546 GR.VMiNE^. (grass family.; 



branches densely spiked-clustered, linear (green and purplish) ; glumes aimless, sharp 

 pointed, unequal, the upper about the length of the very acute lower palea, 

 (Agr. Mexicana, L. A. lateriflora, Michx.) — Varies with more slender pani- 

 cles (A. flliformis, Muhl.) — Low grounds; common. Aug. 



* * Lower palea bristle-aumed from the tip : Jlowers short-pedicelled. 



4. M. sylvatica, Torr. & Gr. Culms ascending, much branched and 

 diffasely spreading (2°-4° long); contracted panicles densely many-flowered; 

 glumes almost equal, bristle-pointed, nearly as long as tlw lower palea, which bears an 

 awn twice or thrice the length of the spikelet. (Agr. diffusa, Muhl.) — Low or 

 rocky woods ; rather common. Aug., Sept. — Aspect bet^veen No. 3 and No. 5. 



5. M. 'Willdenovii, Trin. Culms upright (3° high), slender, simple or 

 sparingly branched ; contracted panicle slender, loosely flowered ; glumes slightly 

 unequal, short-pointed, half the length of the lower palea, which bears an awn 3-4 

 times the length of the spikelet. (Agr. tenuiflora, Willd.) — Rocky woods; 

 rather common. Aug. 



6. M. diffnsa, Schreber. (Dkop-seed. Nimble "Will.) Culms dif- 

 fusely much branched (8' -18' high) ; contracted panicles slender, rather loosely 

 many-flowered, terminal and lateral ; glumes extremehj minute, the lower obsolete, 

 the upper truncate ; awn once or twice longer than the palea. (Dilepyrnm 

 minutifloram, Michx.) — Dry hills and woods, from S. New England to Michi- 

 gan, Illinois, and southward. Aug., Sept. — Spifcelets much smaller than in the 

 foregoing, 1" long. 



§ 2. TRICH6CHL0A, DC. — Panicle very loose and open, the long branches and 

 pedicels capillary : leaves narrow, often convolute-bristle-form. 



7. M. capillaris, Kunth. (Haik-Gkabs.) Culm simple, upright (2° 

 high) from a fibrous (perennial?) root; panicle capillary, expanding (6' -20' 

 long, purple) ; glumes unequal, J to J the length of the long-awned palese, the 

 lower mostly pointless, the upper more or less bristle-pointed. — Sandy soil, W. 

 New England to New Jersey, Kentucky, and southward. Aug. — Pedicels 1'- 

 2' long, scarcely tliicker than the awns, which are about 1' long. 



11. BRACHYELiYTKUM, Beauv. Brachtelytecm. 



Spikelets 1-flowered, with a conspicuous filiform pedicel of an ahortire second 

 flower about half its length, nearly terete, few, in a simple appressed racemed 

 panicle. Lower glume obsolete ; the upper minute, pointless, persistent, shorter 

 than the width of the thick stalk of the flower. Palese chartaceo-herbaceous, in- 

 volute, enclosing the linear-oblong grain, somewhat equal, rough with scattered 

 short bristles ; the lower 5-neiTed, contracted at the apex into a long straight 

 awn ; the upper 2-pointed ; the awn-like sterile pedicel partly lodged in the groove 

 on its back. Stamens 2 : anthers and stigmas very long. — A perennial grass, with 

 simple culms (l°-3° high) from creeping rootstocks, downy sheaths, broad and 

 flat lanceolate pointed leaves, and large spikelets ^' long without the awn. (Name 

 composed of ^paxvs, short, and eXvTpov, husk, from the very, short glumes.) 



1. B. aiistatum, Beauv. (Muhlenbergia erecta, Schreb. Dilepj'rum 

 anstosam, Michx.) — Rocky woods; rather common. June. 



