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UNreD STATES NATIONAL HERBARIUM a VoLuME XII, PART 6

Ce PALOGUE

THE (GRASSES. OF CUBA,

By A. SN HITCHCOCK

WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1909

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The accompanying paper by A. S. Hitchcock, Systematic Agrostol- ogist of the United States Department of Agriculture, entitled Cata- logue of the Grasses of Cuba, is the result of an exhaustive study of the material in the United States National Herbarium and in the herbarium of the Estacién Central Agronémica de Cuba. It was chiefly through the efforts of Mr. Carl F. Baker, who obtained large

. collections in Cuba, that the specimens were made accessible to Mr. Hitchcock. It is hoped that this paper will be followed by similar ones upon other groups. |

a. N. Rose: Acting Curator.

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CATALOGUE OF THE GRASSES OF CUBA.

By A. S. Hrrcncock.

INTRODUCTION.

The following list of Cuban grasses is based primarily upon the collections at the Estacién Central Agronémica de Cuba, situated at Santiago de las Vegas, a suburb of Habana. The herbarium includes _ the collections made by the members of the staff, particularly Mr. C. F. Baker, formerly head of the department of botany, and also the Sauvalle Herbarium deposited by the Habana Academy of Sciences.. These specimens were examined by the writer during a short stay upon the island in the spring of 1906, and were later kindly loaned by the station authorities for a more critical study at Washington. The Sauvalle Herbarium contains a fairly complete set of the grasses col- lected by Charles Wright, the most important collection thus far obtained from Cuba. In addition to the collections at the Cuba Experiment Station, the National Herbarium furnished important material for study, including collections made by A. H. Curtiss, W. Palmer and J. H. Riley, A. Taylor (rom the Isle of Pines), S. M. Tracy, Brother Leon (De la Salle College, Habana), and the writer.

The earlier collections of Wright were sent to Grisebach for study. These were reported upon by Grisebach in his work entitled ‘‘Cata- logus Plantarum Cubensium,”’ published in 1866, though preliminary reports appeared earlier in the two parts of Plantae Wrightianae. S During the spring of 1907 I had the opportunity of examining the grasses in the herbarium of Grisebach in Gottingen.’ In the present article I have, with few exceptions, accounted for the grasses listed by Grisebach in his catalogue of Cuban plants, and have appended a list of these with references to the pages in the body of this article upon which the species are considered. The numbers upon the labels of the Wright specimens in the Grisebach Herbarium are in many cases - not the same as those under which the species were afterwards dis- tributed and under which they were listed in the catalogue. These numbers I have designated as secondary numbers. Grisebach has sometimes connected on his labels the secondary number by the sign

@Mem. Amer. Acad. n.ser. Vol. VIII. Part I, pp. 153 to 192, (as separate) 1860; Part II, pp. 503 to 536, (as separate) 1862. The grasses were included in Part IT. bUnless otherwise stated the writer has examined all the types mentioned in this

- paper:

183

184 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

of equality with the distribution number. The data upon the Grise- bach labels are meager, usually consisting of the number and year, together with an abbreviation for eastern or western Cuba. The distribution numbers of the grasses reported upon by Grisebach are all below 3500. Wright, after his return from Cuba, studied his col- lections at the Gray Herbarium and published his results in a series of articles in conjunction with Doctor Sauvalle, of Cuba.* In the

a Anales de la Academia de Ciencias, Médicas, Fisicas y Naturales de la Habana, Volumes V to IX, 1868 to 1872. This was reset and, an index being added, pub- lished in 1873 as Flora Cubana. The introduction to the first installment of the series (5: 196. 1868) is as follows: ‘‘Revisio Catalogi Grisebachiani vel index planta- rum cubensium ad catalogum Cl. Grisebachii anno 1866 editum attemperata, pluribus Wrightianis novis speciebus aucta, valde quoque emendata, a cl. C. Wright; omnia pro Annalibus Regiae Academiae Scientiarum Havanensis digesta, nominibusque adjectis cubensibus vulgo receptis a Francisco A. Sauvalle. Setiembre, 1868.” Each continuation is headed ‘‘Revisto Catalogi Grisebachiani vel Index Plantarum Cubensium; a Francisco A. Sauvalle.’’ The reprint has a title page as follows: - ‘“‘Flora Cubana. | Enumeratio Nova Plantarum Cubensium | vel | Revisio Catalogi Grisebachiani, | Exhibens |. Descriptiones Generum Specierumque | Nova- rum | Caroli Wright, (Cantabrigiae) et Francisci Sauvalle, | Synonymis | nomini- busque vulgaribus Cubensisadjectis. | Auctore | Francisco A. Sauvalle, | Academiae Scientiarum Havanensis. | Havanae. | Imp. “‘La Antilla,’’ de cacho-negrete, | Calle de Cuba num. 51. | 1873.

The Gramineae appeared in Vol. VIII, 1871. The article was entirely reset for the reprint, but a comparison of this portion of the original with the reprint shows very few errors. In the original the serial numbers of the Gramineae occur as follows:

Numbers. Page. Numbers. Page. Sto 2707 eo ee ee 157. || 2798 to 2800... 205 DIOR to. Ofna ee ke cee 158 || 2801 to 2812. <.....0:45. 2 D756 toD7042 eee ee ete gat 200: || 2813 to 2898: 4... ee 207 D7 Go toe7 60. gee sakte ee Sa ee 901 || 2829 to 28b5=- 208 2770 t0 2780: sacs ee), 202" || 2856 to 2860.2. 209 DRSl to 270k eto. ee Soh a 203 «|i 28700 28782. : i222 2. 287 DOO 210 7a8 5 ak ee 904 |. 2879 to 28912 2..-2 288

In the reprint the numbers are as follows:

Numbers. Page. N umbers. . + | Page. LU DATED LN OLS. ene come ye ea a eee 1903-2799 to: 28124 262 oo eee 1a7 P1388: 40: 210A ns 8 oc So oe Ee AO it ZS re O ek ae ee eo 198 1 GS LO 2 LOO Boncey eae ooo cutee 192. || 2820 to 2844.5. ...-..5-< 3.2 199 BE OO LOL UO sae oan ae eee eee 193° 2845°t0: 2869). =. < 200 2101 to 2789. 222 occ on OS, 28700 2884. eee 201 ZA WET ROWPAEDS | Wha si a shea Re aie eM Ss 7a 195: || 2889 to: 2699 2e. 2- 202 PT UO 20 OD cok liar lnk a pe her 196

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 185

present paper the new species published in Sauvalle’s article are credited to Wright. The original set upon which Sauvalle’s list is based is at the Gray Herbarium, and a fairly complete duplicate set is in the Sauvalle Herbarium.

The sets of Wright’s plants were made up at the Gray Herbarium and given herbarium distribution numbers. Hach number included such collections as were thought to be of the same species. Thus it often occurs that different specimens of the same distribution num- ber may have been collected in different localities or may even belong to different species. The data found upon the field labels in various herbaria are mentioned under each species in the present list. There is also appended a list of the species of grasses included in Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana, with references to their identification, and a list of the Wright numbers in sequence with their identification.

The plan followed in the present paper is to give under specimens cited a list of the specimens found in the herbarium of the Estacién Central Agronémica, including the Sauvalle Herbarium, and in the National Herbarium, without statement as to the herbarium in which they are deposited. 'To these are added specimens found in the Gray Herbarium which do not occur in the herbaria just mentioned, and finally, specimens in the Herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden (Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.), including the herbarium of Colum- bia University, of which the Torrey Herbarium forms a part, which are not found in the others mentioned. The specimens collected by the staff of the botanical department of the Cuba Experiment Station are numbered in a single series and are indicated in this list by the letters HC (Herbarium Cubae). The data for the Wright specimens, given in the paragraph devoted to the enumeration of specimens, are understood to be found with the specimens in the Sauvalle Her- barium. Additional data, found with specimens in other herbaria, are quoted in the succeeding paragraph devoted to notes. :

Grisebach enumerated 154 species of grasses in his catalogue. Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana includes 170 species. The present list includes 228 species or well-marked subspecies.

KEY TO THE GENERA.*

SERIES PanicEAE.—Spikelets 1-flowered, rarely 2-flowered; when 2-flowered the

terminal floret perfect, the lower staminate or neutral (except in Isachne), no apparent

internode between them; rachilla articulated below the glumes, the spikelets falling

from the pedicels entire, singly, in groups, or together with joints of an articulate

rachis; spikelets not laterally compressed (except in Lithachne).

Lemma and palea (the latter sometimes wanting in Andropogoneae) hyaline; glumes more or less indurated, the first largest; sterile lemma like fertile lemma in texture (except in Alloteropsis).

“Jn this key the tribal characters are given with reference to the Cuban genera only, and in some cases would not hold good for the entire tribe.

186 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

Staminate and pistillate spikelets in different inflorescences; pistillate spikelets inclosed in a bony bead-like involucre (MAaypEaA®)..........1. Coix (p. 190). Spikelets all perfect, or unisexual and arranged in pairs, the pistillate sessile, the staminate pedicellate (or all pedicellate in Trachypogon). (ANDROPOGONEAE.) Joints of the rachis much thickened and excavated to receive the spikelets. First glume of the perfect spikelet flat or somewhat convex; perennials. 6. ae (p. 191). eee glume of the perfect spikelet hemispherical, pitted; annual. 7. Hackelochloa (p. 191). Joints of rachis not thickened nor excavated for the reception of the spikelets. Spikelets all alike, perfect; inflorescence a plume-like panicle. Axis of racemes continuous, not articulate; spikelets awnless. 2. Imperata (p. 190). Axis of racemes articulated.

Spikelets awnless.-.........-../--...--- 3. Saccharum (p. 190). Spikelets ayned 0. / oh nee ee 4. Erianthus (p. 190). Spikelets not alike. All pedicellate; the perfect long-pedicellate, long-awned, the stami- | nate short-pedicellate, awnless.........- 8. Trachypogon (p. 191).

Sessile and pedicellate, the former perfect, awned, the latter stami- nate, empty or wanting. Perfect spikelets transversely rugose..... 5. Ischaemum (p. 191). Perfect spikelets not transversely rugose.

Sessile spikelets not all alike, the first to fifth pairs homog- amous; awns 10cm. long, stout; glumes bearing oil glands, lemon-scented when fresh... ... 13. Heteropogon (p. 196).

Sessile spikelets alike throughout.

Racemes of several to many joints, at least some of the racemes sessile .........-..- 9. Andropogon (p. 192). Racemes reduced to 1 or 2 joints, all the racemes more or less pedunculate. Pedicellate spikelets present, usually 2 to each sessile spikelet...........-. 10. Holcus (p. 195). Pedicellate spikelets wanting. Awns not over 2 cm. long, delicate. 11. Sorghastrum (p. 195). Awns over 10 cm. long, stout.” 12. Rhaphis (p. 195). Lemma and palea membranaceous or indurated; sterile lemma when present like the

glumes in texture. . Lemma and palea membranaceous; axis of inflorescence not breaking up at maturity.

Spikelets 3 to 5 together, the clusters arranged in spikes, the glumes indu- rated. (ZOYSIEAE.) .

Glumes covered with hooked spines.-...-..-.--.-.-.-- 14. Nazia (p. 196). . Glumes not spiny, united into a somewhat pitcher-shaped pseudo-

am VOhWete fo eo yas See Cee me ne ee eee 15. Anthephora (p. 196). Spikelets distinct, paniculate. (TRISTEGINEAE.) :

Fertile lemma awned; rather robust grasses. ...16. Arundinella (p. 196).

Fertile lemma awnless; low grass with tuft of involute rather wiry basal

leaves [doubtfully placed in this tribe]....-...- 17. Triscenia (p. 198).

Lemma and palea cartilaginous or chartaceous-indurated, conspicuously differ-

ent in texture from the membranaceous glumes, rarely but little sao (PANICEAE.)

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. © 187 Spikelets unisexual; plants moncecious; blades abruptly contracted into petiole-like bases.

Inflorescence consisting of 2 slender racemes, one staminate the other pistillate, digitate at the summit of a naked culm; leafy stems dis- tinct from the base; plants low .........-.-... 44. Mniochloa (p. 233).

Inflorescence borne on leafy culms; fruit bony-indurated.

Fruit dorsally compressed; panicles terminal on culms or leafy branches, pistillate spikelets above, staminate spikelets below in Raume spamnle, face a oe lek FS Ss ae GE 42. Olyra (p. 233).

Fruit laterally compressed, oergevonds gibbous on upper dorsum; panicles all axillary or axillary and terminal, the terminal when present wholly pramunare: Ene Weegee, a Same 43. Inthachne (p. 233).

Spikelets all perfect.

Spikelets 2 to 4 together sunken in the alternate notches of a broad, thickened rachis; creeping grasses ........ 41. Stenotaphrum (p. 232).

Spikelets not sunken in notches of a thickened rachis.

Spikelets solitary or in small clusters subtended by an involucre consisting of 1 to many bristles (sterile branches), these some- times grown together.

Involucre persistent on the axis, spikelets deciduous. 36. Chaetochloa (p. 230). Involucre deciduous with and attached to the spikelets. Involucre a spiny bur inclosing | to 5 Spe

: . Cenchrus (p. 231). Involucre of distinct bristles.

Involucre of a single sterile branch produced beyond each spikelet ...............-40. Paratheria (p: 232). Involucre of numerous often plumose bristles.

38. Pennisetum (p. 232). Spikelets not involucrate.

Fruits not rigid, margins of lemma not inrolled. Inflorescence of slender racemes, divergently digitate at the summit of the culm, both glumes wanting. 18. Reimarochloa (p. 198). Inflorescence ane

Blades cordate-clasping, fruit open at summit; aquatic or semiaquatic grasses........ 29. Hymenachne (p. 212)..

Blades not cordate-clasping. Spikelets awned, first glume with a pedicel- like callus. - Pe eae soo Chace (p22): Spikelets Soules ; ae cartilaginous-indurated, papillose, usually dark-colored, lemmas with

thin, usually white margins.

Fruit open at the white-margined summit; spikelets tuberculate-hispid between the nerves .....-.- 21. Leptocoryphium (p. 207). Fruit not open nor white-margined at summit. _ Sterile lemma like the fertile lemma in texture .......26. Alloteropsis (p. 210). Sterile lemma like the glumes in texture. Spikelets. clothed with long silky haste Lessee 25. Valota (p. 210). Spikelets glabrous or pubescent only.

24, Syntherisma (p. 208).

188 ' CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

Fruits indurated-rigid (or if thin not open at the summit nor hyaline-margined). Spikelets placed with the back of the fruit turned away from the main axis. First glume and rachilla joint forming a swollen ring- like callus; fruit mucronate or shortly awn-pointed.. 22. Ervochloa (p. 207). First glume present or wanting, not forming a ring-like callus; spikelets in slender racemes.

First glume as long as the spikelet or nearly so; spikelets swollen on the side toward the axis and fitting into alternate hollows; inflorescence a sin- gleraceme.c.222 2 o5 ee 27. Mesosetum (p. 211).

First glume wanting or not over one-fourth the length of the spikelet.

Racemes racemose along the main axis; first

glume present......- 28. Brachiaria (p. 212).

Racemes digitate or subdigitate, first glume

wanting..... eta 20. Axonopus (p. 207).

Spikelets with the back of the fruit turned toward the main

axis. Unt

Spikelets plano-convex, subsessile in spike-like

racemes, typically lacking the first glume (both glumes wanting in P. pulchellum). .

19. Paspalum (p. 199).

Spikelets unequally biconvex; paniculate, or if race-

mose the first glume present.

“Bertite flereta 2221s fe ane 23. Isachne (p. 208).

Fertile floret 1.

Glumes awnless. Second glume broad and saccate, panicle contracted or spike-like. 30. Sacciolepis (p. 212). Second glume not broad nor saccate. - Margins of lemma inrolled; no lateral appendages nor excavations at base of trust. .s. 32. Panicum (p. 214). Margins of lemma not inrolled; either lateral appendages or excavations at base of fruit. 33. Ichnanthus (p. 228). ~Glumes or one of them awned, or cuspidate. Fruit cuspidate, palea free at the tip; second glume and sterile lemma tapering into an awn or cuspidate point. 31. Echinochloa (p. 213). Fruit not cuspidate, palea not free; awns arising from a toothed summit. Spikelets clothed with’ rose-colored silky hairs; first glume minute. 34. Tricholaena (p. 229). Spikelets pubescent with short pale hairs, first glume nearly as long as the second.35. Oplismenus (p. 229).

HITCHCOCK——GRASSES OF CUBA. 189

Serres PoaceaE.—Spikelets 1 to many-flowered, the imperfect or rudimentary floret, if any, uppermost; rachilla articulated (except in Oryzeae) above the glumes, which are persistent on the pedicel or rachis after the fall of the florets; when 2 to many-flowered a manifest internode of the rachilla separating the florets and articu- lated below them; spikelets laterally compressed.

Spikelets articulated below the glumes. (ORYZEAE.) Spikelets unisexual, plants moncecious. Spikelets in pairs, one large, perfect, sessile, the other small, staminate, long- pediceled; the broad oblanceolate blades with transverse veins between

the longitudinal nerves. . ... gee eee eh ee epee a ae 45. Pharus (p. 234). Spikelets not in pairs, the staminate and pistillate in different panicles; blades; linear, “not eross-vemmed ..2.....-.-2-22-2-2- 46. Luziola (p. 234). Spikelets all perfect. | Glumes wanting, lemma awnless............. 48. Homalocenchrus (p. 234).

Glumes present. Glumes minute, awnless; lemma awned except in cultivated forms. 47. Oryza (p. 234). Glumes about as long as the floret or longer, awned. Glumes tapering into awns; spikelets, including awns, over 3 cm.

