HITCHCOCK AND CHASE NORTH AMERICAN PANICUM. 



199 



DISTRIBUTION. 



Wet woods and sphagnum swamps, along the Coastal Plain from New York to Florida 

 and^est to eastern Texas. Vcusj^v: VWV^ 



New York: Woodmere, Bichnell in 1902; Hempstead, Bicknell in 1903. 

 New Jersey: Speedwell, Stone 7; Wildwood, Pollardin 1897; Tuckerton, Chase 



3599; Forked River, Chase 3593; Atsion, Chase 3550, 3554; South Amboy,' 

 O- Mackenzie 2167 . , ^ 

 Indiana: Dune Park, Umbach 4962. 

 Delaware: Ogletown, Canby 11. 



Maryland: Beltsville, Chase 3743; Lanham, Chase 3475. 

 District of Columbia: Chase 5418, Greene in 1908, Kearney in 1897, Pollard 403, 



Scribner in 1894, Steele in 1899. 

 Virginia: Fort Myer, Williams in 1898; Lynn Haven, Hitchcock 364. 

 North Carolina: Wilmington, Chase 3112, 3159, Hitchcock 365, 367, 368, 369, 



1442, 1470, Kearney 260; Jack- 

 sonville, Chase 3197 ; Lake Mat- 



tamuskeet, Ashe in 1898; 



Rowan County, Smallin 1894; 



Biltmore, Biltmore Herb. 



5066b, Hitchcock 362. 

 South Carolina: Aiken, Kearney 



288 in part, Orangeburg, 



Hitchcock 363, 366. 

 Georgia: Clarke County, Harper 



88; Randolph County, Harper 



1760; Thomson, Bartlett 1136; 



Augusta, Cuthbert 529. 

 Florida: Jacksonville, Curtiss 6601; eastern Florida, Palmer 632 in 1874; Lake 



City, Hitchcock 1026; Argyle, Curtiss 6403; Apalachicola, Biltmore Herb. 800b; 



Milton, Chase 4320; Washington County, Combs 615; Waldo, Combs 687 in 



part; Homosassa, Combs 934; Eustis, Chase 4068, Nash 337, 500; Bartow, 



Lee Co. PL 481. 

 54, Tracy 3749; Flomaton, Hitchcock 1059; 



Mobile, Kearney 45. 

 Mississippi: Taylorville, Tracy 8405; Magee, Trccy 8504; Waynesboro, Kearney 



167; Ocean Springs, Tracy 95. 

 Louisiana: Oberlin, Ball 202; Lake Charles, Mackenzie 460. 

 Texas: Colmesneil, Nealley 35 in 1892. 

 In the herbarium of the Philadelphia Academy is a specimen said to be from Brazil 

 which appears to be P. lucidum. 



Fig. 202. — Distribution of P. lucidum. 



o 115. Panicum sphagnicola Nash. 



Panicum sphagnicolum[cola] Nash, Bull. Torrey Club 22: 422. 1895. "The late 

 and much branched state was collected by the writer this summer in a sphagnum bog 

 at Lake City, Florida, and will be distributed as No. 2500." The type, in Nash's 

 herbarium, consists of several culms 45 to 55 cm. high, with long intemodes and 

 divaricate branches; the primary panicle is devoid of spikelets, the secondary panicles 

 are small and few-flowered. There are three sheets of this collection in Nash's her- 

 barium, none of which is marked type. The foregoing refers to the largest specimen. 



