PART II. 
LIST OF GRASSES COLLECTED OR OBSERVED IN THE SOUTHEASTERN 
STATES FROM JUNE TO AUGUST, 1895. 
MAYDEZ. 
8 dactyloides L. — Selma and Mobile, Ala.; Apalachicola, Fla.; Aiken, S. C.; 
mington, N. C., in swales, along ditches, in graveyards, etc. 
ANDROPOGONEJE, 
Elionurus tripsacoides HBK.—St. Georges Island, Fla., in dry pine barrens, growing 
tufts among bushes. Culms slender, strict, 3 or 4 feet high, in tufts from 
3 . The roots have the delightful odor of vitivert (Andropogon 
5 Gri Schult.—Aiken, S. C., in dry soil along railway. 
dum gon argyreus macra Seribn.—Jacksonville, Fla., dry, open ground in the 
ne barr Culms tall (nearly 6 feet), slender, little branched; whole plant 
e Very different in appearance from A. argyraeus. It is A. H. Curtiss's, 
No. 4952 (1894). 3 
pedir Elliottii Chapm.—St. Georges Island, Fla., in dry pine barrens. 
Andropogon provincialis Lam.—Aiken, S. C., in dry 8011, hilly pine woods. 
adropogon 8 scoparius Michx.—Hiwassee Gorge, Polk County, Tenn., in dry, sterile 
soil. Not in v Hi 
Andropogon Sor iens Brot.—Selma, Ala.; Augusta, Ga.; Aiken, S. C., in 
fields, at ee a 
di 
PANICEJE. 
Paspalum ciliatifolium Michx. 5 Ala.; Tallahassee, ö "E Jackson- 
ille, Fla.; Savannah, Ga.; Wilmington, N. C., fields, roadsides The ordi- 
nary form, found ly in rather fertile, shaded ground; is s perfeetly 
epis except. the ciliate margins of the leaves. A very hairy form, growing 
dry, sterile soil, observed at Mobile, Tallahassee, and N is probably 
P. dasyphyllum 
- Paspalum difforme Le Conte, —Mobile, Ala.; Jacksonville, Fla., in rather fertile soil 
rape railway tracks. Resembles P. floridanum glabr ubun, but smaller in every 
AES 
DE 
i 
Pad dilatatum Poir.— Mobile, Ala. ; Augusta, Ga., in moist ground along ditches. 
aspalum distichum L.—Knoxville, ‘Tenn. Mobile, M: ; Apalachicola and Jac! 
ville, Fla. ; n N. C., in ditches, about ponds, river banks, and ocean 
in moist soil on the beach at Apalachicola, lacked the characteristic bluish colai 
of the species. 
Paspalum floridanum Michx.—Selma and Mobile, Ala.; Jacksonville, Fla. ; Savannah 
and Augusta, Ga. ; Aiken, S. C.; Wilmington, N. C., in moist or dry, open ground. 
Varies considerably in degree of pubescence 
Paspalum floridanum glabratum Engel. Mobile, Ala. ; : len Fla., moist, 
open ground, usually eumd railways, less frequent than P. floridanum, flower- 
ing at the same time. y conspicuous for its egen color, which 
extends even to came s Is probably a distinct species. 
20 