NTE ee ee oe Se Ae Ae Sa ee SLY 49. Achlaena (p. 235). Glumes awned irom the notched apex; spikelets, including awns, SCarcelyomb CMe lone re.) SSeS 50. Reynaudia (p. 235).

Spikelets articulated above the glumes. Oulms woody, perennial, at least at the base, leaf blades commonly articulated with and deciduous from the sheath. (BAMBUSEAE.) 66. Arthrostylidium (p. 245). Culms herbaceous, annual, leaf blades not articulated with the sheath. Inflorescence of l-sided spikes or racemes, spikelets sessile or nearly so. (CHLORIDEAE.) Plants dicecious or monoecious, the staminate awnless, pistillate with numerous awns; low stoloniferous grass....... .-60. Opizia (p. 242). Plants not dicecious, spikelets all alike. Spikelets with 1 perfect floret, sometimes 1 or more sterile florets above the perfect one. No sterile florets, spikelets awnless, spikes slender, digitate. ; 54. Capriola (p. 238). One or two sterile florets above the perfect one, spikelets gen- erally awned. Spikes digitate or approximate in apparent whorls at the BUM Or the ema. 45.2556 aS. 55. Chloris (p. 238). _ Spikes remote along the main axis. .56. Bowteloua (p. 240). Spikelets with 2 or 3 perfect florets. Spikes alternate, more or less remote along the main axis, spike- lets not crowded ........-.-.----------59. Leptochloa (p. 241). Spikes digitate or nearly so, spikelets crowded. -Axis of spike not produced beyond the uppermost spikelet, elumes and lemmas not cuspidate...57. Eleusine (p. 241). Axis of spike produced into a naked cuspidate point, glumes and lower lemmas cuspidate.58. Dactyloctenium (p. 241). Inflorescence paniculate, sometimes contracted but spikelets never sessile in 1-sided spikes. Spikelets 1-flowered. (AGROSTIDEAE.) iceninra awnless! oleae oS. SS OE eee 53. Sporobolus (p. 237).

190 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

Lemma awned. Lemma indurated, convolute, awn 3-fid (lateral awns minute or wanting In A. seaera) 52 Sea ee ee, 51. Aristida (p. 235). Lemmas not indurated, tapering into a capillary awn.

52. Muhlendergia (p. 237).

Spikelets 2 to many-flowered. (FESTUCEAE.) Lemmas cleft above into a ips bcs crown of bristles. 61. Pappophorum (p. 242). Lemmas entire. Lemmas clothed with long silky hairs, tall, reed-like, dicecious prassed .. 2Sy 0 Te aot See eee Pe .-62. Gynervum (p. 242). Lemmas not clothed with silky hairs, Lemmas3-nerved, not at allindurated .63. Eragrostis (p.242). Lemmas many-nerved, somewhat indurated and rigid. Sterile lemmas 1 to 3 above the glumes; plants not deeCious oi 72 eos te 64. Uniola (p. 245). Sterile lemmas above glumes none; plants dicecious. 65. Distichlis (p. 245).

CATALOGUE OF GENERA AND SPECIES. 1. COILS L-Sp- 1-92. 1758.

1. Coix lachryma-jobi L. Sp. Pl. 972.1753.

Pinar del Rio, Baker & Abarca, HC 3686; El Guama, Palmer & Riley 142.

This is originally from tropical Asia, but is now cultivated for ornament in the warmer regions of both hemispheres, whence it has escaped.

2. IMPERATA Ciril. Pl. Rar. Ic. 2: 26. pl. 11. 1792.

1. Imperata brasiliensis Trin. Mem. Acad. Petersb. VI. 2: 331. 1833.

La Magdalena, Baker HC 4946; Madruga, Britton 630; without locality, Wright ~ 3486; Cienfuegos, Combs 701, in Gray Herbarium; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.; Pinar del Rio, Shafer 310 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

The type in the Trinius Herbarium is from Serra da Lapa, Brazil, though Trinius in the original publication cites merely ‘“‘V. spp. Brazil.”’ JI. caudata Trin., as shown by the type in the Trinius Herbarium, differs in having smaller spikelets

(about 2.5 mm. long), longer and more copious hairs, and an elongated inflores-—

cence. The spikelets of J. brasiliensis are 4 mm. long. Wright’s specimen (3486)

is the latter species as shown by the specimen in the herbarium of Grisebach and_

in that of Sauvalle. This is referred to J. caudata by Grisebach@ and Sauvalle.? 3. SACCHARUM L. Sp. Pl. 54. 1753.

1. Saccharum officinarum L. Sp. Pl. 54. 1753. Cienfuegos, Pringle 17; Guanajay, Curtiss 635. This species (sugar banie) is grown in all tropical countries, ied the above speci-

mens are from cultivated plants.

4. ERIANTHUS Michx. FI. Bor. Amer. 1: 54. 1803.

1. Erianthus saccharoides Michx. Fl. Bor. Amer. 1: 55. 1803. Laguna San Mateo, Pinar del Rio, Wright 3903. In Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana this is called Andropogon alopecuroides L. The latter

species, however, has a twisted awn, while in £. saccharoides the awn is straight or

only slightly bent, not twisted.

aCat. Pl. Cub. 236. 1866. b Anal. Acad. Cienc. Habana 8: 288. 1871; Fl. Cub. 202. ere

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 191

5. ISCHAEMUM L. Sp. Pl. 1049. 1753.

1. Ischaemum rugosum Salisb. Icon. Stirp. Rar. 1791. Madruga, Curtiss 533, ‘‘Wet ground beside railroad.’’ A native southeastern Asia, introduced in Cuba.

6. MANISURIS L. Mant. PI. 2: 164, 300. 1771.

Water lume trausyersely wrinkled_- 2. 2-2... ce lute ee 1. M. loricata. Outer glume with three longitudinal furrows..........-....-.-----.-- 2. M. impressa.

1. Manisuris loricata (Trin.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 780. 1891. Rottboellia loricata Trin. Mem. Acad. Petersb. VI. 2: 250. 1833. Rottboellia filifolia Wright, Anal. Acad. Cienc. Habana 8: 209. 1871; Fl. Cub. 200. i Herradura, Baker HC 2963, Baker & Abarca HC 4181, Tracy 9059, Hitchcock in 1906; Dayaniguas, Wright 3905. _ Trinius’s type specimen, which comes from Serra’ da Lapa, Brazil, has trans- versely rugose outer glumes, as in the Wright specimen.

2. Manisuris impressa (Griseb.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 780. 1891.

Rottboellia vmpressa Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 235. 1866.

El Salado, Wright 3904.

The type specimen in Grisebach’s herbarium is accompanied by the printed blank label with the year 1865, but no locality. The label also bears the secondary num- ber 201. |

The specimen in the Sauvalle Herbarium is from El Salado and is numbered 3904. The Wright specimen in the National Herbarium is numbered 3904 upon an 1865 label like that of the type. These may be all of the same collection.

| = p

v (-

7. HACKELOCHLOA Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 776. 1891.

1. Hackelochloa granularis (L.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 776. 1891.

Cenchrus granularis L. Mant. 2: 575. 1771.

Manisuris granularis Sw. Prod. 25. 1788.

Punta Brava, Baker HC 4047; Madruga, ‘Shafer 22, 65; Isle of Pines, Palmer & Riley 1084, 1092, Curtiss 493; Hoban Leon 213; ia Masdalena, Baker 6; without locality, Wright 1553 in 1865; Pieridae Tracy 9100, 9101.

The Grisebach specimen is Wright 1553, collected in eastern Cuba, 1859. Wright’s 1553 in the Gray Herbarium is from ‘‘open grassy places at Saltadera, Sept. 11.”

8. TRACHYPOGON Nees, Agrost. Bras. 341. 1829.

Pemmie a MECE Set UESCCMt 2c eee 2. 2 eh Seti eek ee eee 1. T. filifolius. Awn strongly SS SEIe ee aaa 9 Si ae po T. gouinr.

1. Trachypogon filifolius (Hack.) Vn

Trachypogon polymorphus B filrfolius Hack. in ee ‘Mon. oe 6: 325. 1889.

In small tufts in pebbly pinales,z October, Pinar del Rio, Wright 3893; in large tufts; low damp pinales,¢ Pinar del Rio, Wright 3892; Herradura, Baker HC 2155.

This species is characterized by the elongated, closely convolute blades, the single racemes, and the erect awn 4 cm. long, short-pilose below, and by being glabrous throughout, except the slightly barbed nodes. Culm 100 to 150 cm. tall.

2. Trachypogon gouini Fourn. Mex. PI. 2: 66. 1886. Torteleza de la Cabana, Baker & Van Hermann HC without number; San Fran- cisco de Paula near Habana, Leon 209; Habana, Leon 300; Triscornia, Tracy 9086. Awn 7 to 8 cm. long, very plumose to the tip.

a Pine woods.

ptakn Heck. LG. Gea. ee TF. /2ITTY es a Berglnertar, )”

192 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

9. ANDROPOGON L. Sp. Pl. 1045. 1753.

Racemes numerous in a leafless terminal panicle................. 7. A. lewcopogon. Racemes 1 to 4, solitary or fascicled from spathes. . Racemes solitary. : : Spikelets awnlese'.... 5-2". ao. 3 ete eee 11. A.spathiflorus. Spikelets awned. Outer glume of sterile spikelet conspicuous and bract-

hike os. .0o.. vn oe ee ee ee 4. A. fastigiatus. Outer glume not conspicuous. Plants annual; racemes delicate ............-... 2. A. brevifolius.

Plants eee ‘racemes not delicate. Racemes cylindrical, stiff and spike-like. Sterile pedicel ciliate its entire length;

spikelets 5 to 6 mm. long............ 10. A. semiberbis. Sterile pedicel ciliate only at apex; spike- lets 4-mm lone? 2. 2 fh. Be eee 12. A. tener.

Racemes zigzag, axis lax and slender; spike «lets about 3 mm. long.

- Racemes conspicuously villous.|,.......- 6. A. gracilis. Racemes sparsely villous, spikelets about 6am ones ho ase eee oe 3. A. cubensis.

Racemes 2 to 4 from each spathe. Spathes numerous in a large corymb.

Spukelets awiless:: 2 ....c¢ opel cei Be eee 1. A. bicornis. Spikelets, long-awned 22.) ../ 34.225 2 -eeees eee 5. A. glomeratus. Spathes scattered or the inflorescence naked and terminal. Racemes shorter than the spathe.................... 13. A. virginicus. Racemes naked, terminal. Spikeletsawned 7... 52s l2 eee sae se oe eee 9. A. nashianus. Spikelets :awnlesss.¢ ctr Ste ee eee eee S:. ae leucostachys.

1. Andropogon bicornis L. Sp.-Pl. 1046. 1753.

Arroyo Galiano, -O’Donovan HC 5217; Santiago de las Vegas, Wilson 439; Pinar del Rio, Palmer & Riley 86; Isle of Pines, ee 294; Retiro, in Savannas, Wright 3902; El Jobe Palmer & Riley 95; Nueva Gerona, Papas & Riley 1125; witha locality (1865) Wright 1555; eee Hitchcock in 1906; Cieptuegos, Conte 265 in Gray Herbarium; Meine, Britton & Shafer 773 in Herb® Ny ?Bot? Gard.

Wright’s 770 from eastern Cuba (1859) is A. bicornis as shown by the specimen in Grisebach’s herbarium. -

Wright’s 1555 as distributed consists in part of Andropogon bicornis and in part of A.glomeratus. The latter is distinguished by the long-awned spikelets.

2. Andropogon brevifolius Sw. Prod. 26. 1788.

Madruga, Curtiss 530; without locality, Wright 1558; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906.

The Wright specimen in the National Herbarium bears a blank label of 1865. No. 1558 in the Grisebach Herbarium is from eastern Cuba, 1859, but the plant is A. tener (there has probably been some misplacement of labels here). In the latter her- barium is a specimen from western Cuba, 1863, with the secondary number 925, upon which Grisebach has marked ‘‘=1558.’’ One sheet of Wright 1558 in the Gray Herbarium is A. tener, the other A. brevifolius, from ‘‘Pinales San Diego de Bafios, Nov. 16.”

3. Andropogon cubensis Hack. Flora 68: 121. 1885.

Without locality, Wright 3898. ;

This number was not seen by Grisebach, but is listed in Sauvalle’s Flora Cnbess without specific name. :

B ~Fuad ~ : ; y ay ae 4 ae - -—

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 193

4. Andropogon fastigiatus Sw. Prod. 26. 1788.

Dry savannas October 26. Wright 3483.

No. 34838 of Wright, 1865, is accompanied by two supplementary labels, ‘‘Savannas, San Cristobal, Nov.,’’ and ‘‘Culms few or single, sandy pine woods, Pinar del Rio, Dec.’’ The Grisebach specimen of this is from ‘‘Cub. occ. 1863”’ and bears the sec- ondary number ‘‘921—3483.’’ No. 3485 [error for 3483?] in the Gray Herbarium was collected by Wright in 1860-64 in ‘‘sandy pine woods, Asiento Viejo, Los Remales, Wee--2:”

5. Andropogon glomeratus (Walt.) B.S.P. Prel. Cat. N. Y. 67. 1888.

Cinna glomerata Walt. Fl. Car. 59. 1788.

Andropogon macrourum Michx. Fl. Bor. Amer. 1: 56. 1803.

Hanabana, Wright 1555; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 294, Taylor 18 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.; Batabano, Shafer 224; Habana, Schott 103; Guanabacoa, Leon 565, 572; Santiago de las Vegas, Wilson 2207 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.; Matanzas, Britton & Wilson 83, 94 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.; Maraguana, Wilson 7553 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

Wright’s 1555 in the National Herbarium is A. bicornis. The specimen in the Grise- bach Herbarium with this number is A. glomeratus, but it is from eastern Cuba, col- lected in 1859. In the Gray Herbarium one sheet of Wright 1555 (1859) is A. glomeratus, another (1865) is A. bicornis.

6. Andropogon, gracilis Spreng. Syst. 1:284. 1825.

Schizachyrium gracile Nash in Small, Fl. Southeast. U. S. 60. 1903.

Wright 3484 [3480.in Sauv. Fl. Cub.] without data. Isle of Pines, Curtiss 380, Taylor 17; Buena Vista, Shafer in 1903; Herradura, Baker & Dimmock HC 4829, Tracy 9067; Candelaria, Earle & Wilson HC 1637; Calvario, Leon 562.

Wright’s 3484 in the Grisebach Herbarium has a blank label of 1860-64, but is without other data. The Wright specimen of this species in the National Herbarium has a blank label of 1865, with the number 204 and also a tag in Wright’s handwriting, ‘“Pine woods, Cagalbana, Apr. 17.’’ Wright’s 1557, in the Grisebach Herbarium, “Cub. or.’’ in 1859, is also A. gracilis. This species was described under Andropogon scoparius Michx. in Sagra’s History of Cuba.@

7. Andropogon leucopogon Nees, Linnaea 19: 694. 1847.

Isle of Pines, Curtiss 382; Wright 1556 in Grisebach Herbarium.

In the Grisebach Herbarium and in the Gray Herbarium Wright 1556 is labeled as collected in eastern Cuba in 1859. Curtiss’s specimen was distributed under an

unpublished name.A-€hn $23

8. Andropogon leucostachys H.B.K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 1: 187. 1816.

Andropogon domingensis Roem. & Schult. Syst. 2:809. 1817.

Isle of Pines, Curtiss 314, Taylor 16; Madruga, Baker HC 3458; Herradura, Earle HC 3111, Tracy 9046, Consolacion del Sur, Palmer & Riley 480; bushy savannas, Hanabana, May 17, Wright 3900.” | »Grisebach’s specimen of this has an 1865 label with the secondary number 202. = >

' 9. Andropogon nasnianus sp. nov. Culms solitary or few in a cluster, simple, slender, erect, glabrous, 30 to 45 cm. high, nodes glabrous; sheaths glabrous or sparsely pilose toward the summit, much shorter than the elongated internodes, broader at the summit than the base of the

@ Rich. in Sagra, Hist. Cub. 11: 320. 1850. The types of the grasses described by Richard in this work are at the Museum d’ Histoire Naturelle at Paris. The types of Panicum were examined by the writer in the spring of 1907. Fragments from the types of five other species were later sent to the National Herbarium through the kindness of Director Le Comte.

4 61170—voL 12, pr 6—09——2 met} f? yet Par fi Ciel m } WH. 3966 > Birelileray , Liye suoct ped

ohh beer, Oe. ae : . 2 j y " %e 6 a a

194 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

blade thus forming more or less of a shoulder; blades narrow, folded, appressed, gla- brous, 1 to 4 cm. long, 1 mm. wide, the basal as much as 10 cm. long, the uppermost reduced to points 1 to 3 mm. long; inflorescence at the summit of the naked culm, the peduncle long-exserted from the uppermost sheath; racemes in pairs 3 to 4 cm. long, very villous with tawny hairs 5 to 7 mm. long from the rachis and the sterile pedicel; sessile spikelets 3 to 4mm. long, as long as or slightly longer than the internodes of the rachis; first glume nerveless between the scabrous keels, second glume slightly shorter than the first, sterile and fertile lemmas hyaline, slightly shorter than the second glume, the fertile lemma bearing an awn which extends 10 to 15 mm. beyond the spike- let; stamen 1; sterile pedicel 3 mm. long, bearing an involute scale 1 to 2 mm. long.

Type, Cuba, Wright 3899, no. 35320 in U. 8S. National Herbarium.

Sandy pine woods, western Cuba. In addition to the type this species is represented by: Herradura, AMitchcock in 1906, Tracy 9069.

The specimen of Wright 3899 in the Sauvalle Herbarium is labeled ‘‘Sandy pine woods, Pinar del Rio. Sept. Culms few or single, scattering.”’

