40 PLANTS BAKERIAN.E. 



this direction, although there is an agricultural experi- 

 ment station at this very point. 



Poa longepedunculata, Scribn. Near Pagosa Peak, at 

 12,000 feet, Aug. Two varieties were distributed, nn. 205, 



206, both common on alpine grassy slopes. 



Poa nemoralis, Linn. Near Pagosa Peak at 10,000 feet. 

 18 Aug. A form very near to P. rupestris was issued as n. 



207, this from an altitude of about 12,000 feet. 



Poa occidentalis, Vasey. At 9,000 feet, near Pagosa Peak. 



Poa pratensis, Linn. Near Pagosa Peak at 9,000 feet, 

 Aug.; 11. 308. What have been determined as varieties of 

 this species were obtained at Los Pinos in May, and at 

 Pagosa Springs in July; but that they are specifically iden- 

 tical with the mountain plants seems a strange proposition. 



POA REFLEXA, Vasey & Scribn. U. S. Herb. i. 276. No. 

 209 is said to be a form of this with short leaves and rather 

 large spikelets. It is common at about 12,000 feet, near 

 Pagosa Peak. 



POA VASEYANA, Beal, Grasses, ii. 532. Habitat of the 

 last, at about 11,500 feet; n. 209 ; said to be larger and more 

 robust than the type, with rougher foliage and sheaths, 

 large and more acute as well as more woolly-pubescent 

 glumes. 



GRAPHEPHORUM MUTICUM. Trisetum muticum, Scribn. 

 Bull. Agrost. xi. 50. Occasional in damp spruce woods at 

 Cumbres, Colo., 10,000 feet, Sept.; n. 180. 



Panicularia nervata, Kuntze. Pagosa Springs, Arboles 

 and Piedra, June and July; n. 191. Also in two more 

 or less dissimilar states from near Pagosa Peak, Aug.; n. 



