gUll 







GRAMINEAE (GRASS FAMILY) 11*7 



and sterile lemma scarcely equaling the fruit which is minutely pubescent at 

 the apiculate tip. More or less spreading in the autumnal state, branching from 

 the middle nodes, the upper leaves of the branches crowded and spreading. 

 (P. latifolium Am. auth., not L.) Woods, Me. to Minn., and southw. 



Var. m611e (Vasey) Hitchc. & Chase. Usually not so tall, downy-pubescent 

 throughout. (P. latifolium, var. Vasey; P. pubifolium Nash.) Commoner 

 southw. 



73. P. latifblium L. Like P. Boscii, but usually taller ; culms and sheaths 

 (except the ciliate margin and pubescent ring at the summit of the sheaths) 

 glabrous or rarely pubescent below, nodes glabrous; blades commonly 1.5dm. 

 long, 3 cm. wide, sometimes wider, ciliate toward the very broad base, otherwise 

 glabrous, rarely minutely pubescent ;. panicle 8-15 cm. long, the long few-flowered 

 Branches ascending ; spikelets 3.5-3.8 mm. long, obovate-elliptic, the apiculate 

 p of the fruit usually glabrous. Autumnal state as in P. Boscii. (P. macro- 



*pon Le Conte.) Rocky woods and sand dunes, Me. to Wise., and southw. 





HIANS (Ell.) Nash, a lax perennial with narrow flat leaves and 

 terminal panicles with spreading branches naked at base, and crowded spikelets, 

 the palea of the sterile lemma subindurated, enlarged and forcing the spikelet 

 n, has been collected in se. Mo. (Bush) ; common in the South. 



12. SACCI6LEPIS Nash. 



Second glume gibbous at the base, 11-nerved, equal to the 3-5-nerved sterile 

 lemma (which incloses a large palea and often a staminate flower), about twice 

 as long as the slightly stipitate fruit ; lemma thinner at the apex, the palea free 

 at the tip ; spikelets otherwise as in Panicum. Semi-aquatic perennials with nar- 

 row spike-like panicles. (Name from <rd/c/cos, bag, and \cirts, scale, alluding 

 to the saccate second glume.) 



1. S. striata (L.) Nash. Perennial, stoloniferous ; culms erect from a creep- 

 ing base, 3-9 dm. high, branching ; sheaths hirsute, at least on the margins ; 

 blades 0.8-2 dm. long, about 1 cm. wide, flat, glabrous ; panicle 10-15 cm. long, 



Fntracted, spike-like ; spikelets 3.5 mm. long, lanceolate, acute. (Panicum gib- 

 m Ell.) Low wet ground, Va. to I. T., and southw. 

 I 



13. ECHIN6CHLOA Beauv. 



Spikelets 1-flowered, sometimes a staminate flower below the perfect termi- 

 nal one, nearly sessile in 1-sided racemes ; glumes unequal, spiny-hispid, mucro- 

 nate ; sterile lemma similar and awned from the apex (sometimes mucronate 

 only), inclosing a hyaline palea; fertile lemma and palea chartaceous, acumi- 

 nate ; margins of the glume inrolled except at the summit, where the palea is 

 not included. Coarse annuals with compressed sheaths, long leaves and termi- 

 nal panicles of stout racemes. (Name from ex?vos, a hedgehog, and x\6a, grass, 



allusion to the bristling awns. ) 



1. E. CRUSGALLI (L.) Beauv. (BARNYARD GRASS.) Culms stout, rather 

 culent, branching from the base, ascending or erect, 3-18 dm. high ; sheaths 



ml blades glabrous ; panicle dense, 1-3 dm. long, of numerous 

 ct or spreading racemes, very variable, deep purple to pale 

 en, erect or drooping ; spikelets long-awned or nearly awnless, 

 ensely and irregularly crowded in 3 or 4 rows, about 3 mm. 

 long. (Panicum L.) Moist, chiefly manured soil and waste 

 ground, river banks, etc., common throughout, except in the 

 extreme North. Aug. -Oct. (Nat. from Eu.) FIG. 68. 



E. FRUMENXACEA (Roxb.) Link (Panicum Roxb.), JAPANESE 

 ARNYARD MILLET, or BILLION-DOLLAR GRASS, is an occasional 63- 

 escape from cultivation. It is distinguished from short-avvned 

 forms of the preceding chiefly by the more compact panicles with short often 

 incurved branches. 



2. E. WaltSri (Pursh) Nash. Resembling the preceding, usually taller, at 

 least the lower sheaths coarsely papillose-hispid; panicle usually long, more 



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