This species is named for Mr. George V. Nash, who, while studying the species of Andropogon in the National Herbarium, suggested that the above-mentioned speci- mens did not belong to A. leucostachys, to which they had been referred. The species

is allied to A. leucostachys H. B. K. and A,subtenyis Nash. a. D , aL Wace Ege $7 3 4. 10. Andropogon semiberkis (Nees) Kunth, Enum. 1:489. 1833.

WSchizachyrium semiberbe Nees, Agrost. Bras. 336. 1829. Wright 389]. (in 1865). Hecbans Lon 199C) (629.

11. Andropogon spathifiorus (Nees) Kunth, Enum. 1: 496. 1833.

Hypogynium spathiflorum Nees, Agrost. Bras. 366. 1829.

Anatherum spathifiorum Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 236. 1866.

Wright 3481; Herradura, Baker & Dimmock HC 4814; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 460, Taylor 23. .

The Sauvalle specimen has two labels, ‘‘Savannas Dayaniguas Sept.”’ and “‘ Pinales, Dayaniguas Sept.’’ Another sheet has a blank label, ‘‘3480 Anatherum inerme Gris.”’ In the Grisebach Herbarium are two sheets of this, one marked 3481 on an 1860-64 label, and another marked ‘‘899=3481, Cub. occ. 1863.’’ Thespecimenin the National Herbarium with the number 3481 has this on an 1865 label. .

In the Grisebach Herbarium there are two other sheets of this species, marked Anatherum inerme Griseb., ‘3480 Cuba 1860-64,’’ and ‘‘898=3480, Cub. occ. 1863.’’ I have not seen the type of Anatherum inerme (Steud.) Griseb.¢ (Andropogon imermis Steud.)®, which is from Venezuela,.but Hackel placesit under Andropogon spathiflorus as variety inermis.¢ I do not see that Wright’s 3480 differs from 3481. Nees’s type at Munich is the same. One sheet of this species in the Gray Herbarium is marked ‘“3480=3481” and is from ‘‘pinales (wet), Los Almacigos, July 29;” another from the same locality is marked ‘‘3481—3480.”’ in

12. Andropogon tener (Nees) Kunth, Rev. Gram. 2: 565. 1832.

Schizachyrium tenerum Nees, Agrost. Bras. 336. 1829.

Wright 3482; Herradura, Tracy 9065.

Grisebach’sspecimen is labeled ‘‘Cub. occ. 1863’ and is numbered ‘‘914=3482.”” The Wright specimen in the National Herbarium has an 1865 label. Wright’s 3482 in the Gray Herbarium is from ‘‘savannas, Almacigos, July 25.’’ One sheet of Wright’s 1558 in the Gray Herbarium is this species, the other is A. brevifolius.

13. Andropogon virginicus L. Sp. Pl. 1046. 1753. Wright 3901; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker & Wilson HC 599; Guanabacoa, Leon 193. The Sauvalle specimen has no data. The Wright specimen in the National Her- barium bears an 1865 label.

a Cat. Pl. Cub. 236. 1866. ¢ Mart. Fl. Bras. 23: 296. 1883. - > Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 390: 1854. : f 7 7 em ¢ ee Couey A Crege Lad tarcteccehen 24 Ag roster las Mfreg, Law FS = C et _ Hobe flake 19 ee ee j é }

Ta a” V2

ig avivwie> d. ; | f. 2 }. oe a OT pe Aer rrotrmrces = ae, eee "2 ah ae

a 95 * Hy ms |

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a

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 195

(10. HOLCUS L. Sp. Pl. 1047. 1753.4

1. Holcus halepensis L. Sp. Pl. 2: 1047. 1753.

Andropogon halepensis Brot. Fl. Lusit. 1: 89. 1804.

Sorghum halepense Pers. Syn. 1: 101. 1805.

Habana, Curtiss 561, Leon 271; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 503, Hitchcock in 1906; Guanajay, Palmer & Riley 664, 815; without data, Wright 3488; Vedado, Leon 424. .

Wright’s 3488 in the Grisebach Herbarium bears the data, ‘‘Cub. or. 1860-64, fields near Matanzas.’’

11. SORGHASTRUM Nash in Britton, Man. 71. 1901.6

Pent min long se Pe eek ee Westone : S. francavillanum. Awn not over MBI OOS yeas See pe iE ne Soe oe | S. setosum. 1. Sorghastrum francavillanum (Fourn.). ~ alh pet ph>

Andropogon francavillanus Fourn. Mex. PI. 2: 56. 1886.

Pinar del Rio, Wright 3896; Herradura, Baker HC 2179.

The Sauvalle specimen fee two labels, ‘‘Sandy pine woods Oct.,’’ and ‘‘ Low savan- nas and pinales Sept.’”’ The Wright specimen in the National Ferbane has an 1865 label. This species has a loose panicle, with slender branches; the spikelets are about 5 mm. long, light brown, sparsely pilose on the lower half; the pedicel of the upper spikelet about 4 mm. long, awn 10 to 15 mm. long, once, or more or less twice, genicu- late; blades long and folded or convolute, about 3 mm. wide: I have not seen Four- nier’s type of this, but his description applies to the Cuban plant.

2. Sorghastrum setosum (Griseb.).

Andropogon setosus Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 235. 1866.

Wright 3897.

_ The specimen in Grisebach’s herbarium, which is the type, has a blank label of 1865 and bears the secondary number 208. The Sauvalie Herbarium contains a specimen accompanied by a similar label with no. ‘‘208” and a second of the same kind, with no. ‘‘3897” and also a label with habitat, ‘‘Bushy savannas, Hanabana, June 1.”’ This is a duplicate type. Wright’s 3897 in the Gray Herbarium is from ‘*Bushy savannas, Hanabana, June 6.”

The inflorescence is comparatively dense; the spikelets smaller than in the pre- ceding, only about 3 to 3.5 mm. long, long-pilose all over; pedicel of the upper spikelet 2 to 3 mm. long; awn none or short and exserted 1 to 2 mm.; blades flat, 5mm. wide, about 15 cm. long.

12. RHAPHIS Lour. Fl, Cochinch. 552. 1790.

1. Rhaphis pauciflora (Chapm.) Nash in Small, Fl. Southeast. U.S. 67. 1903.. Sorghum pauciflorum Chapm. Bot. Gaz. 3: 20. 1878. Sandy pine woods, Pinar del Rio, Wright 3895; Isle of Pines, Taylor 46. _ This is listed in Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana as ‘‘ Andropogon (Chrysopogon) wrightti Munro,” but is without description. Under this are mentioned nos. 293 and 263.

a Holcus sorghum 1. must be considered the type of the genus Holcus since it is the most important economic species of the genus and further, since, in the fifth edi- tion of his Genera Plantarum, Linnzus refers to the genus Sorgum Mich [eli] as a

_ synonym of Holcus.

_ © Poranthera Raf. (Ser. Bull. Bot. 1: 221. 1830) has for its type Andropogon nutans

L., but the name was previously used for a genus of Euphorbiaceae (Rudge, Trans.

Linn. Soc. 10: 302. 1811). The type species of Sorghastrum Nash is Andropogon

- avenaceum Michx., which is the same as A. nutans L.

®. damit ok ee

196 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

The latter I have not seen. Wright’s 293 isin the Gray Herbarium, labeled as above, with the herbarium name of Munro.

13. HETEROPOGON Peis. Syn. 2: 533. 1807.

1. Heteropogon contortus (L.) Roem. & Schult. Syst. 2: 836. 1817.

Andropogon contortus L. Sp. Pl. 2: 1045. 1753.

Andropogon secundus Willd.; Nees, Agrost. Bras. 364. 1829, in note.

Eastern Cuba, Wright 1559.

This specimen is in the Grisebach Herbarium and is listed in Grisebach’s cat- alogue of Cuba plants as Andropogon (Heteropogon) secundus. (Heteropogon secun- dus Presl is a species of Trachypogon.) Sauvalle lists no. 1559 as Andropogon con- tortus, but there is no specimen of this number in the Sauvalle Herba es One is found, however, in the Gray Herbarium.

14. NAZIA Adans. Fam. Pl. 2: 31, 581. 1763.

1. Nazia aliena (Spreng.) Scribn. U.S. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Bull.-17: 28. 1899. Lappago aliena Spreng. Neue Entd. 3: 15. 1822. Wright 3489, without data. , The Grtchaek specimen was collected ‘‘1860-64.’’ This is listed in Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana as Lappago racemosa. ,

15. ANTHEPHORA Schreb. Beschr. Gras. 2: 105. pl. 44. 1810.

1. Anthephora hermaphrodita (L.) Kuntze, Rey. Gen. Pl. 2: 759. 1891.

Tripsacum hermaphroditum L. Syst. ed. 10, 2: 1261. 1759.

Anthephora elegans Schreb. Beschr. Gris. 2: 105. 1810.

In sand along the shore La Palma Sola, Aug. 7, Wright 3890; Santiago de = Vegas, Van Hermann HC 2694, Hitchcock in 1906; Herradura, Enke HC 2691; La Magdalena, Baker HC 3634; Cathie es Combs 257 in Gray Horas

This is listed in Sanvalle: s Flora Cubana as 3870. The Sauvalle specimen is marked 3890, as is the specimen in the National Herbarium. The former speci- men is accompanied by a second label with the secondary number 308, which is the only number with the Grisebach specimen.

16. ARUNDINELLA Raddi, Agrost. Bras. 37. pl. 1. f. 3. 1823.

Ayn. bent; tightly twisted below: 5. i. 62s -eetab seeenoer eee 2. A. martinicensis. Awn bent, but not tightly twisted. Blades flat, over 1 cm. wide; panicle dense, 30 cm. or more

Womens Oo aes es Se So cae FS ap a oe -.1. A. deppeana. Blades more or less folded, less than 1 cm. wide; panicle loose, not elongated 5+ 0 = oaks ng ee ee ae Je ae a peruviana. 1. Arundinella deppeana Nees, Bomelenaey 3:84. 1855. | oe

Arundinella phragmitoides Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 234. 1866.

Wright 3479; Madruga, Curtiss 662, Britton & Shafer 647 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.; Pinar del Rio, Palmer & Riley 70; Shafer 304 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.; without locality, Otto 268.

Grisebach’s specimen is from western Cuba in 1863 and is numbered ‘‘933=3479.”’ I have not seen Nees’s type, ‘‘ Seemann n. 428, Panama.’’ Nees describes the awn as 6 lines long, strongly geniculate in the fade and not twisted. This can only apply to A. phragmitoides and to A. peruviana. Nees further states that the leaves are smooth and one-half inch wide, and the panicle over a foot long and 4 inches thick. This applies best to A. phragmitoides, though the blades are usually more or less pilose. Specimens in the National Herbarium are as follows: Mexico: Lieb-

abe ee aaa

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 197

Se 629, 630; Langlassé 608; C. T. Smith 1892; Botter’ 730, 731, 734; Palmer 1264, 1920. Guatemala: Heyde & Lux 3907; Maxon & Hay 3526; Rock in 1887; World’s Fair Commission in 1893. Salvador: Renson 207. Costa Rica: Tonduz 9211.

2. Arundinella martinicensis Trin. Gram. Pan. 62. 1826.

Arundinella pallida Nees, Agrost. Bras. 465. 1829.

Thysanachne scoparia Presl, Rel. Haenk. 253. 1830.

Wright 3478.

The Grisebach specimen is from eastern Cuba in 1860 and numbered ‘‘113=3478.”’ Wright’s 3478 in the Gray Herbarium is from San Juan de Buenavista, Nov. 21. These were compared with the type of Nees at Munich and that of Trinius at St.. Petersburg (from Martinique, Sveber 262). Thisspecies has an elongated dense panicle, more or less folded blades, the bent awn twisted below. It ranges from Cuba and Mexico to Brazil, and is represented in the National Herbarium by the following: Porto Rico: Heller 934, 4355, 6256; Sintenis 361, 5797; Barrett 101. Santo Domingo: Wright, Parry & Brummel 626. Jamaica: Eggers 3514. Mexico: Palmer 434. Costa Rica: Pittier 11005; -Tonduz 3672.. Brazil: Glaziou 17433; Regnell 1414 (111).

Thysanachne scoparia Presl was published in the Symbolae Botanicae, the title page date of which is 1832 and which, hence, is later than the Reliquiae Haenkeanae. But the part containing the above species must have been published earlier, for in the latter work@ is cited ‘““T. scoparia. Presl de thysanachne, 1829. cum icone.’’ There appears to be no such work by Presl except the portion of the Symbolae (pages 11 and 12 and pl. 6) where Thysanachne and T’. scoparia are described asif they were there originally published. The species is based on Sieber 264 from Martinique. Presl’s type from Mexico was examined at Prague.

Pilger > refezs the Porto Rico species to A. hispida (Willd.) Kuntze (Andropogon hispidus Willd.), to which he also refers A. brasiliensis Raddi. I have not seen the type of either of the last two species, but in Trinius’s herbarium is the type of Gold- bachia mikani Trin., which is included by Pilger in the list of synonyms of A. hispida. This I consider distinct from A. pallida, as did Nees,¢ and it is what I take to be A, brasiliensis Raddi. This is also the A. brasiliensis of Hackelin Martius’s Flora Bra- siliensis, as indicated by plate 38 and by specimens so named received trom Professor Hackel. The spikelets are smaller and the awn shorter, sometimes scarcely exserted. This species is represented in the National Herbarium by the following: Mexico: Liebmann 622,635. Colombia: Pittier 1527. British Guiana: Mount Roraima Exped. 254. Brazil: Glaziou 17921, 20567a; Henschen in 1868, Dusén 3875. Uruguay: Arechavaleta.

3. Arundinella peruviana (Presl) Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 115. 1854.

Thysanachne peruviana Presl, Rel. Haenk. 253.- 1830.

Arundinella cubensis Griseb. Mem. Amer. Acad. n. ser. 8: 533. 1862.4

Arundinella crinita Trin. Linnaea 10: 299. 1836.

Wright 1552.

Sheaths and blades pilose, the latter narrow and more or less folded, usually less than 0.5 cm. wide; panicle rather loose, not elongated as in A. martinicensis; awn slender and bowed back like a shepherd’s crook, but not twisted. The type of A. cubensis from eastern Cuba, no. 1552 in 1859, is in the Grisebach Herbarium. Another specimen also from eastern Cuba, 1860, is numbered “‘115=1552.”’

The types above cited, namely, those of Presl at Prague, Grisebach at Gottingen, and Trinius at St. Petersburg, agree with each other and are well characterized by the shape of the awn. Additional specimens in the National Herbarium are as fol- - lows: Mexico: Liebmann 621, 625, 632, 634; Bourgeaw 1660, 2223; Palmer 12, 526,

@ Rel. Haenk. 253. : ¢ Agrost. Bras. 465. 1829. 6 In Urb. Symb. Antill. 4: 80. 1903. .@ Pl. Wright. 2.

a

198 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

652; Pringle 3133. Guatemala: Cook & Griggs 691. Costa -Rica: Pittier 2407, 11246; Biolley 7469; Tonduz 4867. Brazil: Commis. Geogr. S. Paulo 2800.

In the collection of Haenke at the herbarium of the German University at Prague there are, under Thysanachne peruviana, two specimens. One is accompanied by the label, ‘‘Peruan. mont. guanoc. Hanke.’”’ This specimen corresponds to Presl’s description of this species and agrees with a duplicate in the Bernhardi Herbarium at the Missouri Botanical Garden figured by Scribner.¢ The other specimen is A. martinicensis Trin.

17. TRISCENIA Griseb. Mem. Amer. Acad. n. ser. 8: 534. 1862.

1. Triscenia ovina Griseb. Mem. Amer. Acad. n. ser. 8: 534. 1862.

Banks of creeks, May 28, Wright 756.

The Grisebach specimen is from eastern Cuba in 1859, no. 756.

Grisebach © cites this number also under Isachne leersioides. This appears to be an error, as.in Grisebach’s herbarium this number occurs only with Triscenia ovina. Wright’s 756 in the Gray Herbarium is from ‘‘banks of Pinal Creek in small dense tufts, Monte Verde, Aug. 10, 1859.”’

aaa: (18. REIMAROCHLOA gen. nov.

Spieler lanceolate, acuminate, solitary, subsessile along one side of a flattened narrow rachis (the back of the fertile lemma turned toward it), forming few to several slender racemes, approximate at the summit of the culm, spreading or reflexed at maturity; glumes obsolete except in the terminal spikelet in which one glume is frequently present; sterile lemma exceeding the fruit; fertile lemma scarcely indu- rated, faintly nerved, long-acuminate, inrolled at the ees only, the palea of similar texture, free nearly Pale its length. i

Perennials of the tropics and’subtropics of the Western Hemisphere.

The genus Reimaria as established by Fligge on the single differentiating character ‘“uniglumis,’’ included three species, the first two of which, R. candida and R. elegans, differ from Paspalum only in having spikelets without glumes, a character which is

_ unreliable in this group of Paniceae. The third species, R. acuta, together with those added to Reimaria by later authors, constitutes a distinct genus distinguished by the characters in the diagnosis above. Considering that Fltigge’s three spe- cies are not congeneric, but that the first two on the one hand and the third on the other must be separated, it is necessary that the name Reimaria go with the larger group.¢ Reimaria then becomes a synonym of Paspalum, or if the glumeless species, P.candidum H. B. K., P. pulchellum H. B. K., P. elongatum Griseb., etc., be con- sidered generically distinct, the name would apply to this group. For R. acuta and its allied species the above name is proposed with Reimaria acuta Fliigge as the type: Reimarochloa acuta (Fliigge). Paspalum vaginatum Sw. and P. distichum L. (in which both glumes are occasionally present) in habit and texture of the acute fruits show a closer affinity to this genus than do the glumeless species mentioned above.

