10 CLXXiii. GBAMiSBiE. (J. D. Hooker.) 



Spikelets 2-fld. as in Dendrocalamus ; ovary glabrous at 



the top, fruit large, pericarp fleshy . ... . 139. MeiooalamdS. 

 Spikelets l-fld., loosely spiked on the branches of the 



panicle, bracteate ; fruit small, depressed-globose ; 



pericarp crustaceous 140. PsEUBOSTACHYXIM. 



Spikelets l-fld. as in Pseudostachymn ; fruit elongate 



beaked, pericarp crustaceous 141. TeinostACHTUM. 



Spikelets l-fld., bracteate, crowded in globose heads ; fruit 



oblong, beaked, pericarp thick, separable . . . 142. Cephalostachyum. 



Sabtribe IV. MEiocANNE.a;. Spikelets l-fld. Palea or glume-like. 

 Stamens 6-oo . Pericarp crustaceous or fleshy, seed free. 

 Spikelets in clusters on the branches of the panicle, rachilla 

 produced far beyond the fl. gl. ; fruit small, pericarp 



hard 1*3. SCHIZOSTACHYUM. 



Spikelets very minute, clustered on the branches of the 



panicle, rachilla not produced ; lodicules . ■ . 144. Dinochloa. 



Spikelets bracttate, crowded in unilateral spikes, rachilla 



not produced ; fruit very large, fleshy . . . 145. Melocakka. 

 Spikelets large, capitate or subspicate; stamens 6 or more ; 



fruit very large, pericarp fleshy .... 146. OCHIANDBA. 

 Excluded Genus. 

 Pbionanthium, Besv. Opuse. 65 t. 4, is a S. African grass, erroneously described 

 as Indian. It was subsequently published by Nees as Prionachne Ecklonii. 



Tribe I. PANioEiB. (See p. 2.) 

 1. PASPAXiVItX, Linn. 



Annual or perennial grasses. Spikelets l-fld., secnnd in simple spikes 

 or spikelike branches of a simple panicle or raceme, articulate on the 

 pedicel but not thickened and callous at the base, never avf ned. Qlumes 3 

 (homologous of II III and IV in Panicum), with rarely a very minute 

 lowest fourth (I of Panicum) ; I and II snbeqnal, membranous, both some- 

 times very small or I (at the back of the fl gl.) absent ; II. epaleate ; III 

 more coriaceous, paleate, bisexual. Stamens Z. Stifles 2, iree. Grain tree 

 ■within the hardened glume. — Species perhaps about 160, natives ot all 

 warm regions. 



As above defined, Paspalum includes the Sigitaria section of Panicum, which 

 appears to me to be artificially placed in the latter genus, because of the occasional 

 presence of a very minute scale-like glume at the base of what is the 3rd gl. of 

 Pmiicum (that opposite the flg-). This minute glume which is present or absent 

 even in the same species, is nerveless and never embraces that above it, as the lowest 

 gl. always does in Panicum proper. One Indian species alone of Panicum (P. 

 subeglume) has only 3 glumes, but its decompound panicle and the form of its spikelets 

 and its afliuities are with Panibum. 



* Spikelets orbicular or broadly oblong, ovate-oblong in P. distichum. 



1. P. scrobiculatum, Linn. Mant. i. 29 ; spikelets about as broad 

 as the flat rachis -^-j-^ in. diam. ■2-4-ranked plano-convex or hemispheric, 

 gl. I 3-nerved, II 5-nerved. Fluegge Monogr. Gram. 86 (Paspalus) ; 

 Trin. Diss. ii. 122, Oram. Panic. S6, 8p. Oram. Ic. t. 143 ; Kunth JSnum. 

 PI. i. 63 ; Steud. Syn. Oram. 21 ; Roxl. Fl. Ind. i. 278 ; Grah. Cat. Bomb. 

 PI. 234 ; Balz. 8f Gibs. Bomb. PI. Snppl. 97 ; Thio. Enum. PI. Zeyl. 857 ; 

 Trim. Cat. PI. Ceyl. 104; Aitchis. Cat. Panjab PI. 104; Wall. Cat. n.8753; 

 Wight Cat. n. 1601 ; Duthie Field and Gard. Crops, 8 t. 27 ; 

 Grasses N.W. Ind. 1; Indig. Fodd. Grass, t. 1; Fodd. Grass. N. Ind. 

 1 ; Mig. Fl. Ind. Bat. lii. 430 ; Benth. Fl. Mongk. 408, Fl. 



