GENERA OF GRASSES OF THE UNITED STATES. 89 
found at altitudes of 12,000 to 14,000 feet. In some species there are 
two spikelets at the nodes of the rachis. This is especially frequent 
in A. smithia and allies it with Elymus. 
In general, all the species of Agropyron are forage grasses. They 
form an important part of the forage on the western range and in 
the valleys often grow in sufficient abundance to produce hay. 
For a revision of the species of Agropyron found in the United 
States, see Scribner and Smith, U. S. Dept. Agr., Div. Agrost. Bull. 
4325-36. 1897. 
34. Triticum L. 
Spikelets 2 to 5 flowered, solitary, sessile, placed flatwise at each 
joint of a continuous or articulate rachis, the rachilla disarticulating 
above the glumes and between the florets or continuous; glumes rigid, 
3 to several nerved, the apex abruptly mucronate or toothed or with 
one to many awns; lemmas keeled or rounded on the back, many- 
nerved, ending in one to several teeth or awns. 
Annual, low or rather tall grasses, with flat blades and terminal 
spikes. Species about 10, southern Europe and western Asia; none 
in the United States except 7'riticwm aestivum, the cultivated wheat. 
Type species: Triticum aestivum L. 
Triticum’ L., Sp. Pl. 85, 1753; Gen. Pl., ed. 5, 87. 1754. Linnszeus describes 
seven species, 7’. aestivum, T. hybernum, T. turgidum, T. spelta, T. monococcum, 
T. repens, T. caninum. The citation in the Genera Plantarum is to Tournefort’s 
figures 292 and 293 which represent, the first, beardless wheat, and the second, 
bearded wheat. These two forms, beardless and bearded, are named by Lin- 
nzus JT. aestivum, the bearded wheat, and 7. hybernum, the beardless wheat. 
Triticum aestivum is chosen as the type because it has priority of position in 
the Species Plantarum. lLinnzeus divides the genus into two groups, ‘“‘ annua” 
and “perennia.” The latter group, including J'riticum repens and T. caninum, 
is now referred to Agropyron. 
Zeia Iunell, Amer. Midl. Nat. 4: 225. 1915. Based on “Triticum spelta 
Linn.” Agropyron Gaertn. is included in the genus proposed. 
The most important species of Triticum is the cultivated wheat, 
T. aestwum L. (7. vulgare Vill., 7. sativum Lam.). A large 
number of varieties are in cultivation, some with smooth lemmas, 
some with velvety lemmas, some with long awns (fig. 44), some awn- 
less (fig. 44, 4). Durum wheat and club wheat are races, each with 
several varieties. Tviticwm monococeum U., einkorn or 1-grained 
wheat, is grown sparingly in Europe. Triticum dicoccum Schrank, 
emmer, is cultivated in this country as a forage plant. In emmer the 
axis breaks up into joints, each joint bearing a spikelet which re- 
mains entire, each floret permanently inclosing its grain.? 
11n the Species Plantarum the word appears in the plural, Tritica, probably inadvert- 
ently. 
2for a classification of wheats, see Jessen, Deutschlands Griiser 191, 1863; Koérnicke, 
Handb. Getreidebaues 1: 40, 1885; Hackel in Wngl. and Prantl, Pflanzenfam. II, 2: 80, 
1887; True Grasses, translated by Scribner and Southworth, 180, 1890; Schulz, Mitt. 
Natf. Ges. Halle 1: 14. 1911. For an account of 7’. dicoccoides Koérn., recently found by 
Aaronsohn on Mount Hermon, Palestine, see Aaronsohn, Verh. Zool. Bot. Ges. Wien 59: 
485, 1909; U. S. Dept. Agr., Bur. Pl. Ind. Bull. 180: 38, 1910; Cook, U. 8S. Dept. Agr., 
Bur. Pl. Ind. Bull. 274. 1918. 