Spikelets about 2°mm. long 222.202 amen eee eee ee 1. R. brasiliensis. Spikelets about 5 mm. long..-..... wee eee ee hee |v Lule or

1. Reimarochloa brasiliensis (Spreng.). Agrostis brasiliensis Spreng. Nov. Proy. Hal. 45. 1819. Reimaria brasiliensis Schlecht. Bot. Zeit. 10: 17. 1852. Panicum oxyanthum Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 41. 1854. Wright 3437; Isle of Pines, Curttss 497. Grisebach’s specimen of this number is from ‘‘savannas, Hanabana, May 22.” Another specimen in his herbarium from ‘‘low wet ground around ponds, Hanabana”

@ Rep. Mo. Bot. Gard. 10: pl. 6. 1899. bCat. Pl. Cub. 234. 1866. 4 ¢ American Code, Canon 15 (Bull. Torr. Club Pe up. 190) Vienna Code, Art. 45. aes

(4 chats Pegi ot ited to Mack Cube

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 199

bears the secondary number 206. The specimen in the Gray Herbarium is labeled, “‘Wet savannas, Candelaria, June 5, 1860-64.” The type of Panicum oxyanthum Steud. labeled ‘‘Ins. St. Domingo, Legit Poiteau 1802 cf. hrbr Delessert 54”’ in the museum at Paris, is a small specimen of this species; that in the Delessert Herbarium is a good specimen.

2. Reimarochloa oligostachya (Munro). fy

Reimaria oligostachya Munro; Benth. Journ. Linn. Soc. 19: 34. 1882.

Wright 3854 in National Herbarium.

This number of Wright’s is mentioned in the original description, though the type is Curtiss 3566 from Florida. The specimen in the Sauvalle Herbarium with the number 3854 is Paspalum vaginatum Sw. In the Griseback Herbarium is a specimen of Reimarochloa oligostachya labeled ‘‘Damp ground around ponds Hana- bana,’’ 1865, and bearing the secondary number 180. The sheet of Wright 3854 ‘in the Gray Herbarium bears two plants of R. oligostachya and one of Paspalum distichum.

19. PASPALUM L. Syst. ed. 10, 855. 1759.

meiachis dilated and membranaceous......:..22-222 5222.25 022.2 - 9. P. dissectum. Rachis not dilated and membranaceous. Racemes terminal and also from the uppermost sheath.

biades pubescent, om both surfaces... 0900.20 .205. 24 - Ck debvle: Blades glabrous or nearly so, often ciliate on margins. Blades ciliate, 4 wtp 5 Iam. wide.. --2¢,---------25. P. propinquum. Blades not ciliate. T Cklitiferue Blades less than 2 mm. wide; first glume Gisele torae ae ex shai gee ne Cera eee Pie 27. P. rigidifolium. Blades about 1 cm. wide; first elume present. .23. P. pedunculatum. Racemes terminal only. Racemes in pairs—that is, normally 2 and approxi- ; mate. Plants with creeping rootstocks. Spikelets pubescent on convex surface.....--- 10. P. distichum. Spikelets glabrous on convex surface........-- 30. P. vaginatum. Plants without creeping rootstocks. Bounolmmes obsoletes, ae. Moe... See 2 26. P. pulchellum.

First glume only obsolete. the _ Spikelets circular 1.5 mm. long or less. Spikelets papillose or nearly glabrous. .22. P. papillosum. Spikelets villous on the margins . ..-- 6. P. conjugatum. Spikelets lanceolate or elliptical, 2 mm. long or more. Spikelets loosely imbricated; aires

ascending. . at ..15. P. lineare. Spikelets cence aurea priees spreading. Spikelets 2 mm. long: . 2.25. 227: 2182 minus: Spikelets 3 mm. long..-...-- eee 20. P. notatum.

Racemes 1 to several; if 2, the lower at some distance below the terminal and the number not constant. Racemes usually 1, sometimes 2. Spikelets transversely wrinkled. Blades involute, glabrous, Ren, 40 to 60 cm. long. - : per ulia, Blades flat, yt pee 5 is te cm. omen 5429.

. filvforme.

- NnanUmM.

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200 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

Spikelets not transversely wrinkled.

Pubeseence glandular’) ..-o ears 5. P. clavuliferum. Pubescence if present not glandular. Spikelets about 1 mm. long....... ...29. P. rupestre. Spikelets 2 to 3 mm. long. Blades short, 10 cm. long, villous. .28. P. rottboellioides. Blades elongated 30 to 50 cm. long, glabrous.......2.........., 1. P..alternifiorum.

Racemes more than 1, often numerous. Sale Pirat,olime presentrnay seco or ea ee 4. P. ciliiferums ake? Vi Letty First glume obsolete. Ff Bs Apes

Sterile lemma transversely eine ale spikelets brown. es Spikelets ohovate sos 55 42 ult ea nts Spikelets, elliptreal 2a... ear e 11. P. elatum.

Sterile lemma, not transversely wrinkled. Racemes few, mostly 2 to 4. Spikelets flattened.__........-....16. P. hividum.

. Spikelets distinctly convex. Spikelets pubescent. Pubescence glandular... 2. P. arenarium. . Pubescence not glandu- 1 a easier Sar aetna bh s f 3. P. caespitosum. Spikelets glabrous. Spikelets elliptical, about 1 mm. wide ....13. P. glabrum. a3 Spikelets circular, about 75 fr 7 2 men WIG. Leask 14, P\ hemicryptum) Racemes numerous. Spikelets pubescent. Spikelets § hemispherical, slightly exceeding 1 mm. Lamia sae ae ..-21. P. paniculatum. Spikelets gees Dees ae -31. P. virgatum. Spikelets glabrous. Axis long-pilose............- 8. P. densum.

Axis not pilose. Spikelets elliptical, about 3 mm. long. .... 32. P. virgatum

schreberianum. Spikelets obovate-circu-

lar, 2 to 2.5 mm. long. .17. P. millegrana.

1. Paspalum alterniflorum Rich. in Sagra, Hist. Cub. 11: 299. 1850.

Paspalum dolichophyllum Hack. Inf. Est. Centr. Agron. Cuba 1: 409. 1906.

Wright 3841; Guanabacoa, Leon 117 in part; Habana, Tracy 9105, Baker, Tracy & Hasselbring in 1907, Leon 564, 585; Marianao, Leon 581. Calabazon, Buse & O’ Dono- van HC 4545; Matanzas, Rugel 894 in Herb. N.Y. Bot. Gard.

Grisebach’s specimen of this species was collected in 1865 and is accompanied by _ the data, ‘‘In small dense tufts, low savannas, Hanabana, May 19.” The sheet bears the secondary number 167. The Sauvalle specimen is accompanied by the two numbers, 3841 and 167, thus connecting the two. In the Grisebach Herbarium is a specimen of this collected in Cuba by Rugel and numbered 753a. Grisebach refers @ to ‘‘Rug. 894’? underthisname. Richard’s type is at Paris.

a@Cat. Pl. Cub. 231. 1866. :

aw N

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 201

2. Paspalum arenarium Schrad.; Schult. Mant. 2:172. 1824.

Paspalum simpsoni Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 24: 29. 1897.

Wright 3443 in part, in National Herbarium, and in Gray Herbarium.

Spikelets similar to those of P. caespitosum (Wright 3448, in part, in National Her- barium), but glandular-pubescent; leaves mostly near the base of the plant, the blades ciliate on the margins, otherwise glabrous, flat, less than 10 cm. long, 5 to 6 mm. wide; spikes 1 to 3.

From this P. longepedunculatum Le Conte of the southeastern United States differs in having glabrous spikelets and longer, thinner blades. Pittier 1847 from Honduras should also be referred to P. arenarium.

3. Paspalum caespitosum Fliigge, Mon. Pasp. 161. 1810.

Low wet woods, Pinar del Rio, September, Wright 3443 in part; Cojimar, Baker HC 2899, 2903, Hitchcock in 1906; Triscornia, Tracy 9087, Hitchcock in 1906; Habana, Leon 268; Batabano, Hitchcock in 1906; Matanzas, Britton & Wilson 11, 236 in Herb: N.Y. Bot. Gard., Britton & Shafer 63 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

Grisebach’s specimens of this are labeled ‘‘910=—3443”’ from western Cuba, 1863, and ‘‘97=3443”’ from eastern Cuba, 1860. A third ‘‘290=3444,” collected in 1865, agrees with these and not with 3444 [see P. clavuliferum. Wright]. There are two sheets of Wright’s specimens in the Gray Herbarium numbered 3444, of which one is Paspalum clavuliferum, the other P. caespitosum. ‘The latter is labeled ‘‘In crevices of rocks in the channel of the river Santa Cruz, Aug. 27.’’ Wright’s 3443 in the Gray Herbarium is labeled ‘‘Rocky ridges, Holguin-Barajugua, Aug. 21.’’

4. Paspalum ciliiferum (Nash).

Dimorphostachys cilufera Nash in Small, Fl. Southeast. U. 8. 78. 1903.

Arroyo Naranjo, Leon 587; Matanzas, Britton & Wilson 148; Madruga, Britton & Shafer 751, both in Herb. N.Y. Bot. Gard.

5. Paspalum clavuliferum Wright, Anal. Acad. Cienc. Habana 8: 203. _187 1; Sauv. Fl. Cub. 195. guaden sa

Paspalum falcula Doell in Mart. Fl. Bras. 2? : 60, Ne sl cy 4 Wright 3444 in National Herbarium.

This resembles P. papillosum Spreng., but the spikes are usually solitary instead of in pairs and the spikelets obovate instead of orbicular. The type of this is in the Gray Herbarium. The plant in the Sauvalle Herbarium under this number is a different species, as are the two specimens in the Grisebach Herbarium which are said

to be ‘‘=3444” (cf. P. caespitosum and P. rupestre of this list). Salzmann’s specimen in Trinius’s herbarium from Bahia, labeled Paspalum horticola Salzm., belongs to this species. Salzmann’s name was mentioned as a synonym by Steudel under P. papillosum.« To P. clavuliferum may be referred Pringle 2359 and 11762 from Mexico, and Smith 175 from Colombia.

6. Paspalum conjugatum Bere. Act. Helv. 7: 129. 1772.

Roadsides, Hanabana, Wright 767; Herradura, Baker HC 2672, Hitchcock in 1906; mountains north of San Diego de los Bafios, Palmer & Riley 541; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 2658, 2659, Wilson 543, 1006, Hitchcock in 1906; Sagua, Britton & Wilson 265; valley of the St. Augustine, Britton & Wilson 510, 515; Guajay, Wilson 342; Habana, Wilson 1277, Leon 302. The following are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Isle of Pines Curtiss in 1904; Santiago de Cuba, Taylor. 146; Baracoa, Underwood & Earle 1162; Cuba, Rugel 788; Matanzas, Rugel 912.

7. Paspalum debile Michx. Fl. Bor. Amer. 1:44. 1803. Paspalum viliosissmum Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 24:40. 1897. Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906.

"a Steud Peyne ee: ery 117.1854, yaa AAMAD

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202 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

8. Paspalum densum Poir. in Lam. Encycl. 5:32. 1804.

Dense bunches in ponds, Pinar del Rio, September, Wright 3447.

There is a second specimen of this species in the Sauvalle Herbarium, without locality, erroneously numbered 3462. In the Grisebach Herbarium there are two specimens of this species, one from western Cuba, 1863, numbered ‘‘866=3447,”’ the other from ‘‘ Low wet savannas; Hanabana,’’ 1865.

9. Paspalum dissectum (L.) L. Sp. Pl. ed. 2. 81. 1762.

Panicum dissectum L. Sp. Pl. 57. 1753.

Paspalum membranaceum Walt. Fl. Car. 75. 1788. :

Low grounds around ponds, procumbent. Hanabana, J une 10, Wright 169 [Sec- ondary number].

The same number occurs in the Grisebach Herbarium. A second specimen of this species, from eastern Cuba, 1860, is numbered ‘‘ 983440.’ The specimen in the National Herbarium is numbered 3440. For a discussion of the type of P. dissectum L., see Contr. Nat. Herb. 12: 115. 1908.

10. Paspalum distichum L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 855. 1759.

Wright 1546; Habana, Curtiss 764; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker & Wilson 385; Playa de er bees Palmer & Riley 848; Herradura, Tracy 9056; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904; Matanzas, Britton & Wileon 67, both in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

Grisebach’s specimen of Wright’s 1546 is from eastern Cuba; a second specimen of the same species is from western Cuba, 1863, and is numbered ‘‘911—1546.”’ In the National Herbarium is a sheet of Wright’s with the secondary number 292 which is part this species and part P. vaginatum Sw. .

11. Paspalum elatum Rich.; Doell in Mart. Fl. Bras. 27:78. 1877. Wright 3843.

This specimen is referred to this species from description only, as no authentic

specimens of P. elatwm have been examined. It is a much taller grass than P. plica- tulum Michx., which it resembles, with more elliptical and less convex spikelets.

12. Paspalum filiforme Sw. Prod. 22. 1788. Paspalum swartzianum Fligge, Mon. Pasp. 96. 1810. Paspalum approximatum Doell in Mart. Fl. Bras. 2?: 82. 1877. In pastures forming tufts, Retiro, July, Wright 769; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 523, 374,

Palmer & Riley 949; Gincabaces Hitchcock in 1906; Biacen, Brian & Wilson 477

in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

Grisebach’s specimen of Wright 769 was collected, ‘‘1860-1864,”’ ‘‘in the edge of woods, Hanabana, May 28.’’ Another of his specimens with the secondary number 165, in 1865 is Ake from Hanabana, May 23, ‘‘in small tufts.”’

Doell @ refers P. filiuforme Sw. to P. caespitosum Fliigge. This is not the plant that Swartz describes, as is shown by the original description in the Prodromus and the

later amplified description in his Flora. Swartz describes his plant as having a |

single spike, ovate spikelets, and filiforme leaves, while P. caespitosum has 3 to 5 spikes, oblong-obovate spikelets, and flat blades.

13. Paspalum glabrum Poir. in ere Encycl. 5: 30. 1804.

Paspalum bakeri Hack. Inf. Est. Centr. Agron. Cuba 1: 410. 1906:

Habana, Baker 1824; Triscornia, Hitchcock in 1906; without locality, Wright 298; _ Matanzas, Rwgel 869 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

In the Grisebach Herbarium is a epoca of P. glabrum labeled, “Tn small tufts, sand banks near the sea, Palma Sola, July 15,’’ 1865, and bearing the Seconda number

@ Loc. cit. - 6 Fl. Ind. Occ. 1:1386. 1797.

ee

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 2038

298. This species is represented in the Gray Herbarium by Wright 3846, a number which is not mentioned in Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana. P. helleri Nash of Porto Rico

. differsin having somewhat smaller pubescent spikelets.

14. Paspalum hemicryptum Wright, Anal. Acad. Cienc. Habana 8: 204. 1871; Sauv. Fl. Cub. 196. Paspalum inops Vasey, Contr. Nat. Herb. 1: 281. 1893. Low savannas, El Salado, August, Wright 3847.

The type of P. inops Vasey (Palmer 592 from Guadalajara, Mexico, in the National

Herbarium) agrees with Wright’s type in the Gray Herbarium.

15. Paspalum lineare Trin. Gram. Pan. 99. 1826. Herradura, Baker 3459; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 379. The type in the Trinius Herbarium is from Brazil, collected’ by Langsdorff, and is

included in the same cover with P. angustifoliwm Nees. Trinius published the latter

name on the same page of the work cited, but preceding P. lineare on the page. The type is said to be from ‘‘Brazil (N. ab Esenb.).” The type specimen is labeled “Paspalum angustifolium N. ab Es. In Brasilia. Mis Auctore.’’ This specimen, however, is not P. lineare, but has, as described, smaller spikelets with rugose trans- versely wrinkled glumes. P. angustifolium as described three years laterd is the same as P. lineare Trin., while variety (/ is P. angustifolium as described by Trinius. Consequently P. neesw Kunth is a typonym of P. angustifolium, since Kunth changes the name of the latter on account of the earlier P. angustifoliwum Le Conte, but the name does not apply to the Cuba plant under consideration.

16. Paspalum lividum Trin.; Schlecht. Linnaea 2: 383. 1854.

Habana, Leon 272, 571, Tracy 9119; Marianao, Leon 588.

This Mexican species is probably a recent introduction into Cuba. The type from Hacienda de la Laguna, Mexico, Schiede, in the Trinius Herbarium, is included in the cover of P. denticulatum Trin., but the two specimens are not the same species. The latter has larger spikelets.

17. Paspalum millegrana Schrad.; Schult. Mant. 2: 175. 1824.¢ Paspalum underwoodu Nash, Bull. cies Club 30: 375. 1903. Paspalum lentiginosum Presl, err. det. Mez in Urban, Symb. Antill. 4: 82,1903. Habana, Tracy 9121; without locality, Wright 3840. ie $f (a The Sauvalle specimen is also numbered 170. As I have not examined Schrader’s

type the reference to this is only provisional and based on description. Our specimens

~ are the same as P. vulnerans Salzm., from Bahia, as distributed to the National Her-

barium. Other specimens in the National Herbarium to be referred here are: Porto

- Rico: Britton & Cowell 1449, Heller 4368, Goll 923, Underwood & Griggs 149. Jamaica:

Britton 841 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard. Wa .3 9G (4d. Su. Hor)

18. Paspalum minus Fourn. Mex. Pl. 2:6. 1886. Herradura, Baker & Abarca HC 4180, Tracy. 9093, Hitchcock in 1906; Isle of Pines,

Palmer & Riley, 978; without locality, Wright 3438; Guanabacoa, Leon 117 in part;

La Magdalena, Baker 2. The following are in the herbarium of the New York Botan-

ical Garden: Sagua, Britton & Wilson in 1903; Pinar del Rio, Shafer 477; Isle of .

Pines, Curtiss in 1904.

