ORDER 156. GR AMINES. 



sheaths ciliate; pan. of remote, short (6"), dense, alternate spikes, the rachis fiex- 

 uous; glumes nearly equal, both awned; lower pale with a stout awn which is 

 much longer than those of the glumes; upper pale minute; fertile fl. lanceolate. 

 Dry shades, Car. to Ga. and La. Aug. Oct. (Panicum, L.) 



20. SETA'RIA, Beauv. BRISTLY FOX-TAIL GRASS. (Lat. seta, a 

 bristle.) Spikelets, &c. as in Panicum, but each subtended by a cluster 

 of awn-like bristles (abortive pedicels), forming a sort of bristly invo- 

 lucre. FJ S . in dense, cylindric spikes or spike-like panicles. 



Bristles of the involucre rough backwards, in pairs, short No. 1 



Bristles rough upwards. Fertile pales strongly rugous crosswise Nos. 2, 3 



Fertile pales smoothish, striate lengthwise No. 4 



Fertile pules smoothish, not striate Nos. 5, 6 



1 S. verticillata Beauv. Culm smooth, about 2f high ; Ivs. lance-linear, rough- 

 edged; sheaths smooth, hairy on the margin; spicate pan. composed of short, 

 divided branches in interrupted verticils, 2 3' long ; bristles of the invol. in pairs, 

 rough backwards, as well as the upper part of the culm ; paleaeofthe 5 roughish- 

 punctate. Sandy fields, N. Eng. to Ohio, more frequent South. July. 



2 S. glauca Beauv. BOTTLE GRASS, Culm 2 3f; Ivs. lance-linear, carinate, rough, 

 hairy at base ; sheaths striate, smooth ; ligules setous ; spike cylindric, yellowish- 

 green, 2 i' long, nearly simple; invol. of G 10 fascicled, scabrous bristles much 

 longer than the spikelets; fertile pale, transversely rugous. (J) Fields and road- 

 sides, N". Eng. to Ohio. Jl., Aug. 



(3. PURPURASCENS. Sheaths and spikelets pilous, awns purple. 



3 S. corrugata Schul. Culm terete, 2 to 3f; Ivs. linear, 8 to 12' by 3 to 4", 

 very scabrous, as well as the sheaths; ligules setous; pan. terete, dense, spike- 

 like, 3 to 6' long, compounded of many appressed spikes, each of many spikelets ; 

 bristles as many as spkls. (one at the base of each) and 3 or 4 times as long ; 

 caryopsis and its pales strongly corrugated (Elliott). Savannah (Baldwin). 



4 S. viridis Beauv. WILD TIMOTHY. Culm smooth, 2 3f ; Ivs. lanceolate, flat, 

 minutely serrulate ; sheaths striate, hairy on the margin, and with a setous stipule ; 

 spike 1 to 3' long, cylindric, compound, terminal, green ; involucre of 4 10 fas- 

 ciculate bristles, much longer than the spikelets ; palese of the perfect flower longi- 

 tudinally striate, punctate, and minutely corrugated under a lens. (T) Common in 

 cultivated grounds, Northern States. July, Aug. 



5 S. Italica Kunth. Culm somewhat compressed, about 4 to Gf high ; Ivs. lan- 

 ceolate, 1 2f long, an inch wide; sheaths roughish, pilous at the throat; spiko 

 compound, interrupted at the base, nodding, G 8' long sometimes 12 to 18' long 

 and I' thick (Feay) ; spikelets conglomerate ; invol. of 2 or more bristks, several times 

 longer than the flower ; fertile fl. polished, shining, %" long. (T) Ditches, Mid. and 

 S. States. July. 



6 S. Germanic a Beauv. MILLET. BENGAL GRASS. Culm 2 4f high, simple, 

 leafy ; Ivs. lance- linear, flat, acuminate, serrulate on the margin ; sheaths striate, 

 close, pubescent; stip. bearded; spike compressed, yellowish, oblong-cylindric ; 

 rachis densely hirsute ; involucrate bristles 4 8, as long as, or longer than tho 

 spikelets, yellowish; glumes unequal, ovate; pakcB 1" long, obscurely 3-veined, 

 duU with minute corrugations. (5) In fields, often cultivated. (S. Italica p. 

 Kunth.) 



21. CENCHRUS L. BURR GRASS. (Gr. Kev^po^ the ancient namo 

 of the millet.) Flowers racemous or spicate; involucre burr-form, 

 laciniate, echinate, persistent, and becoming hard in fruit, including 

 1 3 spikelets ; glumes 2, 2-flowered, outer smaller ; flowers dissimlar, 

 the lower sterile, the upper perfect; scales 0; branching; spikelets 

 sessile. 



1 C. tribuloides L. St. 1 2f long, erect or procumbent and geniculato at 

 base ; Ivs. lance-linear, conduplicate, gradually acuminate, 3 5' by 2 3" ; sheaths 

 open, about as long as the colored joints ; spike with the burr-like involucres 

 approximate ; invol. cartilaginous, beset externally with many sharp, retrorsely 



