52 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM, 
AtaABAMA: Mobile, Mohr in 1878; Deatsville, Pollard & Mazon 307. 
Mississippr: Starkville, Kearney 9, 18; Nicholson, Kearney 372 in part; Biloxi, 
Tracy 4618, 6507; Mississippi City, Tracy 77. 
Lovuistana: Calhoun, Ball 67; McCall, Combs 1436; Burnside, Combs 1419; 
Coushatta, Ball 135; Natchitoches, Ball 139, 164; Rayville, Ball 31, 24; 
Oberlin, Ball 215, 229; South Pass, Tracy & Lloyd 471; Baton Rouge, Joor 
25; Lake Charles, Chase 4392; without locality, Langlois 29. 
Texas: Houston, Hall817; Waller County, Thurow in 1898 and 1903; Texarkana, 
Heller 4210, 4246; Clarksville, Plank 8; Llano, Plank 18 in part; Kerrville, 
Heller 1883 in part; Santa Maria, Nealley in 1889; without locality, Joor, 
Nealley in 1886. 
OxiaAnHomA: False Washita, Palmer 375 in 1868. 
BBR ASS Cea PU ae NE pea eR. EIS: 
ALIFORNIA: Fresno, Bioletts 40. 
Mexico: Head of Mazatlan River, Wright 1317 (Gray Herb.). 
Bermupas: Hamilton, Millspaugh Pl. Utow. 126. 
Banamas: Hog Island, Eggers 4405, 4512; Nassau, Curtiss 177; Cat Cay, Brace 
3742; Watlings, Geogr. Soc. Baltimore 489. 
Cusa: Herradura, Tracy 9055, 9342; Santiago de las Vegas, Hitchcock 151; Bata- 
bano, Hitchcock 150; Guanabacoa, Leon 919; without locality, Wright 3456, 
3860 in part, 3861. 
Porto Rico: Utuado, Britton & Cowell 432. 
LEEWARD Isianps: Guadeloupe, Duss 3178. 
Braziu: Bahia, Salzmann,; without locality, Riedel 959. 
Paracuay: Morong 543, 1002 in part. 
Urueuay: Montevideo, Arechavaleta. 
V 18. Panicum bartowense Scribn. & Merr. 
Panicum bartowense Scribn. & Merr. U. S. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Cire. 35: 3. 
1901. ‘‘Type specimen collected in wet, reclaimed swamps at Bartow, Polk County, 
Fla. No. 1220, Robert Combs, September 29, 1898.” 
The type, in the National Herbarium, is an erect, sim- 
ple plant about 1.75 meters high, with conspicuously 
hispid sheaths and nearly glabrous blades, the spikelets 
about 2.5 mm. long. 
DESCRIPTION. 
Plants simple or sparingly branching, as much as 2 
meters high, erect; culms glabrous, the larger as much 
as 7 mm. thick; sheaths mostly longer than the inter- 
nodes, papillose-hispid; ligules 2 to 3 mm. long, the 
ciliz more or less segregated in tufts; blades 15 to 40 cm. 
long, 5 to 13 mm. wide, glabrous or more or less pilose above, rarely sparsely hispid 
beneath, rather prominently papillose on the margin near the round but scarcely 
cordate base; panicles large and finally loosely spreading, 15 to 60 cm. long, the 
branches at first ascending, finally spreading, the short branchlets and short-pediceled 
spikelets appressed asin P. dichotomiflorum, spikelets 2.2 to 2.7 mm. long, the glumes 
and fruit asin P. dichotomiflorum. 
This species is closely allied to P. dichotomiftorum, and may be only an extreme 
form of that species. As limited here, it differs in having tall, erect, simple, or 
nearly simple culms and papillose-hispid sheaths. The blades are usually pilose 
above, though the type specimen has nearly glabrous blades, but this is the case 
Fig. 33.—P. bartowense. From 
type specimen. 