These agree with the duplicate type in the National Herbarium (Mexico, Bourgeau 2298). The spikelets are about 2mm. long. Wright’s 3438 in the National Herbarium is partly this and partly P. notatum. Grisebach’s specimen, from western Cuba, 1863, numbered ‘‘936=3438,’’ is all P. minus. The other specimens in this cover

a Bull. Torr. Club 30: 376. 1903. b Nees, Agrost. Bras. 64. 1829. c The specific name as used by Schrader is a noun.

Ly

A aor

204 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

have spikelets 3 mm. long and are P. notatum (Jamaica, Alexander; Trinidad, Sieber 364, labeled P. taphrophyllum Steud.; Antigua, Wullschlaegel). A part of Wright 3438 in the Torrey Herbarium is P. minus and a part is P. notatum.

19. Paspalum nanum Wright; Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 230. 1866.

Paspalum caudicatum Wright, Anal. Acad. Cienc. Habana 8:205. 1871; Sauv. Fl. Cub. 196.

Wright 176 (secondary number); sandy pine woods, Pinar del Rio, October, Wright 3866; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906; Isle of Pines, Taylor 40, Curtiss in 1904, both in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

The type of P. nanum is Wright 176 in the Grisebach Herbarium, collected in ‘Bushy savannas, Hanabana, June 1,’’ 1865. This agrees with Wright 3866, the

type of P. caudicatum,.in the Gray Herbarium.

The specimen in the National Herbarium is numbered 3842. The specimen in the Grisebach Herbarium bears the label, ‘‘176. Bushy savannas. Hanabana, June 1.”’

Spikelets sent by Professor Le Comte from the plant supposed to be the type of Paspalum lindenianum Rich.) show this plant to be the same as P. nanum Wright, ~but this species does not agree with Richard’s description in so far as the blades are said to be glaucous and glabrous except the ciliate margins, while in P. nanum the blades are pubescent on the surface. Pending a further examination of the type the name P. nanum is retained.

20. Paspalum notatum Fliiege, Mon. Pasp. 106. 1810.

Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906, Baker HC 2968; Arroyo Galiano, O’ Donovan HC 5210; Isle of Pines, Palmer & Riley 1119; Lomas de Managua, Baker & Wilson HC 299; Habana, Baker, Tracy & Hasselbring HC 3097, Tracy 9118; Guines, Leon 117b; Matan- zas, Britton & Wilson 444 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

‘As stated above, a part of Wright 3438 in the National Herbarium is this species. and a part is P. minus Fourn. The spikelets of the species as here understood are about 3 mm.long. The type has not been examined. The Baker & Wilson plant, HC 299, cited above, is larger than the other specimens, with spikelets 4 mm. long, and may be a distinct species. Wright’s 3438 in the Gray Herbarium is P. notatum; itis labeled ‘‘Savannas Chirigote, July 11.’’ This number in the Torrey Herbarium is part P. notatum and part P. minus.

21. Saar paniculatum L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 85d. 1759. .

Savannas, Retiro, Wright 766; San Diego de los Bafios, Palmer & Riley 544; El Guama, Palmer & Riley 179a; ells near Candelaria, Earle & Wilson HC 1625; Came Leon 579; Cienfuegos, Goaais 295 in Gray Herbarium. The following are Es the her- barium of the New York Botanical Garden: Matanzas, Britton & Shafer 576; Santiago ~ de Cuba, Taylor 377; Jaguey, Eggers 5317.

Grisebach’s specimen is from eastern Cuba, 1859, no. 766. Nash¢ applies this name to Panicum fasciculatum Sw., but as has been shown elsewhere¢ the name Paspalum paniculatum L. should be applied to the Linnzean plant, as heretofore, and not to the Sloane plate cited, through error, by Linnezeus.

22. Paspalum papillosum Spreng. Nov. Prov. Hal. 47. 1819. 2. Paspalum-pittiert Hack. -Oesterr. Bot: Aeitschr--54:>-233- 190T- Low savannas, Chirigote, Pigeoper 26, Wright 3844; Herradura, Baker HC an 4185, Hitchcock in 1906.

——

_4See footnote, p. 193.

b Rich. in Sagra, Hist. Cub. 11:299. 1850. The type is Linden 1813. ¢ Bull. Torr. Club 30: 381. 1903.

@ Contr. Nat. Herb. 12: 116. 1908.

Palen

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. | 205

I have not seen the type of this species, but in the Trinius Herbarium there is a specimen labeled ‘‘Paspalum papillosum Sprengel, mis. cl. auctor.’”? The Cuban plants agree with this, except that the spikelets are less glandular, the flat surface being quite glabrous. Agreeing with Sprengel’s specimen are two in the Trinius Herbarium, one collected by Salzmann in Bahia labeled ‘‘ Paspalum horticola mari-

tima Salzm.’’ and another by Riedel at Bahia in 1831. Tonduz’s 4474 from Costa Rica

belongs here. Wright’s 3444 in the Torrey Herbarium is P. papillosum.

23. Paspalum pedunculatum Poir. Encycl. Suppl. 4: 315. 1816.

Paspalum decumbens Sw. Prod. 22. 1788, not Rottb. 1778.

Panicum decumbens Roem. & Schult. Syst. 2: 429. 1817.

Paspalum vaginiflorum Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1:19. 1854.

Dimorphostachys pedunculata Fourn. Mex. Pl. 2:15. 1886.

Banks of Rio San Sebastian, Pinar del Rio, December, Wright 3851; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 327.

A second Wright label reads, ‘‘ Damp woods, Rangel, Dec.’’

Steudel’s type, from ‘‘Guiana, Lenormand”’ is in the museum at Paris.

24. Paspalum plicatulum Michx. Fl. Bor. Amer. 1: 45. 1803.

Savannas, Retiro, Wright 768; in small tufts, pinales, Pinar del Rio, Wright 3839; Magay, Baker & Wilson HC 354; Santiago de las Vegas, Wilson 420, 421, 425, Baker 2056, 3112, 3113, 3454, Baker & Wilson, 545, 596, Hitchcock in 1906; La Magdalena, Baker 5, 7; Habana, Tracy, 9117; Herradura, Tracy 9051, 9052, Hitchcock in 1906; Isle of Pines, Palmer & Riley 947, Taylor 38; Cienfuegos, Combs 262 in Gray Herbarium. The following are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904; Alto Cedro, Underwood & Earle 1621; Matanzas, Britton & Wilson 429; Sagua, Britton & Wilson 280, 285, 337; La Soledad, Eggers, 5405.

The Grisebach specimen, from “‘edge of savannas, Hanabana, May -19,’’ 1856, bears the secondary number 166. Wright’s 768 in the Gray Herbarium is labeled, ‘‘Savan- nas, Chirigote, July 11.”

25. Paspalum propinquum Nash, Bull. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 1: 291. 1899. . Wright 3845.

26. Paspalum pulchellum Kunth, Mem. Mus. Hist. Nat. 2: 68. 1815.

Reimaria elegans Fliigge, Mon. Pasp. 216. 1810, not Paspalum elegans Kunth, Enum. 1:59. 1833.

, Wright 3439; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904 in Herb. Nay. Bot: Card.

The specimen in the Snare Herbarium bears the secondary number 171. One of the Grisebach specimens is from western Cuba in 1863, and is numbered ‘‘915=3439;”’ the other bears the secondary number 171 and is labeled ‘‘ Bushy savannas, Hanabana, May 24, 1865.’’ One sheet of this in the Torrey Herbarium is numbered 3839.

27. Paspalum rigidifolium Nash, Bull. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 1: 292. 1899. Wright 3442. : The Grisebach specimen of this species, collected in western Cuba in 1863, bears the number ‘‘905=3442.” Wright’s 3442 in the Gray Herbarium is labeled ‘‘Savannas, Chirigote, July 11.’’

28. Paspalum rottboellioides Wright, Anal. Acad. Cienc. Habana 8: 204. 1871; Sauv. Fl. Cub. 195. Wright 3864; Isle of Fives: Curtiss 375, Taylor 41; Herradura, Baker & Dimmock | - HC 4813. The at. of this species is Wey hae in the SH Herbarium.

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206 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE.NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

29. Paspalum rupestre Trin. Linnaea 10: 293. 1836. Wright 3444, 3445; near Habana, Hitchcock in 1906; Leon 286. 19 97, / Se, I~ 2X7 The Gneanenh specimen is from eastern Cuba, 1860, numbered 6199— =3445,”’ and is labeled, ‘‘ Paspalum lindenianum Rich. (Nesaisliyian Steud.),’’ under which name it is listed in Grisebach’s Catalogue of Cuban Plants.¢ A second specimen is

from western Cuba, 1863, and is numbered ‘‘939=3445.’’ A third specimen collected.

in 1863 and numbered ‘‘943=3444,’’ is included by Grisebach in his cover of P. caes- pitosum. Wright’s 3445 in the Gray Herbarium is labeled ‘‘Pinales near Baracoa, June 15.”’ 30. Paspalum vaginatum Sw. Prod. 21. 1788. Digitaria foliosa Lag. Gen. & Sp. Nov. 4. 1816. Hanabana, Doctor Robbins, Wright 3854; Habana, Curtiss 751; Batabano, Bure HC 2294, 1863.

The characters which separate this from P. distichum L., the g elabrous spikelets and ~

more or less suppressed midnerve of the glume, may prove to be inconstant. Grise- bach’s specimen from western Cuba, 1863, numbered 947, is this species. A part of Wright 1546 (1546a) in the Torrey Herbarium has glabrous spikelets, and consequently would be referred to P. vaginatum.

Lagasca’s type, labeled ‘‘ Digitaria foliosa sp. n. ex Havas. Boldo iter,’’ is in the

herbarium of the Botanical Garden at Madrid. 3l. Paspalum virgatum L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 855. 1759. Paspalum leucocheilum Wright, Anal. Acad. Cienc. Habana 8: 203. 1871; Sauv. FI. Oub. 194. 3 Isle of Pines, Curtiss 501, Taylor 42, Palmer & Riley 1057; without locality, Wright

3446; La Magdalena, Baker HC 3626, Britton & Shafer 243 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.;

Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 544, 595; Las Acostas, Baker HC 5242, 5246; Batabano. Baker HC 3967; Arroyo Galiano, Baker HC 5211; Habana, Tracy, Baker & Hasselbring

HC 3085, Tracy 9120, 9122, 9123, 9124; Guanabacoa, Leon 195; Herradura, Tracy 9127,

Hitchcock in 1906; San Diego de los Bafios, Palmer & Riley 628; Guines, Leon 578, Pinar del Rio, Shafer 479 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.; Matanzas, Britton & Wilson 155, 455 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

Grisebach’s specimen is numbered 302 (labeled ( straminewm), while the specimen in the Sauvalle Herbarium bears this number in addition to no. 3446. The type speci- men of P. leucocheilum Wright is in the Gray Herbarium. The spikelets are somewhat smaller than normal (2 mm. long), and the inflorescence consists of a single spike

partially concealed in the uppermost sheath. _ The spikelets have the shape and »

pubescence of P. virgatum.

3la. Paspalum virgatum schreberianum Fltigge, Mon. Pasp. 190. 1810.

Guanajay, Palmer & Riley 813 in part; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906; Batabano, Mitchcock in 1906; Habana, Tracy. 9125, 9126; Wright 3446 in Gray Herbarium; Rugel 898 in Gray Herbarium; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard. Cienfuegos, Combs 262 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

This differs from P.virgatum in its scarcely pilose rachis and oblong-obovate, acute, glabrous spikelets. It appears to be a distinct species, but as the type has not been examined, our plants are referred ag above, rather than separated under a new name. This form appears to be included in P. vwirgatum glabriusculum by Doell in Mar- tius’s Flora Brasiliensis.o Wright’s 3446 in Gray Herbarium is labeled, ‘‘In large tufts on sand bars of the Baracoa near N. Sophie, Sept. 11.’’

32. Paspalum sp.

Wright 3848. fet At

This specimen in the Sauvalle espa is too fragmentary to identify. It appears to belong to none of the species enumerated in the list. It is listed in Sau-

aSee note under B. nanum. -b 22: 89. 1877. - |

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. | 207

valle’s Flora Cubana as ‘‘P. swartzianum Fliigeg?,’’ but it is not that species as here understood. The specimen in the Gray Herbarium is less fragmentary. The blades are long and narrow, 30 or 40 cm. long and less than 1 mm. wide; terminal spike single; spikelets glabrous, 1.6 mm. long. A part of Wright 3444 in the Gray Her- pee. ‘- o to be ye SPE pve Nice P

cee, SVR ITO Coop. sf 20. KXONOPUS Beauv. Rioe: 12. 1812.

1. Axonopus compressus (Sw.) Beauv. Agrost. 12. 1812.

Milium compressum Sw. Prod. 24. 1788.

Paspalum compressum Rasp. Ann. Sci. Nat. [. 5: 301. 1825.

Wet places in roads and elsewhere Zarabanda, May 21, Wright 3849, Wright 3850, Wright 763 in Gray Herbarium; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 306, 511; Habana, Curtiss 606, Leon 298; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906, Tracy 9092; San ee Baker HC 2946, Hitchcock in 1906; Santiago de las Vegas, Mitchcock in 1906; ata Baker & Wale oean Herb. N.Y. Bot. Gard.; Matanzas, Britton & Wien 104 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard. . oct

In the Grisebach Herbarium are.two specimens of this species, one of 1865 labeled, ‘*Roadside, Hanabana, May 18,’’ and bearing the secondary number 168, and one of no. 765, 1860-64. The Sauvalle specimen of Wright 3850 has two labels, with localities El] Salado and Retiro. This number has narrower blades and larger spike- lets, about 3mm.long. This may be Paspalum tristachyon Lam.,“ the type of which I have not seen. The sheet of Wright 3849 in the Gray Herbarium bears also a specimen of Syntherisma digitata.

21. LEPTOCORYPHIUM Nees, Agrost. Bras. 83. 1829.

1. Leptocoryphium lanatum (H. B. K.) Nees, Agrost. Bras. 83, 1829.

Paspalum lanatum H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 1: 94. 1816.

Wright 3429; Isle of Pines, Palmer & Riley 440, 972, Curtiss 393; La Magdalena, Baker HC 4555; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906, Tracy 9048, 9071. The following are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Santa Clara, Britton & Wilson 335; Pinar del Rio, Shafer 481; Cedro, Underwood & Earle 1451, 1459.

Grisebach’s specimen, from western Cuba in 1863, is numbered ‘‘919—3429.”’ Wright’s 3429 in the Gray Herbarium is labeled, ‘‘Wet savannas, Candelaria, June 3,’ and ‘‘Savannas near Pinar del Rio, Dec. 11.”

22. ERIOCHLOA H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 1: 94. pl. 30. 31.1816.

iglades)tilttorm=. >: 2.2.5.0. 5. - BGS er eee (ire eer geels a l. EB. filifolia. Blades flat. Fruit tipped with a slender awn | mm. long; blades 7 to 15 mm. arg Cea pret pe EI a cre nA soca a a Cathe Le SILO ne 2 or ah ORE RS 2. E. punctata. Fruit merely apiculate; blades 2 to 3 mm. wide.....-. POR oie 3. E. famosa.

1. Eriochloa filifolia sp. nov.

Plant cespitose; culms numerous, very slender, almost capillary, glabrous, 10 to 20 cm. high, erect or more or less geniculate below; leaves glabrous, blades very narrow, convolute-setaceous, the lower about 10 cm. long, the upper shorter, the uppermost 1 to 2 cm.; spikes mostly 2, erect, 1 to 2 cm. long, one terminal, the other 5 to 10 mm. below; rachis capillary, minutely pubescent or scabrous, pubescent at base; spikelets 4 to 8, 3 mm. long, secund in a single row, the pedicels slender, about 1 mm. long, the neue or jem dark- potted gpue and sterile lemma about

@Tabl. Haeyen 1 176. 1791.

208 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

equal, ovate-acuminate, pilose with appressed hairs, sterile lemma empty; fertile lemma oval, glabrous, 1.5 mm. long, tipped with a slender scabrous awn about 1 mm. long.

Jata Hills near Guanabacoa, Hitchcock, March 15, 1906, no. 559392 in the U. 8. National Herbarium (type).

2. Eriochloa punctata (L.) Hamilt. Prod. Fl. Ind. Oce. 5. 1825.

Milium punctatum L. Syst. ed. 10. 2: 872. 1759.

Wright 1542; Yumary Mountains, Rugel 889 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

There are two specimens of this species in the Grisebach Herbarium, both from eastern Cuba, one collected in 1859, marked 1542, the other in 1860, with the sec- ondary number 95. In the Gray Herbarium there are also two sheets of the same,

one collected near Monte Verde, eastern Cuba, in 1859, ‘‘River bank Saltadero,

Sept. 11,” the other from ‘‘Sand bars of the Baracoa near N. Sophie, Sept. 11,” 1860-1864.

3. Eriochloa ramosa (Retz.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 775. 1891.

Milium ramosum Retz. Obs. 6: 22. 1791.

Paspalus annulatus Fliigge, Mon. Pasp. 133. 1810:

Eriochloa annulata Kunth, Rev. Gram. 1: 30. 1829.

Wright 3886. 3650(Hb-Re mile)

This agrees with Asiatic specimens and may fe introduced. It differs from E. punctata in the narrower blades and the shorter awn to the fruit.

Allied to these is the Porto Rican Eriochloa subglabra (Nash). (Monachne subglabra Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 30: 374. 1903; Eriochloa punctata subglabra Urban, Symb. Antill. 4: 85. 1903). This species differs from LE. ramosa in the broader blades and pronouncedly velvety nodes, and in habit; from EH. punctata in the mucronate, instead of slender-awned, fertile lemma, and from both in having a staminate flower in the axil of the sterile lemma. Urban reduced this to a variety of EH. punctata without having seen the plant.

23. ISACHNE R. Br. Prod. 196. 1810.

1. Isachne leersioides Griseb. Mem. Amer. Acad. n. ser. 8: 533. 1862.

Wright 755 in National Herbarium (1547 in Sauvalle Herbarium).

