6 7 



Phleum pratense L. Timothy. 



On the side of a street in town. Infrequent. Introduced from 

 hay. 



Sporobolus indicus (L.) R. Br. Smut Grass. 



Common along roads and in yards. A bad weed in lawns. 



Sporobolos junceus (Michx.) Kunth. 



Sand hills. 

 Calamagrostis cinnoides (Muhl.) Barton. 



Wet edge of Kilgore's Pond. 

 Cynodon Dactylon (L.) Pers.f Bermuda Grass. 



A common and valuable introduced grass. 



Gymnopogon ambiguus (Michx.) BSP. 



Dampish ground near the lake. North end of the paper mill 



dam. Pine woods in front of the Upper Farm Place. 

 Gymnopogon brevifolius Trin. 



Plantation Savanna. 

 Dactyloctenium aegyptium (L.) Richter. Crowfoot Grass. 



Common in open places. 

 Eleusine indica Gaertn. Wire Grass. Yard Grass. 



Roadside west of Snake Branch. 

 Eragrostis pilosa (L.) Beauv. 



Roadside west of Snake Branch. 

 Eragrostis hirsuta (Michx.) Nash. 



Roadside west of Snake Branch. 

 Arundinaria macrosperma Michx.* Large Cane. 



Common in swamps. 

 Arundinaria tecta (Walt.) Muhl.* Dwarf Cane. 



Common on edges of bays. 



Cyperaceae 



Eleocharis Torreyana Boeckl. 



In shallow water at crossing in branch by Captain Cannon's 

 sheep pasture. 



fBermuda grass is not supposed to produce seed in our States, but Miss 

 Tillman has found that at Raleigh, N. C, a considerable amount of good 

 seed is set. See Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scienttic Society, Aug., 1912. 



*I have some doubt as to the determination of these two canes. There is 

 no record of either having fruited in Hartsville. We may have only one 

 of the species. 



