b e 2 SE A FP ² U — ee MEN T OTTM 
21 
Paspalum furcatum Flugge.—Jacksonville, Fla.; Savannah, Ga.; ; Misa nee N.C. 
moist, open ground along ditches and streams in the pine bar 
Paspalum dove Michx.—Selma, Ala.; Tallahassee and Jacksonville Fs ; Savannah, 
Ga.; Aiken, S. C.; Wilmington, N. C.; Norfolk, Va., fields, roadsides, moist 
eadows, etc. Varios from very hairy He quite ado de; and in the size of the 
spikelets. A form collected at Jacksonville, very smooth, with several spikes, 
seems to approach P. purpurascens. 
Heros membranaceum W alt.— 3 Ala.; Jacksonville, Fla., moist, sandy, soil, 
g railway tracks; not comm 
regal platycaule Poir.— Selma XM Mobile, Ala.; Tallahassee and Jacksonville, 
la.; 3 Ga., moist, sandy soil in low 3 roadsides, etc., usually 
very abun 
ep plicatulum Michx.—Mobile, Ala. ; ee Fla. ; Savannah, Ga., very 
dry n ground in the pine barrens. Resembles P. lwve, but is more rigid. 
Puri] precoz Walt.—Mobile, Ala.; J eee Fla.; 3 Ga.; Wilming- 
ton, N. C., about ponds and along ditches and streams in the pine barrens, in 
moist ground. Varies in degree of pubescence. el to flower „off and on” 
all sum 
Paspalum ncc does Ell.—Mobile, Ala. ; Jacksonville, Fla. ; Savannah and Augusta, 
Ga. ; es . E 1 N. C., in low W and along streams, 
in moist, rather heavy soil; co 
deme 5 Michx.— obi 15 À Me; ; e and Jacksonville, Fla.; Savan- 
and Augusta, Ga. ; Wilmingt . C., in dry, sandy soil at 5 and 
in ines common in ihe pine b Very distinct from P. ciliatifolium. 
Paspalum virgatum pubiflorum Vasey. ae Ala., along a ditch in the city; intro- 
uced. Lower sheaths rough hirs 
* villosa Ben o ne Fla., dry, sandy soil in pine barrens; 
fre 
eque 
Det floridanum Chapm.—Jacksonville, Fla., especially abundant upon rail- 
way embankments, also at roadsides and in cultivated fields, in rather loose, dry 
soil. Grows often in large Lehi the slender, branched, creeping root-stocks 
mg it an excellent soil binde 
3 setis Kunth. Jacksonville, Fla., brackish marshes of St Johns River. 
metimes over 5 feet h 
Panicum amarum minus Vamy and Seribn,—Norfolk, Va., ocean pep in drifting 
sands, just above high tide. Great majority of pisi small and sterile. Root- 
stocks not penetrating deep, but much branched, making E sand 
þi 
inders. 
Panicum anceps Michx. — Tallahassee and Jacksonville, Fla.; Savannah, Ga.; Wil- 
groun 
e with the lower sheaths pubescent or NM whole plant often becom- 
ing purplish when 5 in dry, open grou 
Panicum se Ata aor m Ell.— ile, Ala.; Five Ga; ; Aiken, S. C.; Wilmington, 
N.C. Two well-mark Es hae one small; compact, much brane ched, growing 
in dry, màs ground; the other larger, more straggling, less branched, darker 
barre 
green, s. 
Panicum autumnale Bosc.—Selma, Ala.; Augusta, Ga.; Aiken, S. C., dry, sandy soil, 
fields and roadsides, abundant at Augusta and Aiken. aaa a. allu 
at base of panicle branches very prominent at period of flowering, glistening 
when held to the light, as if full of water. 
Panicum baldwinii Nutt. in Herb. Phila. Acad. (Panicum nitidum minor Vasey Contr. 
U. S. Nat. Herb. 3: No. 1, 30, 1892).—Carrabelle and eckson ville Fla.; Savan- 
moist, open ground. 
nah, Ge. ; Wilmington, N. C., in fertile pine woods, or in 