Number 755 in the Sauvalle Herbarium is Panicum exiguiflorum. In the Grise- bach Herbarium there are two specimens of Isachne leersioides collected by Wright in eastern Cuba—one in 1859, numbered 755, and one in 1860, numbered 102. In the Gray Herbarium there are three specimens bearing the number 755. One is P. exiguiflorum, the other two are Isachne leersioides, both from eastern Cuba—one in 1856-57, the other from Monte Verde in 1859. Jsachne leersioides is listed in Sau- valle’s Flora Cubana as no. 1547.

24. SYNTHERISMA Walt. Fl. Car. 76. 1788.

Rachis of racemes wing-angled. Spikelets 3 to 4 mm. long, more or less villous on nerves; rachis TLOb PILOSEs MINS Ue wale ee ts Bes | Sale or em Lone ere em 4. S. sanguinalis. Spikelets 2 mm. long, glabrous; rachis sparsely long-pilose. ... - 1. S. digitata. Rachis of racemes angled but scarcely winged. | Spikelets about 3 mm. long, nearly glabrous. ...........----..-- 5. S. simpsont. Spikelets 1. 5 to 2.56 mm. long, usually villous-ciliate. Racemes usually less fade 10 cm. long; spikelets 1.5 mm. Ne 10 eke Pier uN Steg eee eh ET NG OR MC CA mS PCRLNALEPE Me nd = R colee ace 1 1 2. S. filiform. Racemes usually more than 10 cm. long; spikelets 2 to 2.5 mm. long.

: >

HITCHCOCK-——GRASSES OF CUBA. 209

Blades much elongated, mostly 30 to 40 cm. long,

nearly glabrous; spikelets about 2.5 mm. long.......3. S. leucocoma. Bladesshorter, mostly 10 to 20 cm. long, woolly-villous; ppecleis about: 2ammelome as. 2 ise ec te 2 e- 6. S. villosa.

1. Syntherisma digitata (Sw.) Hitchc. Contr. Nat. Herb. 12: 142. 1908.

Milium digitatum Sw. Prod. 24. 1788.

Digitaria setosa Desv.; Hamilt. Prod. Fl. Ind. Occ. 6. 1825.

Syntherisma setosa Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 25: 300. 1898.

Wright 764 in part; Herradura, Tracy 9049, Hitchcock in 1906; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

In the Grisebach Herbarium are two Wright specimens, no. 177 of 1865, ‘‘Bushy - savannas, Hanabana, May 29,’’ and no. 764 from eastern Cuba, 1856-57. Wright’s 764 from eastern Cuba in 1856-57 in the Gray Herbarium is amixture of S. digitata and S. sanguinalis; no. 764 of 1865 is the latter species only.

2. Syntherisma filiformis (L.) Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 22: 420. 1895.

Panicum filiforme L. Sp. Pl. 57. 1753.

Panicum curvinerve Hack. Oesterr. Bot. Zeitschr. 51: 335. 1901.

Wright 1544 in part.

The specimen of Wright’s 1544 in the National Herbarium labeled, ‘‘Sandy pine woods, Pinar del Rio, Sept.,’’ is partly this and partly S. leucocoma Nash. Hackel @ bases his P. curvinerve upon this portion of Wright 1544. The characters which he mentions, such as the smooth glumes with incurving nerves, are found not infrequently among specimens of S. filiformis from the northern United States, whence the type was collected by Kalm. In the specimen of 1544in the National Herbarium (the smaller portion with spikelets only 1.5 mm. long) part of the panicles have nearly glabrous spikelets, and part have long-pubescent spikelets. This differs distinctly from the other part of Wright 1544, which Hackel may have taken for the true S. filiforms. The amount of pubescence upon the spikelet is quite variable in this species as inothersofthisgenus. Thesize of thespikelets, however, is fairly constant. In the Grisebach Herbarium there are two specimens of this from eastern Cuba, one collected in 1859 numbered 1544, the other in 1860 numbered ‘‘107=1544.”’

3. Syntherisma leucocoma Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 25: 295. 1898. Sandy pine woods in large tufts, Pinar del Rio, September, Wright 1544, in part; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906. Spikelets 2.5 mm. long; plants mostly glabrous or nearly so, tall, with elongated ‘narrow blades and slender erect racemes as much as 25 cm. long.

4. Syntherisma sanguinalis (L.) Dulac, Fl. Haut. Pyr. 77. 1867. :

Panicum sanguinale L. Sp. Pl. 57. 1753. |

Asperella digitaria Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 1: 167. 1791.

La Fermin4, June 17, Wright 3883; Wright 764 in part; Habana, Curtiss 655, Hitch- cock in 1906, Leon 301, 304; Santiago de las Vegas, Hitchcock in 1906, Baker HC 501; Puentes Grandes, Leon 279; Guanabacoa, Hitchcock in 1906; Batabano, Hitchcock in 1906; Cienfuegos, Pringle 46 in the Gray Herbarium; Guines, Leon 304. The following ' are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Santiago de Cuba, Taylor 50; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904; Rincon, Britton & Wilson 485; Matanzas, Britton & Shafer 333; Bayamese, Eggers 4690.

The sheet of 764 in the National Herbarium, like that in the Sauvalle Herbarium, consists of a mixture of this species and S. digitata. In the latter herbarium this num- ber has two labels, one ‘‘Savannas, 8. Cristobal, Aug.,’’ the other ‘‘Sandy pine woods, Pinar del Rie, Sept.’”’ No. 764 in the National Herbarium has the label, |

@ Loc. cit. o1870—vor 12, rr 6—09——3

210 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

““Savannas, Retiro, July.’’ In the Grisebach Herbarium there are two specimens from Wright. One collected in 1865 and numbered 178, and 294 (‘‘var. eriogona”); the other without number, labeled ‘‘ Roads and fields, common, Hanabana, May ANY,

Lamarck’s type, labeled ‘‘Asperella digitaria lam. i. ex. D. Richard,’ is in the

Lamarck Herbarium in the Museum at Paris.

5. Syntherisma simpsoni (Vasey) Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 25: 297. 1898.

Panicum sanguinale simpson Vasey, Contr. Nat. Herb. 3: 25. 1892.

Isle of Pines, Curtiss 521.

Spikelets glabrous, 2.5 mm. long, the glume and sterile lemma equal and slightly exceeding the fruit. Syntherisma aequiglumis (Hack. & Arech.) (Panicum aequi- glume Hack. & Arech.in Arech. Gram. Urug. 93. 1894) differs in having larger spike- lets, 3.5 mm. long, the acuminate sparsely pubescent glume and sterile lemma exceed- ‘ing the fruit by 0.5 mm.

6. Syntherisma villosa Walt. Fl. Car. 77. 1788.

Sandy pinales, La Grifa la Catolina, Pinar del Rio, January, Wright 3884; Herra- dura, Tracy 9077, 9104. .

There are two specimens in the Grisebach Herbarium, one marked ‘‘Edge of woods, bushy savannas, Hanabana, May 30,” 1865, numbered 173, the other, ‘‘ Bushy

savannas, Hanabana, May 27,’’ 1865. Spikelets about 2 mm. long; plant pubescent

or nearly glabrous. 25. VALOTA Adans. Fam. Pl. 2: 495. 1763.

1. Valota insularis (L.) Chase, Proc Biol. Soc. Wash. 19: 188. 1906.

Andropogon insulare L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 1304. 1759. Pe

Panicum leucophaeum H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 1: : 87. 1816. y

Panicum duchaissingu Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 93. 1854.

Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 602, 1473, Hitchcock in 1906; Vento, Schafer in 1903; Triscornia,. Tracy. 9083; Herradura, Tracy 9050; San Luis, Pollard & Palmer 350; Matanzas, Rugel 191 in Gray Herbarium; Cienfuegos, Pringle 44 and Combs 255 in Gray Herbarium; Marianao, Leon 306. The following are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Santiago de Cuba, Hamilton 216, 217, Underwood & Earle 165; Matanzas, Britton & Shafer 165, Britton & Wilson 101; Caden: Uneven & Earle 1536.

In the Grisebach Herbarium is a Wright specimen from eastern Cuba, 1859, num- bered 1541.

Steudel’s type from ‘uae Guadaloupe Duchaissing”’ is in the Museum at Paris.

26. ALLOTEROPSIS Presl, Rel. Haenk. 343. pl. 47. 1830.4

Blades elongated, 30 to 40 cm. long; racemes several in a cluster.2. A. dura. Blades mostly radical, 10 to 15 cm. long; racemes | or 2-.....-.- 1. A.gamphistemon.

a The type species is A. distachya Presl (op. cit. 344), which is published as coming from Monterey, California, but the type in the National Museum at Prague has two labels, ‘‘Peruana montana,’’ and ‘‘Regio montana Luzon?’’ The plant is Allote- ropsis semialata (R. Br.); Panicum semialatum R. Br. Prod. 192. 1810, the type of which is from New Holland. This is not an American species and Presl’s type must have come from the Philippines, as indicated by Scribner (Rep. Mo. Bot. Gard.

10: 37. 1899). Presl’s plate and description are incorrect in that the artist incor-

. porated in the drawing of the spikelet of Alloteropsis a spikelet of an Andropogon which had become wedged between the glumes and this is described as a second ' pairof spikelets. Although Presl’s genus is founded upon a misconception there is no

doubt as to the identity of the type species. Hence Alloteropsis, the oldest name

for this group as segregated from Panicum, is accepted for the genus.

| :

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. P11

1. Alloteropsis amphistemon (Wright).

Pamcum amphistemon Wright, Anal. Acad. Cienc. Habana 8: 207. 1871; Sauv. Fl.“Cub.198.

Wright 3464.

The type of Panicum shia eotibh Wright isin une Gray Herbarium, Wright 3464, labeled ‘‘Mayari-abajo, Aug. 2, in small dense tufts.’

2. Alloteropsis dura (Griseb.). Pamcum durum Griseb. Mem. Amer. Acad. n. ser. 8: 533. 1862. AL Rocky hills, procumbent. in loose tufts, Valestina, September 25, Wright 3868; in ‘La small tufts on steep hills at the Farallones, Ny Sophie, September 29, Wright 1539 ; in the Gray Herbarium. ' Tn the Grisebach Herbarium is the type of P. durum, Wright 1559 from eastern Cuba in 1859.

27. MESOSETUM Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 118. 1854.4

mpikelets copiously willous-ciliate v.02... 2.2222 2222 2222.22 2. 1. M. rottboellioides. _ Spikelets ¢ sels or Lay hispid SFE AEE ears ae eM OEE ib a 2. M. wright.

1. Mesosetum i oetpaciiodes (H. B. KS,

Pamcum rottboellioides H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 1: 96. 1816.

Mesosetum cayennense Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 118. 1854.

Culms scattered, single or few, savannas, Metatoso, August, Wright 3449; Herra- dura, Baker HC 2935, Tracy 9058, Hitchcock in 1006; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 396, Palmer & Riley 889, 896, Taylor 31; Cienfuegos, Combs 401 in Gray Herbarium; Sagua, Britton & Wilson 336 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

The Sauvalle specimen has a second label which reads, ‘‘In small tufts, Pinales, Daganiguas, Almacigos Consolacion, Sept.’’ The Grisebach specimen from western Cuba, 1863, is numbered ‘‘894=3449.” Wright 3449 in the Gray Herbarium is from ‘‘Savannas, Vueltabajo, July 24.”’ ;

2. Mesosetum wrightii sp. nov. . Culms ascending from a geniculate, rooting or creeping base, slender, glabrous, 20 to 40 cm. long; nodes appressed-hispid; sheaths glabrous below, hispid toward the summit, or the lower hispid throughout, ciliate on the margin; ligule of short bristles; blades flat or somewhat involute on the margins, stiff and thick, yellow- green, hispid below and sparsely so above, remotely papillose-ciliate on the car- ' tilaginous margins, 3 to 6 cm. long, 2 to 3 mm. wide, the uppermost much reduced; spike single, terminating the cma mostly long-exserted, 2 to 3 cm. long; spike- lets subsessile, appressed to the rachis, alternate, 3 to 4 mm. long, the apex of one about reaching the base of the one above on the same side; first glume glabrous, 8-nerved, narrow, acuminate to a blunt point, a little shorter than the second, placed next to the rachis; second glume hispid at the base with a tuft of hairs, sparsely or copiously hispid above, strongly 5-nerved and with some additional striz, narrowed to a blunt apex; sterile lemma similar, somewhat gibbous below, ' 7-nerved, its palea obsolete; fertile lemma chartaceous, smooth, and shining, rounded on the back so as to be as thick as wide, about 2 mm. long, extended into a short point, the margins flat, not inrolled; palea similar and included in the margins of the lemma. Type specimen from Cuba, Wright 3859 no. 559961 in the U. S. National Herba- rium. The fragmentary specimen in the Sauvalle Herbarium bears the label

aMesosetum Steud. Flora 33: 228. 1850, nomen nudum. The type species of

Mesosetum is M. cayennense Steud., ‘‘Leprieur legit. in Cayenne,’’ the type speci-

men of which, in the herbarium of he Museum at Paris, belongs to the same Spe 3 _ as that of Panicum rottboellioides H. B. K. in the same herbarium.

AS 4 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

‘‘Pinales, Daganiguas, Almicigos, Sept.’’ Panicum sclerochloa Trin. (Mesose- tum sclerochloa (Trin.)) of Brazil, the type of which is in the Trinius Herba- rium, differs in having glabrous blades, spikelets 5 mm. long, somewhat scabrous but not hispid, and glumes and lemmas all notched near the apex, hence some- what 3-lobed. In Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana Wright 3859 is doubtfully referred to Panicum sclerochloa Trin.

28. BRACHIARIA Griseb. in Ledeb. Fl. Ross. 4: 469. 1853.

1. Brachiaria plantaginea (Link).

Panicum plantagineum Link, Hort. Berol. 1: 206. 1827.

Panicum leandri Trin. Icon. 335. 1836.

Paspalum platyphyllum Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 230. 1866.

Panicum platyphyllum Munro; Vasey, U. &. Dept. Agr. Div. Bot. BullivSesaae 1889.

Brachiaria platyphylla Nah in Small, Fl. Southeast. U. S. 81. 1903.

Wright 3853, 3441; in dense patches in pasture, Sabinilla, June, Wright 3867.

The type of iene speciesisin the Berlin Herbarium. Wright’s 3853 inthe Sauvalle Herbarium bears the secondary number 174. In the Grisebach Herbarium are two specimens, the type of Paspalum platyphyllum from western Cuba, 1863, numbered ‘*892—=3441” and no. 174 labeled, ‘‘Damp places in roads and elsewhere, Zarabanda, May 4.’’ This species is placed in the genus Brachiaria because the spikelets are placed with the first glume toward the rachis.

29. HYMENACHNE Beauv. Agrost. 48. pl. 10. f. 8. 1812.

Inflorescence spike-like; spikelets 4 mm. long..........--..-.--. 1. H. amplexicaulis. Inflorescence of numerous spikes, 1 to 3 cm. long; spikelets 2 to. SS UMNTUT OMG i OO EC AN caine ens ec tts Deane Ai Oe ea 2. H. auriculata.

l. Hymenachne amplexicaulis (Rudge) Nees, Agrost. Bras. 276. 1829.

Panicum amplexicaule Rudge, Pl. Guian. 1: 21. 1805.

Panicum hymenachne Desv. Opusc. 82. 1831.

Panicum myuros of authors, not Lam.?

Wright 3469; Santiago de las Vegas, Hitchcock in 1906; Habana, Leon 559; Guines, Leon 577.

The specimen in the Grisebach Herbarium is from eastern Cuba, 1860, and is num- bered ‘‘108=3469.”’ No.3469 in the Gray Herbarium is from ‘‘Margin of Be Bayamo, Oct 142”

2. Hymenachne auriculata (Willd.) Chase, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 21: 5. 1908. Panicum auriculatum Willd.; Spreng. Syst. 1: 322. 1825. . ; Wriaht 3863 in part. Thec. are three labels with this specimen in the Sauvalle Herbarium, ‘‘In ponds, Daganiguas, Sept.,’’ ‘‘Wet margin of lagunas, Sta. Cruz de los Pifios, Nov. 10,” ““Low

marshy lands, Guanimar, Nov.” On the same sheet is a specimen of Panicum con-

densum Nash, and one of P. laxum Sw.”

The specimen of Hymenachne is fragmentary, but appears to belong to this species. Wright’s 3863 in the National Herbarium is mixed with Panicum laxum Sw. Wright’s 3863 in the Gray Herbarium is mixed with P. condensum.

30. SACCIOLEPIS Nash in Britton, Man. 89. 1901.

Spikelets 4 mm. long, on slender pedicels........-..-.---------------- 2. S. striata. Spikelets 2 to 3 mm. long, subsessile.

acon. 283, 1836. bSee Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 21: 1. 1908,

F 4 7

Se aT ee

nS

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 2S

Spikelets 2 mim. long) panicle dense-:.2..2:-=.22\2) 12.222 5-22--- 1. S. myuros. Spikelets 3 mm. long, panicle often interrupted.............----- 3. S. vilvoides.

1. Sacciolepis myuros (Lam.) Chase, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 21: 7. 1908. Panicum myuros Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 1: 172. 1791. Isle of Pines, Curtiss 428.

2. Sacciolepis striata (L.) Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 80: 383. 1903.

Aolcus striatus L. Sp. Pl. 1048. 1753.

Panicum gibbum Ell. Bot. 8. C. & Ga. 1: 116. 1816.

On tembladeros@ in lagunas, Pinar del Rio, December, Wright 3885.

The Grisebach specimen is from Hanabana, May 25, 1865, numbered 198. A speci- men in the Gray Herbarium is numbered ‘'302=3885.”’

3. Sacciolepis vilvoides (Trin.) Chase, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 21: 7. 1908.

Panicum vilvoides Trin. Gram. Pan. 171. 1826.

