44 BULLETIN 772, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. 
The name Kentucky bluegrass has been used because in Kentucky 
the bluegrass pastures have been a prominent feature of the agricul- 
ture of the State. In the northern portion of its range it is usually 
called June-grass. Bluegrass flourishes as far west as eastern Ne- 
braska and as far south as Virginia and in the mountains to northern 
Alabama. In the valleys of the western mountains and in the humid 
region of the Pacific coast, from northern California to British 
Columbia, bluegrass is the common pasture grass. In the regions 
where bluegrass is used for pasture it is the standard lawn grass. 
By liming the soil and by artificial watering bluegrass may be grown 
for lawns beyond the limits outlined above, but it can not be made 
to thrive in the warmer parts of the Southern States or in the arid 
regions of the Southwest. 
Poa compressa L. (Pl. IV), cultivated under the name of Canada 
bluegrass, is of some commercial importance, being grown in the 
region that is adapted to the growth of Kentucky bluegrass, but it 
is used chiefly on sterile sandy or clay soils where the latter species 
does not thrive. Canada bluegrass differs from Kentucky bluegrass 
in its blue-green color, distinctly compressed stems, and narrow less- 
branched panicles. It produces abundant rhizomes that throw up 
numerous scattered stems, mostly 6 to 15 inches tall, these being 
usually solitary rather than tufted. On account of its wiry, com- 
pressed stems it is called in some localities wire-grass and flat-stem. 
Two other species of Poa occasionally grown but of little agricul- 
tural importance are Poa trivialis L., rough-stalked meadow grass, a 
species lacking rhizomes, but resembling P. pratensis in its panicle, 
distinguished easily by its backwardly roughened sheaths; and Poa 
palustris Li. (P. triflora Gilib., P. serotina Ehrh.) known to seedsmen 
as fowl meadow grass, a smooth, rather tall, tufted grass, differing 
from bluegrass in the absence of rhizomes, in the larger more open 
panicle, and in the smaller, 2 to 4 flowered spikelets. 
Poaarachnifera Torr., Texas bluegrass, has been used in some of the 
Southern States as a winter pasture grass and as a lawn grass. It is 
an erect dicecious grass, 1 to 2 feet high, with strong rhizomes and 
narrow panicles, 2 to 4 inches long, the staminate spikelets glabrous, 
the pistillate spikelets with a copious tuft of woolly hairs at the base 
of the florets. Texas bluegrass is a native of Oklahoma and Texas. 
Poa annua L., annual bluegrass (Pl. V), is a low, soft, light-green, 
annual grass that is frequently found as a weed in lawns and gardens. 
It thrives in the spring or even in the winter in southerly regions, 
forming fine light-green patches, which die out later in the season, 
leaving unsightly spots. Poa annua is a native of Europe, but is 
widely introduced in America. 
Several species are important range grasses. Malpais bluegrass 
(Poa scabrella), a bunch grass, with slightly roughened sheaths and 
