GENUS 17. 



GRASS FAMILY. 



147 



29. Panicum consanguineum Kunth. Kunth's 

 Panic-grass. Fig. 339. 



Panicum z'illosum Ell. Bot. S. C. & Ga. i : 124. 1817. 



Not Lam. 1791. 

 P. consanguineum Kunth, Rev. Gram, i : 36. 1829. 



Culms i-2$ tall, finally much-branched, the 

 nodes densely barbed with spreading hairs; sheaths 

 shorter than the internodes, densely villous ; blades 

 erect, linear-lanceolate, the primary ones iJ"-3' 

 long, i'-s" wide, those on the branches much 

 smaller, flat, usually less than 2' long; primary 

 panicle ij'~3' long, oval, its branches ascending; 

 spikelets about ii" long and about i as wide, 

 broadly obovoid, densely pubescent with spreading 

 hairs. 



In dry sandy soil, southeastern Virginia to Florida and 

 Texas. June and July. 



30. Panicum Bushii Nash. Bush's Panic- 

 grass. Fig. 340. 



Panicum Bushii Nash, Bull. Torr. Club, 26: 568. 1899. 



A tufted nearly glabrous perennial. Culms about 

 i tall, finally much-branched; blades erect, linear, 

 acuminate, very rough on the margins, ciliate at 

 the base with a few long hairs, otherwise glabrous, 

 the larger primary blades -4' long, ii"-2" wide; 

 panicle much-exserted, 2*'-3' long, its branches 

 ascending; spikelets ii" long and about i" wide, 

 obovoid, glabrous. 



In dry ground, Missouri. June and July. 



31. Panicum sphaerocarpon Ell. Round-fruited Panic-grass. Fig. 341. 



Panicum sphaerocarpon Ell. Bot. S. C. & Ga. i: 125. 1817. 



Culms generally erect, simple or somewhat branched 

 at base, io'-2 tall, smooth, or the nodes sometimes 

 pubescent. Sheaths shorter than the internodes, or over- 

 lapping, glabrous, the margins ciliate; blades 2 r -4' long, 

 2 "-7" wide, acuminate, cordate-clasping at base, sca- 

 brous above, smooth beneath, the margins cartilaginous 

 and minutely serrulate, ciliate towards the base ; panicle 

 ovoid, 2'-4' long, about as broad as long ; spikelets less 

 than i" long, nearly spherical or somewhat longer than 

 thick, obtuse, purple; first scale broadly ovate, obtuse; 

 third and fourth scales three to four times as long as 

 the first, suborbicular, ;-nerved ; fourth scale oval, 

 obtuse, f" long. 



Dry soil, Vermont to Kansas, south to Florida, Texas and 

 Mexico, northern South America. July-Sept. 