Hymenachne fluviatilis Nees, Agrost. Bras. 273. 1829.

In rivulets, Pinar del Rio, October, Wright 3470; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 304.

This species is represented in the Grisebach Herbarium by a Wright specimen from western Cuba, 1863, numbered ‘‘944=3470.”’ Wright’s 3470 in the Gray Herbarium is labeled, ‘‘In lagunas, Los Almacigos, Nov. 23,’’ and ‘‘On tembladeros¢ in lagunas, Asiento viejo de San Julian, Nov. 30.”’

31. ECHINOCHLOA Beauv. Agrost. 53. pl. 11. f. 2. 1812.

“lheeytlve Lechner eS i gee i: ee: ea 5 aes oe walter. Sheaths glabrous. | Spucclets pomted but NOtaAwned «222 Sos nrs. ee ee oye oh 1. E. colona. SULSSIS TS BNI Eee ee See ee ene mene Saas 2. E. crusgalli.

1. Echinochloa colona (L.) Link, Hort. Berol. 2: 209. 1833.

Panicum colonum L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 870. 1759.

Wright 752; Habana, Baker HC 1796, Leom 303, Palmer & Riley 1137; Santiago de las Vegas, Baler HC 502, 4765, acne in 1906; Buena Vista, Shafer in 1903; Cerro, Shafer 180; Guanabacoa, Leon 117 in part; Cabanas, Palmer & Riley 756; Cicntucue Pringle 45; Combs 254 in Gray Herbarium; Guines, Leon 425. The followin are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Isle of Pines, Curtiss 427; Matan- zas, Britton & Shafer 509; Cedro, Underwood & Karle 1620.

In the Grisebach Pleven thie there are two specimens, one from western Cuba,

1863, “‘946=752,’ the other numbered 27, collected in 1865.

A specimen in.the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden from Matanzas, Rugel 884, is doubtfully referred to EH. colona. The spikelets have awns 2 to 3 mm. long. 4 2. Echinochloa crusgalli (L.) Beauy. Agrost. 53. 1812.

Panicum crusgalli L. Sp. Pl. 56. 1753.

Santiago, Linden 1814 in Leipzig Herbarium; Rugel 889 in Grisebach Herbarium; Wright in 1865 in Grisebach Herbarium; Wright 53 of 1865 in Kew Herbarium; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.; Matanzas, Britton & Wilson 175

in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard. Wr.397¢p. op. Vat. db,

3. Echinochloa walteri (Pursh)-Nash in Britton, Man. 78. 1901. A ee)

Panicum waltert Pursh, Fl. Sept. Amer. 1: 66. 1814. ee oO _ Low wooded swamps, Hanabana, May 27, Wright 3879; Wright 160 in re ieee barium.

aQuaking bogs.

ee ofectatcts (how) L—/.

214 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM. ;

There are two additional labels with Wright 3879 in the Sauvalle Herbarium,

9)

marshy savannas, Guanimas, Nov., Mars 13:74 32. PANICUM L. Sp. Pl. 55. 1753.

Axis of the panicle branches extending beyond base of uppermost

spikeletiasa short pointonbristles;:) |22 eee aoe. eee

Axis.of panicle branches not extended into a bristle. Inflorescence consisting of several spike-like, more or less secund racemes. Fruit smooth and shining; spikelets not over 1.5 mm. long. (LAXUM GROUP.) .

Rachis pilose; pedicel short, subequal........... :

Rachis not pilose; pedicels unequal, panicle less

VOMUIAL oi Deetete nc) Loe Cuba Lote ele ince ar een Fruit transversely wrinkled; spikelets turgid. (REp--

TANS GROUP.)

Nodes bearded..........-. Se ema eer y neh on wan, |

Nodes sometimes pubescent, but not bearded. Glumes and sterile lemma Pe ee. trans- versely reticulate-veined..- Glumes and sterile lemma nue cross- ene. Spikelets hispidulous, pointed, first glume

Spikelets glabrous, first glume truncate. Blades ovate-lanceolate, 5 to 10 mm. wide, 2 to 7 cm. long; prostrate-

cl Ose ere VOU Oo UNg Gripen a er egehey hea oma Tey at

Blades elongated, 10 to 20 cm. long, narrow; flowering culms erect or as- cending; inflorescence of numerous erect-appressed racemes on an elon- gated axis; spikelets in 2 distinct

POW Se oii covers /s ne Sete a) he eee ea ieee

Inflorescence a more or less diffuse panicle, sometimes nar- row and rather compact, but not consisting of spike- like racemes.

Stems woody, résembling bamboos. (DIvARICATUM GROUP.) Sheaths villous. Stems tall, blades 1 fo 2 cm. wide, not distich-

Stems creeping, blades distichous, 2 to 3 cm.

long, about 5 mm. wide, velvety..-...-:..--

Sheaths smooth or pubescent only. Panicle compact; blades ovate-lanceolate, 1.5 to4cm. wide, velvety-puberulent beneath;

spikelets: globular: % 2 32 [s ier ae Bie pene se

Panicle open, blades lanceolate. Stem creeping, sending up erect flowering

Stem climbing or trailing. Panicle large and spreading, 10 to 20 cm. long; blades 1.5 to 2.5 cm.

2. ko,

Efe

. distantiflorum.

. pilosum.

laxum.

.numidianum.

P. fasciculatum.

5 Pe

: grisebachit.

. sloanei.

adspersum.

. reptans.

. geminatum.

. swartzianum.

. rugelt.

. compactum,

““Low and ‘‘Margin of mangrove swamp, Trinidad,

on

a

HITCHCOCK—-GRASSES OF CUBA. 915

Panicle smalland few-flowered, usually about 5 cm. long; blades oun 5

ey Sinaia: ayia sabes Se ORD OP 2 CMOr earn. Stems herbaceous. a ) Fruit transversely rugose...-.-...- Hecker e3ui De Ee IR OLUTI ILI:

Fruit smooth. (See SenEMiatiol a (Continuation 1.)

Plants forming a rosette of basal leavesin autumn; early culms simple, with terminal, exserted, many-flowered, spreading panicles; freely branching after maturity of primary panicle, and bearing numerous reduced panicles more or less in-

cluded in the sheaths. (DicHoToMUM GROUP.) Ligule a ring of hairs, 1 mm. or more long; spikelets pu-

bescent, 1 to 1.5 mm. long.

Spikelets hardly 1mm. long; foliage minutely pubes-

Cent MOlVenVCl versa nes B LG ye los sek Let OF 48. P. wrightianum. Spikelets 1.5 mm. long. Foliage smooth or minutely Paldeeniee: a Vaasa es 24. P. leucothrix. Bley peel vietay tice ye oo baie aay cies See, 1. P. acuminatum.

Ligule inconspicuous. Autumnal state a flat mat or rosette of soft leaves; blades ciliate; spikelets 1.5 to 2mm. long, glabrous. Dindes pilose onthe suriace.. sis. 41. P. strigosum. Blades glabrous on the surface.........-.----.---- 33. P. polycaulon. Autumnal state erect or spreading. . Sheaths velvety or pilose. Vernal culms 1 meter or more tall, a viscid ring below eachnode; primary panicles 10 to 20 cm. long; autumnal blades, 5 mm. OM IMORE My UGE are Mead Mey. Cie iL ee Pee 37. P. scoparium. Vernal culms 20 to 40 cm. tall: primary pan- icles 2 to 6 cm. long; Paeanell blades 1 to Zine Wid ese srs bev aewe SUS Mo Le Behe 6. P.chrysopsidifolium. Sheaths not velvety nor pilose. Culms wiry, minutely crisp-puberulent; spikelets pyriform-turgid.

Spikelets. 1:5 mm. long: 220.523.2224 -46 31. P. pauciciliatum. Spikelets 2 mandivlome. 3c). 2a 3) eee 22. P. lancearium. Culms glabrous, or only lowermost internodes pubescent. Spikelets glabrous, 1.6 mm. long..-..... 7. P. caerulescens.

Spikelets pubescent. Nodes bearded; spikelets 2 mm. MOMeteeetcr ye RAL. OLN Ri eeL gee 28. P. nitidum. Nodes glabrous or pubescent, not bearded. Blades long and narrow, autum- nalbladesinvolute; spikelets papillose. Spikelets 2mm. long, blunt.27. P. neuranthum. Spikelets about 3.5 mm. lone, spointed 2.4 520. 16. P. fusiforme. Bladesnot elongated, autumnal blades flat; spikelets not pap- illose.

216 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

Blades with a white-carti- laginous margin, not cili- ate; spikelets 1.5 mm.

Long > =. eae 44,

Blades without white mar- gin, ciliate toward the cordate base; spikelets scarcely over 1mm. long,

suborbietlane: oh. 1M

Plants not forming winter rosettes. Panicles narrow and compact with appressed branches; spikelets glabrous, i to 2.5 mm. long. . Culms 1 meter or more tall, compressed at base; pan-

icle 10 to 20 cm. long; spikelets 2.5 mm. long..... 9).

Culms 60 cm. or less tall, stiff and wiry, base not com- pressed; panicle less than 5 cm. long; spikelets 1 to

2 mm. long. Spikelets scarcely more than 1 mm. long..-.-... 40. Spikelets 2 mm. long....... NB meh thy hee 43.

Panicles open, usually diffusely spreading. Panicle branches in several distinct distant whorls; spikelets short-pediceled, remote along the

loran@hies'* (Sess ncsa ce teehee tele ole nga ane 26:

Panicle branches not in distinct whorls. Spikelets 5 to 6 mm. long, pedicels short and

stout; panicle branches few, ascending. ...-... 49.

Spikelets less than 5 mm. long, pedicels slen- der, often capillary. Plants producing scaly rootstocks. Blades 5 to 15 cm. long; culms less

than 50 cm. tall; asea-shore grass. . . -- 34.

Blades elongated, 20 to 40 cm. long;

culms 1 meter or more tall........... 47.

Plants not producing rootstocks, but culms sometimes decumbent and rooting at base.

Spikelets glutinous, 3 mm. long .-.--.-..- 18.

Spikelets not glutinous. (See contin- uation 2.) (Continuation 2.) Spikelets warty-rugose, about 2 mm. long; blades ovate-

Lam CELA Hck Veh hs ee ee a ae Sa nari ROI, eS 38.

Spikelets not rugose. ‘Spikelets pubescent, minute (1 mm. long); blades ovate-

lanceolate. sei Pee Se oe OE ee eae 46.

Spikelets glabrous. Spikelets 1.5mm. long, short-pediceled on thespread- ing branches of a panicle 2 to 5 cm. long; culms

slender, 30 to 50 cm. high, blades 1 to 2 mm. wide. 14.

Spikelets on more or less elongated pedicels. Culms slender, widely decumbent-spreading; blades elliptic-lanceolate, 1 to 3 cm. long,

STAUCOUS cs eee ee IE ee Oe eee 30.

P. tenue. P %erectifolium.

P. condensum.

P. stenodes. P. tenerum.

P. megiston.

P. zizanioides.

P. repens.

P. virgatum cubense.

P. glutinosum.

P. sellovii. P. trichoides.

P. exiguiflorum.

P. parvifolium.

Sa: Se Oe

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. OAL

Culms not slender nor decumbent-spreading. First glume obtuse or truncate, one-fourth the length of the acuminate spikelet......- 5. P. chloroticum. First glume acute to acuminate, more than one-third the length of the spikelet. Sheaths glabrous. Panicle very diffuse, the branches capillary; spikelets less than 1.5 TMD OTN Cem ee Gece ore tS 2 Mee ee 45. P. tricanthum. Paniclescarcely diffuse, the branches not capillary; spikelets 2 mm. or more long. Culms slender; spikelets 2 mm. gma gee ee tan he eo aR 10. P. diffusum. Culms tall and stout, 5to 10mm. in diameter; spikelets acumi- nate, about 5 mm. long ...-.... 3. P. aquaticum. Sheaths hispid. | Annual; panicle branches divari- CLES Lr See ae ul Ah een ge te Remi ge Re 4. P. cayennense. Perennial; panicle branches ascend- ing. Spikelets 2 mm. long, panicle COMMIAGE ae ee ee) Score 20. P. hirsutum. Spikelets 3 mm. long, panicle TOOS Ee pais ti, Sh ee ot ee 21. P. hirtwaginum.

1. Panicum acuminatum Sw. Prod. 23. 1788.

Panicum comophyllum Nash; Bull. Torr. Club 30: 380. 1903.

Dry savannas, San Cristobal, August, Wright 3874; Herradura, Baker & Dimmock HC 4871, Tracy 9078, Hitchcock in 1906; Pinar del Rio, Shafer 320 in part, Palmer & Riley 447; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 328, 307, Taylor in 1901, Palmer & Riley 989, 1065, 1083, Taylor 33 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

The type of P. acuminatum at Stockholm is a specimen in the autumnal state. Wright’s 3874 in the Gray Herbarium is labeled ‘‘Low savannas, Chirigote, Nov. 2.’’ Another specimen in the Gray Herbarium, without number, is from ‘‘Savan- nas, Pueblo Nuevo, San Cristobal, May 16.”’

2. Panicum adspersum Trin. Gram. Pan. 146. 1826.

Wright 3869; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 387, 512, 1050, 1825, 2057, Hitch- cock in 1906, Tracy 9109; Triscornia, Hitchcock in 1906; Habana, Curtiss 748, Leon 291,570; Herradura, Tracy 9102; Cabafias, Palmer & Riley 746, 771; Matanzas, Britton, Britton & Shafer 596. In the Herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden are the following: Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904; Pinar del Rio, Shafer 504.

Wright’s specimen in the Sauvalle Herbarium bears the secondary number 304 in addition to the distribution number. Grisebach’s specimen bears the secondary number 304 (1865). The specimen in the Gray Herbarium bears the secondary number 269. Trinius’s type is from Santo Domingo, sent by Sprengel, and is the plant from which the plate is drawn.¢ The spikelets are about 3 mm. long and sparsely hispidulous. The culms are’ geniculate and rooting below;.the blades spreading and 4 to 8 cm. long. A larger form occurs in Florida, with culms as much as 1 meter high, and blades 15 cm. long and 1.5 cm. wide, the spikelets larger, as much as 4 mm. long. This is represented in Cuba by Curtiss 748 and Palmer & Riley 771. An examination of considerable material from the West Indies and Flor-

4 Jeon. 169.

218 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

ida shows that there are all gradations between these extremes, and there appears to be no constant character by which to separate the larger form as a species or even as a well-marked variety.

3. Panicum aquaticum Poir. Encycl. Suppl. 4: 281. 1816. py Me Ob icla Rann plinnn

Panicum elephantipes Nees, Agrost. Bras. 165. 1829.

San Antonio, Hitchcock in 1906, Habana, Leon 335.

Poiret’s, type labeled ‘‘Panicum aquaticum enc. suppl. * * * Porto Ricco. h. Poiret”’ is in the herbarium of Cosson in Paris. Nees’s type at Munich agrees with this.

4, Panicum cayennense Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 1: 173. 1791.

Among other tall grasses in low grounds, pinales, Pinar del Rio, September, Wright 3865; Herradura, Tracy 9073; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 267, Palmer & Riley 1086, Taylor 34.

The Grisebach specimen is from western Cuba, 1863, no. 891. A specimen of this species in the Gray Herbarium, without number, is from ‘‘Savannas, Vueltabajo, July 28.”’

5. Panicum chloroticum Nees; Agrost. Bras. 164. 1829.

Punta Brava, Baker HC 4054; Santiago de las Vegas, Hitchcock in 1906; Batabano, Mitchcock in 1906; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906, Tracy 9055; Wright 3456 and 3860 in National Herbarium in part; Wright 3860 in Sauvalle Herbarium; Wright 181,

189 in the Grisebach Herbarium; Wright 3496 in Sauvalle Herbarium; edge of Lagu- 3

nas, Pinar del Rio, September, Wright 3861.

‘The first two specimens cited above are like the type at Munich; the others are more or less pubescent, but appear to be otherwise the same. The type of Pani- cum proliferum pilosum Griseb. in the Grisebach Herbarium is labeled ‘‘Around lacunas in wet or damp ground, Hanabana, May 16,’’ no. 186. This is the same as Wright 3860 in the Sauvalle Herbarium. Probably P. bartowense Scribn. & Merr.@

is a form of P. chlorotwcum. It differs from the Brazilian specimen only in its hispid .

sheaths and from some of the hispid Cuban specimenspnly in itslargersize. Nash’s 567 from Eustis, Florida, is a low spreading form, with culm about 30 cm. long, but the blades and sheaths pubescent like P. bartowense. P. dichotomiflorum Michx.® (P. proliferum of American authors, not Lam.), common throughout the eastern United States, is smooth throughout, and is usually more or less geniculate-spreading at base, and the blades are usually long and gradually acuminate. In Florida this shows a tendency to become pubescent. Combs & Rol/fs 94 from Lake City, Florida, has the habit of P. dichotomiflorum, but the blades are pubescent on the upper sur- face. The spikelets of P. dichotomiflorum vary in length from 2to3 mm. It would appear that there is one variable species, including P. dichotomiflorum Michx., P. chloroticum Nees, and P. bartowense Scribn. & Merr. The West Indian specimens resemble more closely P. chloroticum in habit, and for the present they are referred. to this species. Other specimens of the same in the National Herbarium are: Baha- mas, Nassau, Curtiss 177; Cat Cay, Brace 3742. Bermuda: Hamilton, Millspaugh 126. Porto Rico: Unado, Britton & Cowell 432. South America: Brazil, Riedel 959, Salz- mann (P. hygrophilum Salzm.); Paraguay, Morong 1002; Uruguay, Arechavaleta.

