Fimhristylis.] clxxii. oypebacisj!. (C. B. Clarke.) 637 



limited here, this Is one of the most widespread weeds in the world. — The following 

 varieties (among many others) hare been esteemed species : — 



Var. 1. ANNUA (sp.) Boem Sf Sch. ; nmbel with few (often with 3-1) ellipsoid 

 obtuse spikelets. — Common in Europe, rare in Bengal. 



Var. 2. DBPATJPBEATA (sp.) .Br. ; stems very slender, flaccid, with few spikelets 

 — 0. B. Clarke (n. 44119) from Assam, has a long slender stem, with a single lateral 

 spikelet, overtopped by most slender leaves ; recedes from the type F. diphylla more 

 than does the Australian F. depauperata. 



Var. 3. PLTTRiSTEiATA, var. C. S. Clarke (i*. pilosa of most authors not of 

 Vahl) ; sheaths and leaves often hairy, nut 10-16-striate on each face often 

 verrucose or tubercular on shoulders. — A very common southern, especially Malay 

 form. 



Var. 4. SPIROSTAOHTS (sp.) F. Muell. ; large, umbel large, spikelets large. — 

 In Australia ; but a Khasia form is equally large. 



Var. NllAQlElcAj rhizome very short, creeping; stems 12 in. in a close linear 

 series ; leaves filiform. — Perhaps referable to F. stolonifera. Nilghiri Hills, Pykara, 

 King. 



16. r. Stolonifera, C B. Clarke ; stoloniferous, spikelets dark 

 chestnut, otherwise as F. diphylla. — Fimhristylis, Wall. Gat. 3503, A, B 

 (part) 0. 



Khasia Hilis, alt. 2-5600 ft., common. Muniypooe ; WatL Nepal or 

 Bengal; Wallich! 



Stolon breaking out horizontally from the base of stem, hardening into a long 

 wiry rhizome clothed with lanceolate' striate dusky scales. Stems subsolitary, 

 1-2 ft., slender. Leames as long as \-\ stem, erect, very narrow, tip obtuse, hairy 

 or glabrate. Umbel nearly ' simple, sometimes depauperated with few spikelets. 

 Spikelets f by J in. 



Var. Vudens; style-branches 3 or 4.— Khasia; alt. 6-7000 ft., 0. B. Clarke. 



tttt Nut obovoid, smoothj reticulate (not conspicuously striate longi- 

 tudinally.) 



17. F. aestivalis, Fa.W Enwm. ii. 288; umbel compound or decom- 

 pound, spikelets many solitary ohlong suhcylindric, glumes ovate acute 

 submucronate, style 2-fid, nut smooth obscurely reticulate straw-colrd. 

 Nees in Wight Contrib. 102 ; BoecJc. in Idnnsea, xxxvii. 11 ; Trimen Gat. 

 PI. Geylon, 101 (excl. syn.). F. Griffithiana, Steud. Syn. Gyp. 110. F. 

 dichotoma, Boeck. in Flora, xlii. 70 (not of Vahl). F. tricholepis, Miq. Fl. 

 Ind. Bat. iii. 319. F. Grriffithii, Boeck. in Flora, xliii. 241. Soirpus 

 Eestivalis, Setz Obs. iv. 12 ; Boxb. Fl. Ind. i. 227. — Isolepis, Wall. Gat. 

 3475.— Fimhristylis, Wall. Gat. 3516, A, 3517 B, D, E. 



Throughout India, alt. O-3O0O ft. (except the North-west), abundant. — DiSteib. 

 S. and B. Asia, Australia and a var. in America. 



Annual, more or less pubescent or puberulous. Stems 2-10 in. Leaves often at 

 Mng as i-i stem. Spikelets 4 by -Jp in. Glumes keeled, glabrous or pubescent, 

 erect or subsquarrose. Stamens 1-2. Style scarcely longer than nut, slightly com- 

 pressed, usually villous ; margin of stylethaSe often minutely hairy (not with long 

 pendent trichomes of F. squarrota).' Nut as long as ^ glume; outermost cells 

 quadrate-hexagonal, arranged in 12-16 vertical rows on each face of nut, but far 

 less prominent than in F. dichotoma, 



18. r. scaberrima, Nees in Wight Contrib. 102; stems middle- 

 sized compressed under umbel, leaves and bracts long, umbel compound 



