426 TRANS. OF THE ACAD. OF SCIENCE. 
orn influence on them , as "se also mupe on — wipe 
scirpoides, as I understand that species, have dinigdsA intensity 
corpse, ng estos leaves, while in the for 
Pacific slope, whic 
rom thei characteristic sword-shape leaves, pir in 
rrow _ 
i scen 
it is seemingly ree sti the Californian sub-genus Ju 
cellus, and in a few American and antarctic species 
which form the sibepeness Rostkovia (gen. Rostkovia, Hook. 
f., Rostkovia, Desv., and Marsippospermum, Desv., i in part), 
The si ingle flowered Junci bear panicles, or, as E. Mey 
and many botanists after him called them, anthele, of differ. 
ent fo nd development. In some species (e. g- in 
s of J. tenuis A 
