ; blades 6-15 cm. long, 2-5 mm. wide, often involute in dry- 

 ing ; panicles not much exceeding the leaves, 4-8 cm. long, few-flowered, the 

 rather strict remote branches ascending; spikelets 3.2-3.8 mm. long, glabrous 

 or sparsely pubescent, strongly nerved ; first glume t-J the length of the spike- 

 let, subacute ; second glume and sterile lemma acuminate, extending in a point 

 beyond the fruit which is 2.3 mm. long. Sterile woods, Me. to Minn., and 

 southw. 



18. P. per!6ngum Nash. Similar to the preceding, more strict in habit, 

 usually papillose-pilose ; blades averaging longer and narrower (sometimes 2.5 

 dm. long), pubescent on the lower surface; panicles smaller, narrow, the branches 

 nearly erect; spikelets 2.7-3 TOOT, long, oval, blunt, sparingly pilose, strongly 

 nerved; first glume \- % the length of the s]>ikelei ; s?c<>inl (jlume and sterile 

 lemma equaling the fruit at maturity, obtuse; fruit 2.4 mm. long; secondary 

 panicles usually more numerous than in the last, sometimes produced from the 

 second node. Prairies and dry soil, Mich, and S. Dak. to Tex. 



