GRAMINE^E. (GRASS FAMILY.) 567 



silky all over; awn only one third the length of the lance-oblong flower; lowef 

 palea 7 - 9-nerved, much longer and larger than the upper; culm .slender (l- 

 3 high) ; leaves and sheaths conspicuously or sparingly hairy. (B. ciliatus, 

 MuU. B. purgans, Torr. Ft. N. Y.) Dry woodlands and open places; com- 

 mon northward. June, July. This is preserved in the herbarium of Linnteus 

 under the name of B. ciliatus, though it is not the plant he has described ; thence 

 has arisen much confusion. 



$2. SCHEDONOKUS, Beauv., Fries. Lower palea somewhat convex, but 

 keeled on the back, late mil y more or less compressed, at least above : flowers soon 

 separating from each other : lotiw glume 1- the upper 3-m-rccd. 



5. B. cilifitllS, L. Panicle compound, very loose, the elongated branches at 

 length divergent, drooping; spikelets 7 - 12-flowered; flowers lanceolate, tipped 

 with an a ten half to three fourths their length; lower palea silky with appressed 

 hairs near the margins, at least below (or rarely naked), smooth or smoothish 

 on the back (B. Canadensis, Michx. B. pubcscens, MuU.) ; or, in var. PUK- 

 GANS (B. purgans, L.!), clothed all over with very short and fine appressed 

 hairs, ty River-banks and moist woodlands; rather' common. July, Aug. 



Culm 3 -4 high, with the large leaves ('-' wide) smooth or somewhat 

 hairy ; the sheaths in the larger forms often hairy or densely downy near the top. 



Variable as to the pubescence, &c., and comprising several forms, including 

 both the Linncean species ; for which the present name is preferable to the inap- 

 plicable purgans, which was taken from Feuille's South American species. In 

 a large-flowered form, two obscure additional nerves appear in the upper glume. 



6. IS. STERILIS, L. Panicle very loose, the slender and nearly simple branches 

 drooping ; spikelets of about 6 rather distant and 7-nerved roughish linear-awl- 

 shaped long-awned flowers; leaves rather hairy, (I) Penn Yan, New York, 

 Sartwell. July. (Adv. from Eu.) 



38. UN I OLA, L. SPIKE-GRASS. 



Spikelets closely many-flowered, very flat and 2-edged ; one or more of the 

 lowest flowers sterile (neutral) and consisting of a single palea. Glumes lance- 

 olate, compressed-keeled. Lower palea coriaceo-membranaceous, strongly later- 

 ally compressed and keeled, striate-nerved, usually acute or pointed, entire, en- 

 closing the much smaller compressed 2-keeled upper one and the free laterally 

 flattened smooth grain. Stamen 1 (or in U. paniculata 3). Upright smooth 

 perennials, growing in tufts from strong creeping rootstocks, with broad leaves 

 and large spikelets in an open or spiked panicle. (Ancient name of some plant, 

 a diminutive of unto, unity.) 



*= Spikelets large (|' -2' long), ovate or oblong, 9 - 3Q-flowered : panicle open. 



1. U. i;i5ii<'u!isl:i, L. Leaves narrow when dry, convolute; spikelets 

 ovate, short-pedicel led ; flowers glabrous, bluntish, several of the lower sterile; the 

 fertile with 3 stamens ; culm and panicle elongated (4 -8 high). Sand-hilla 

 on the sea-shore, S. Virginia and southward. 



2. U latifolia, Michx. Leaves broad and flat (g'-l' wide) ; spikelets at 

 length ob/otiy, ha IK/ ing on lom/ pedicels ; flowers acute, ciliate on the keel, all but 



