GRAMINE/E. (GRASS FAMILT.) 563 



11. P. pratcnsis, L. (Green or Common Meadow-Grass.) Culmii 

 (l°-3° high, from a creeping base) and sheaths smooth; branches of the py- 

 ramidal panicle commonly in fives, spreading ; spikelets 3 - 5-flowered ; flowers 

 S^nerved, lance-ovate, acute, hairy on thfc marginal nerves and lieel ; ligule blunt, 

 short. — Common in dry soil : imported for pastures and meadows. Indigenous 

 at the White Mountains of New Hampshire and northward. May - July. (Eu. ) 



12. P. compressa, L. (Blue-Grass. Wire-Gkass.) Cfulms much 

 flattened, obliqudy amending (9'- 18' high) from a creeping base, the uppermost 

 joint near the middle ; leaves short, bluish-green ; panicle dense and contracted 

 (expanding just at flowering), partly one-sided; the short branches often in 

 pairs, covered to near the base with the 4 - 9-flowered flat spikelets ; flowers 

 linear-elliptical, rather obtuse, hairy below on the lateral nerves and keel ; ligulo 

 short and blunt. — Dry fields and banks, probably introduced >vith other and 

 more valuable grasses ; rarely in woods : apparently truly indigenous north 

 ward. (Eu.) 



34. ERACrROSTIS, Beauv. Eragrostis. 



Spikelets 2 - 70-flowered, nearly as in Poa, except that the lower palea is but 

 3- (rarely 1-) nerved, not webby-haired at the base, and deciduous; the upper 

 persistent on the entire rhacbis after the rest of the flower has fallen. — Culms 

 often branching. Leaves linear, frequently involute, and the ligule or throat of 

 the sheath bearded with long villous hairs. Panicle various. (An early name, 

 probably from spa, earth, and Agrostis, in allusion to the procumbent habit of 

 the original species.) 



* Prostrate and creeping, much-brvmched : root arinual : spikelets flat, imperfectly 



diacious, clustered, almost sessile, in the more fertile plant almost capitate. 



1. E. rcptans, Nees. Spikeletslinear-Ianceolate, 10- 30-flowered, almost 

 sessile ; flowers lance-ovate, acute ; leaves short, almost awl-shaped, smoothish. 

 (Poa reptans, Michx.) — Gravelly river-borders; common. August. — Flovifer- 

 branches 2' - 5' high. 



* * Diffusely spreading, or the flowering culms ascending, low (6'- 15' high) : spike- 

 lets large (i'-|' long), densely-flowered, flat, forming a narrow crowded panicle. 



2. E. po.«oiDBS, Beauv. Lower sheaths often hairy ; leaves flat, smooth ; 

 spikelets short-pedicelled, lance-linear or oblong-linear, 8 - 20-flowered, lead- 

 colored (2" -5" long) ; flowers ovate, obtuse, the lateral nerves evident. (Poa 

 Ei-agrostis, L.) — Sandy waste places, eastward ; scarce. (Nat. from Eu.) 



Var. meoastAchya. Sheaths mostly glabrous ; spikelets larger (i' - 1' long), 

 becoming linear, whitish when old, 10-50-flowered. (E. megastachya. Link. 

 Briza Eragrostis, L.) — Similar situations, and more common. Aug. — Emits 

 a sharp, unpleasant odor. (Nat. from Eu.) 



* * * Erect, or in No. 3-5 diffusely spreading and ascending : panicle open, its 

 branches capillary ; the spikelets proportionally smaU, sometimes minute. (Number 

 of flowers in the spikelet very variable, according to age, §-c.) 



1- Culms slender, branching and decumbent or spreading at the base, from an annual 

 root : leaves narrow, flat, soft : branches of the nanvw panicle rather short and 

 thickly-flowered, not bearded in the axils, except sometimes the lowest sparingly. 



