54 
TRIANDRIA, DIGYNIA. 
Avenaceus, 
Mich. 
S. Avenacea, Muhl. Descrip. Uber. Gram, 
Clayton, p. 15. No. 621. (Elliot.) 
Two-coloured feather-grass. 
A very sing'ular and beautiful grass from two to three feet 
high. Along the borders and open parts of the woods on the 
road from Camden to Woodbury. Not unfrequent. Peren- 
nial. July, August. 
51. Andropogon, Gen. pi. 1566, ( Gramine(S.J 
Flowers in pairs, polygamous ; the hermaphro- 
dite sessile : the masculine or neutral flow- 
er, without awn and pedicellate. — Herma- 
phrodite. Calix 2-valved, 1 flowered. 
Corolla oi 3-valves ; the second valve smal- 
ler and awned, the third interior minute. 
Stamina 1 to 3. Receptacle or rachis most- 
ly villous, hivolucrum, a fasciculate vil- 
lus at the base of the flowers. (In many 
species the leaves are boat-shaped, or like 
tumid sheaths.) Nutt. 
1. A. leaves and sheaths smooth, panicle naked 
somewhat pyramidal-oblong many flowered, 
flowers rufous triandrous, one valve of the glume 
villous, awn very much contorted. Mich. 
A. ciliatus, Elliot. 
A. nutans, Muhl. but not of Elliot, nor A. nutans 
L. 
Fringed beard-grass. 
There appears to have been some confusion between this 
species, and the A. nutans of Lin. ; and Dr. Muhlenberg con- 
sidered them as identical. In his Descriptio Uberior Gram, 
he has A. nutans, with the A. ciliatus of Mr Elliot, and the 
A. avenaceum of Michaux, as synonyms. But Mr. Elliot 
himself describes the nutans, as distinct from his ciliatus. In 
the grass intended above, which grows in profusion in Jersey, 
and in the neighbourhood of Lancaster, I have never seen 
