70 



MISC. PUBLICATION 200, U. S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE 



ceous, somewhat keeled, scaberulous or nearly smooth, the nerves 



evident but not prominent, the 

 apex tapering into a fine point or 

 an awn as much as 2 mm long. 

 91 Open woods, 2,000 to 

 3,000 m, southern Colorado and 

 Utah to New Mexico and Ari- 

 zona (fig. 82). 



20. Festuca versuta Beal. 

 (Fig. 83.) Culms slender, 50 to 

 100 cm tall; blades flat, mostly 

 2 to 5 mm wide; panicle open, 

 10 to 15 cm long, the spreading 

 spikelets above the middle; 



FIGURE 81. Festuca sororia. Panicle, X M; floret, 

 X 5. (Baker 36, Colo.) 



FIGURE 82. Distribution of 

 Festuca sorona. 



lower branches bearing a few 

 spikelets 2- to 5-flowered; glumes narrow, 

 acuminate, nearly equal, 5 to 6 mm long; 

 lemmas firm, obscurely nerved at maturity, 5 

 to 7 mm long, acute, awnless. 21 (F. texana 

 Vasey; F. johnsoni Piper.) Shady banks, 

 Texas and Oklahoma. 



21. Festuca obtusa Spreng. NODDING 

 FESCUE. (Fig. 84.) Culms solitary or few in 

 a tuft, mostly 50 to 100 cm tall; blades flat, 4 

 to 7 mm wide; panicle very loose and open, the branches spreading, 



spikelet-bearing toward the ends, the lower usu- 

 ally reflexed 



at maturity; 



spikelets 3- 



to 5, flowered; 



glumes about 



3 and 4 mm 



long; lemmas 



coriaceous, 



rather turgid, 



about 4 mm 



long, obtuse 



Or aCUtish. FIGURE M. Festuca obtusa. Panicle, X H; floret, X 6. 



the nerves <Amer ' Qr ' Nat ' Herb ' 490 ' Md 



very obscure. 21 (F. nutans Spreng.) Low or 

 rocky woods, Quebec to 

 Manitoba, south to north- 

 ern Florida and eastern 

 Texas (fig. 85). 



22. Festuca shortiiKunth. 

 (Fig. 86.) Resembling F. 

 FIGURE ^83. Festuca ^versuta. obtusa; culms tufted; pani- 



j, less open than 



Panicle, X 1 A', spikelet, X 



5. (Johnson, Tex.) 



FIGURE 85. Distribution of 

 Festuca obtusa. 



in F. obtusa, the branches 

 arched-drooping, the spikelets somewhat crowded toward the ends; 

 spikelets 3- to 6-flowered, 2J. Prairies, low, open ground, and 