Wright’s 3456 and 3861 cited above have larger spikelets than the other Cuban specimens (3 mm. long), but this appears to be a variable character. Wright 3456 is the type of P. proliferum strictum Griseb.¢ Wright 3456 in the ee Herbarium is from ‘‘Lagunas, Almacigos, Nov. 23.”

6. Panicum chrysopsidifoium Nash in Small, Fl. Southeast. U.S. 100. 1903. Wright 3453 in part; Wright 3454 in part; Wright 3461 in part; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906; Consolacion del Sur, Palmer & Riley 481; Isle of Pines, Palmer & Riley 982.

2@U.§8. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Cire. 85 : 3. 1901. ¢Cat. Pl. Cub. 232. 1866. 6 Fl. Bor. Amer. 1: 48. 1803.

auc Prem 2% 3e.('52.6

Se a a

ea

Pe ee oe ae

a ee

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 219

The Grisebach specimen of Wright 3461 also belongs to this species, though it is listed by him under P. dichotomum variety nodiflorum. Another specimen of this was included by Grisebach under P. neuranthum; it is labeled ‘‘ a forma ascendens ramosa.’”’ Wright’s 3461 in the Gray Herbarium is part P. chrysopsidifolium and part P. lancearium. The two labels are, ‘‘Sandy pe Asiento Viejo de San Julian, Dec. 1,’’ and ‘‘ Pinal. Mayart, July 24.”

This species is distinguished from P. neuranthum by the pubescent culms, bearded

nodes, spreading vernal panicles, and short, flat autumnal blades on zigzag stems.

The spikelets are 2mm. long. It occurs in Florida and in Porto Rico (Heller 982).

7. Panicum caerulescens Hack. in herb.

Vernal form cespitose, of a somewhat glaucous bluish green color; culms erect or as- cending, 40 to 75 cm. high, glabrous; sheaths usually less than half as long as the inter- nodes, glabrous or the basal ones sparingly pubescent; blades ascending or spread- ing, commonly purplish beneath, glabrous or rarely a few hairs around the base, 5 to 8 em. long, 4 to 7 mm. wide, the margins nearly parallel for two-thirds their length; panicles usually short-exserted, 3 to 7 mm. long, one-half as wide or less, the branches narrowly ascending; spikelets 1.5 to 1.6 mm. long, 0.9 mm. wide, obovoid, blunt, very turgid, glabrous, first glume about one-third the length of the spikelet; second glume and sterile lemma subequal, the glume scarcely as long as the fruit at maturity; fruit 1.4 mm. long, 0.8 mm. wide, ellipsoid.

Autumnal form erect or letnine. sometimes decumbent at base, producing short, densely fascicled branches at the middle and upper nodes, these tufts scarcely as long as the primary internodes, the reduced blades ascending, more or less involute; the reduced panicles with only a lew long-pediceled spikelets.

Closely related to P. roanokense, a species of the southern Atlantic coastal plain of the United States, from which it is distinguished by the narrow panicles and smaller spikelets and by the tufted branches of the autumnal form.

The type is Hitchcock 706, ‘‘In glade among Spartina, etc., stretching up through

. the tall grass, Miami, Florida, April 3, 1906;” U.S. National Herbarium no. 558380.

The name refers to the glaucous blue color.

In marshes and swampy woods, southern Alabama and Florida, Cuba, and the Bahamas.

Wright 3463 in part; Santa Clara, Britton & Wilson 316 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

Wright’s 3463 in the National Herbarium and in the Krug and Urban Herbarium is this species. For other species distributed as 3463, see P. leucothrix, P. wrightianum, and P. tenue.

Bahamas, New Providence, ‘‘in fruticetis procumbens,’’ Eggers 4305.

8. Panicum compactum Sw. Adnot. Bot. 14. 1829.

Eastern Cuba, 1856-57, Wright 749; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 291, 520, Palmer & Riley 904.

This species is distinguished by its broad, etl puberulent blades and compact panicle.

9. Panicum condensum Nash in Small, Fl. Southeast. U. 8. 93. 1903.

Low savannas, Hanabana, May 19, Wright 3862 in part.

In the Grisebach Herbarium there are two specimens of this species. One of them has two labels, ‘‘Low wet woods, Hanabana, May 27,’ no. 184 of 1865, and ‘‘Wet— among tall Cyperaceae, in small bunches, Hanabana, May 25.”’ The plant is 3 feet tall, stout, with a compressed base, and narrow compact panicle. The other specimen,

which is similar, is labeled, ‘‘Palm savannas, Hanabana, May 18,’’ 1865, no. 197.

This number of Wright’s in the Sauvalle Herbarium and in the National Herbarium is mixed with P. laruwm. There a fragment of what appears to be the same, on the

sheet of 3863 in the Sauvalle Herbarium. PP. condenswm is common in the southern

United States and is found also in the Bahamas (Curtiss 174). Wright’s 3862 in the

220 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

Gray Herbarium consists of P. condensum and P. laxum.- Wright’s 3863 in the Gray Herbarium consists of P. condensum and Hymenachne auriculata.

10. Panicum diffusum Sw. Prod. 23. 1788.

Wright 1540; in pastures, Retiro, July, Wright 3852; damp savannas, Retiro, October 11, Wright 3877; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 350, 511, 2052, 2054, Tracy 9111, Wilson 1405; Habana, Leon 190, 305, Baker, Tracy & Hasselbring HC 3095; Tris- cornia, Tracy 9082; Guanajay, Palmer & Riley 802; Isle of. Pines, Curtiss 384, 494. The following are in the Herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Santiago de las Vegas, Van Hermann 2444; Sagua, Britton & Wilson 314; Madruga, Britton & Shafer 649; Matanzas, Rugel 907.

A sheet in the National Herbarium of Wright 3860 and another marked ‘‘Cuba

3860,’ which appears to be a Wright plant although there is no Wright label, are in part P. diffusum. In the Grisebach Herbarium are three specimens marked, respec- tively, ‘‘In the edge of woods and margin of savannas, Hanabana, May 29,’’ 1865, with the secondary number 191; no. 1540 from eastern Cuba, 1859; and ‘‘edge of savannas, Hanabana, May 19,’ in 1865, with the secondary number 190. Wright’s 3877 in the Sauvalle Herbarium and in the Torrey Herbarium is part P. exiguiflorum.

11. Panicum distantiflorum Rich. in Sagra, Hist. Cub. 11: 304. 1850.

Panicum utawanaeanum Scribn. in Millsp. Field Columb. Mus. Bot. 2: 25. 1900.

Pamcum sintenisti Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 80: 382. 1903.

Wright 3452; Cojimar, Baker HC 267, 2902, Hitchcock in 1906; Triscornia, Tracy 9089, Hitchcock in 1906; Matanzas, Rugel 190 in Gray Herbarium, 874 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

Grisebach’s specimen from eastern Cuba, 1860, is numbered ‘‘104=3452.”’ Another specimen, included by Grisebach under Panicum stenodes, is labeled, ‘‘ Bushy savan- nas, Hanabana, May 16, in small tufts,’’ no. 285. A third specimen, ‘‘Savannas of Guamaroca, July 25,’’ no. 284, is also included under P. stenodes. <A part of Wright 3870 in the National Herbarium belongs to this species. The type of Richard’s species in the herbarium of the Museum at Paris agrees with Scribner’s type from Guanica, Porto Rico,@ a part of which is in the National Herbarium. Nash’s description applies to these specimens and his type (S7ntenis 3463) was also collected at Guanica, Porto Rico. Sintenis’s 3365 and 3416, from Guanica, Porto Rico, also belong to this species. .

12. Panicum divaricatum L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 871. 1759.

Panicum bambusoides Hamilt. Prod. Ind. Occ. 10. 1826.

Panicum chauvinu Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 68. 1854. .

Hillsides, scandent or ascending, Valestina, September 19, Wright 748; Wright 747; Guanajay, Baker HC 4269, El Cangre, Baker HC 5198; Cojimar Baker HC 5324, La Magdalena, Baker HC 2501, 4611; Habana, Baker HC 1837; Triscornia, Hitchcock in 1906; Herradura, Tracy 9047, 9044; Santiago de Cuba, Millspaugh 1015; Baracoa, Pollard, Palmer & Palmer 76; Isle of Pines, Millspaugh 1422, Palmer & Riley 1001; Cienfuegos, Combs 148 in Gray Herbarium. In the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden are the following: Managua, Baker & Wilson 304; Santiago de Cuba, Underwood & Earle 1642; Taylor 327; Matanzas, Britton &) ies 241; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904.

Widely clambering over bushes. The two specimens of this in Grisebach’s her- barium, called by him P. divaricatum, are ‘‘ Prope villam Monte Verde dictam, Cuba orientalis,’’ no. 747, and another labeled 747a. These are both smooth throughout. Besides these there are two specimens with pubescent blades, which Grisebach calls P. dwaricatum variety puberulum.o One is oe ‘‘Tn sylvis densis, Matanzas, Cuba,

a Millspaugh, Plantae Utawanae no. 702. 6 Griseb. Fl. Brit. W. Ind. 551. 1864.

a

Py HITCHCOCK——-GRASSES OF CUBA. 921

/ Rug. 187;’’ the other is Wright 748 from eastern Cuba. The type collected by March in Jamaica is also here. Another specimen (Wright, western Cuba in 1863) is marked | by Grisebach as f stenostachyum. These last two specimens appear to be the ordinary form of P. diwaricatum. The pubescent form can scarcely be separated even as a variety.

Hamilton’s species is based on ‘‘P. bambusoides Herb. Prof. Desv. Porto Rico.’’ A specimen so marked in the Desvaux Herbarium in the Museum at Paris is P. divari- catum. The type of P. chauvinw Steud. is also in the Museum at Paris.

13. Panicum erectifolium Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 28: 148. 1896.

Panicum sphaerocarpon floridanum Vasey, U. 8. Dept. Agr. Div. Bot. Bull. 8: 33. 1889, not P. floridanum Trin. 1835.

Wright 3462.

The specimen in the Grisebach Herbarium is from western Cuba, 1862, and is numbered ‘‘896=3462.’’ The specimen in the Gray Herbarium is labeled ‘‘ Lagunas, Bo ekayo, July 24.”

14. Panicum exiguiflorum Abas Cat. Pl. Cub. 234. 1866.

Pamcum minutiflorum, Rich. in Sagra, Hist. Cub. 11: 305. 1853, not Rasp. 1895.

Panicum tricolor Hack. Oesterr. Bot. Zeitschr. 51: 370. 1901.

Wright 755, 3450, 3877 in part, 756 in Gray Herbarium; Pinar del Rio, Earle & Wilson HC 1550; Herradura, Tracy 9075, Hitchcock in 1906; La Magdalena Baker 1; Isle of Pines, Taylor 35. The following are in the Herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Isle of Pines, Taylor 35, Curtiss in 1904; Madruga, Shafer 452.

Wright’s 3450 in the National Herbarium is labeled ‘‘ Low savannas, Chirigote, Oct. 26;”’ the same number in the Gray Herbarium, ‘‘Pinales, Almacigos, July 26.’’ The type in the Grisebach Herbarium is labeled ‘‘In bushy savannas, Hanabana, May 16,” 1865. The type of Richard’s species is at Paris. Grisebach has two other speci- mens of this, one from western Cuba, 1863, numbered ‘‘909=3450,’’ which is the type of his P. laxum variety variegatum,¢ and the other, also from western Cuba, numbered ““89—3450.’’ Wright’s 755, ‘‘ Pinales, San Juan de Buena Vista, Nov. 21, 1860-64,’’ and no. 756, from eastern Cuba in 1856-57, both in the Gray Herbarium, are P. exiguiflorum.

The type of Panicum tricolor, Eggers 3978, from Fortune Island, Bahamas, was exam- ined at Hackel’s herbarium.

15. Panicum fasciculatum Sw. Prod. 22. 1788.

Panicum fuscum Sw. Prod. 23. 1788.

Panicum flavescens Sw. Prod. 23. 1788.

Panicum illinomense Desv. Opusc. 91. 1831.

' Santiago de las Vegas, Van Hermann HC 2445, Baker HC 2678, 5110, Wilson 593; La Magdalena, Baker HC 3636; Herradura, Tracy 9091; Cienfuegos, Pringle 74, 124, Combs 252 in Gray Herbarium; Rugel 881 in Gray Herbarium; Habana, Leon 573. In the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden are the following: Santiago de Cuba, Taylor 28; Baracoa, Underwood & Earle 839; Santiago de las Vegas, Van Hermann 2698b.

This appears to be a, recent introduction into Cuba, where it occurs as a weed. The type specimens of Swartz’s three species differ only as to size of panicle.

The specimen in the Grisebach Herbarium is from eastern Cuba in 1859 and is numbered 754. Wright’s 754 in Gray Herbarium is from ‘‘ Roadsides near Saltadero, Aug. 4,”’ Monte Verde, 1859.

The published source of P. ilinoniense meee is ‘‘America boreali.’’ The speci- men in Desvaux’s herbarium in the Museum at Paris, marked with this name in Desvaux’s handwriting, is P. fasciculatum Sw. The sheet is also marked “‘ hab. Carol.’’ The eae is ee an error.

a ae PL. ane 233. 1866,

222 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

16. Panicum fusiforme nom. nov. Panicum neuranthum ramosum Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 232. 1866, not P. ramosum ee Oe

Pine woods, Las Oblas, Pinar del Rio, September, Wright 3453 in part; Wright

3454 in part; Herradura, Tracy.9074, Hitchcock in 1906, Baker & Dimmock HC 4846, Caldwell & Baker 7139; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 406. There has been ach confusion in the specimens distributed by Wright unde

numbers 3453, 3454, and 3461. The Grisebach specimen of the above species, which

is the type # his variety, is labeled ‘‘Cuba occ. Wr. 1863, 900=3454.”’ No. 3453 is P. neuranthum. As distributed in various herbaria, however, P. fusiforme occurs in part of nos. 3453, 3454, and 3461. With these are various mixtures of P. neu- ranthum, P. pauciciliatum, and P. lancearium.

17. Panicum geminatum Forsk. Fl. Aegypt. Arab. 18. 1775. _ Panicum paspalodes Pers. Syn. 1: 81. 1805.

Panicum brizoides Lam. Tab. Encycl. 1: 170. 1791, not L. 1771.

Wright 761; Santiago de las Vegas, Hitchcock in 1906; Batabano, Hitchcock in 1906; Cienfuegos, Combs 426 in Gray Herbarium; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

No. 761 of Wright in the National Herbarium is labeled ‘Wet, around ponds, Hanabana, June 5.’ The Grisebach specimen is from eastern Cuba in 1860 and is labeled ‘‘Bunches beside water holes.. Palma Sola, July 19. 99=761.”’ Per- soon’s name is based on Panicum brizoides Lam., as he quotes Lamarck’s diagnosis

and cites his name as synonym. At Florence there is an authentic specimen of this -

sent by Lamarck, collected in Mauritius by Commerson. The specimen of Pan- icum brizoides in the Linnean Herbarium is Echinochloa colona (L.) Link. Doella takes up Paspalum appressum Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 176. 1791, transferring it to Pan- icum, but this is invalidated by Panicum appressum Forsk. Fl. Aegypt. Arab. 20. 1775, and by P. appressum Kunth, Enum. 1: 84. 1833. A

18. Panicum glutinosum Sw. Prod. 24. 1788.

Panicum obtusiflorum Rich. in Sagra, Hist. Cub. 11: 305. 1850.

Pamcum linden Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 233. 1866. _

Shady hills, Loma Pelada, December 12, Wright 757; Linden 2143 in Pans an barium. Wright’s 757 in the Gray Herbarium is from “La Perla, along roadsides.’ The Grisebach specimen is from eastern Cuba, no. 757. P. lindenwi Griseb. is a typonym of P. obtusiflorum Rich., both being based on Linden 2148, which is in the Paris Herbarium.

19. Panicum grisebachii Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 35: 301. 1908.

Mountain woods, creeping-assurgent, Valestina, October 8, Wright 3457; Madruga, Britton, Britton & Shafer 758; San Antonio de los Bafios, Bonar HC 2853, Hitchcock in 1906; Pinar del Rio, Baker HC 3817; Matanzas, Rugel 187 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

The main stem creeps along the ground, throwing up flowering branches a ‘dia or so high. There are two Wright specimens of this in the Grisebach Herbarium, both ee western Cuba, 1863, one numbered ‘‘889=3457,’’ the other 941 —=3457,””

20. Panicum hirsutum Sw. Fl. Ind. Occ. 1: 173. 1797. Wet ground near Matanzas, July 5, Wright 297 in 1865 in Grisebach Herbarium. A large stout grass with hirsute sheaths, glabrous blades, large, rather compact panicle, and spikelets about 2 mm. long, being similar to the type at Stockholm. In the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden are two other West Indian specimens of this species: Martinique, Duss 768; Guadaloupe, Duss 3917.

@ In Mart. Fl. Bras. 22: 184. 1877.

- -

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. yaaes

21. Panicum hirtivaginum sp. nov.

Culm erect (apparently from a perennial base), ascending-hirsute, 60 to 80 cm. tall, the nodes densely hirsute; sheaths hirsute like the culms; ligule bristly; blades flat, hirsute on both surfaces or glabrescent, scarcely scabrous on the margins, elon- gated, erect or ascending, as much as 60 cm. long, and 12 mm. wide; panicle dif- fuse, 20 to 30 cm. long, branches ascending, these and the main axis glabrous or somewhat scabrous; spikelets.on pedicels 1 to 3 mm. long, ovate-acuminate, gla- brous, about 3 mm. long; lower glume ovate, strongly 5-nerved, somewhat over 1 mm. long; upper glume and sterile lemma equal, strongly 7 and 9-nerved, the palea of the latter delicate, about half as long; fertile lemma chartaceous, smooth, acute, nearly 2 mm. long, inrolled at the margins and including the margins of the

_ palea; fruit brown at acueey

Type specimen Wright, 758, Cuba, U. S. National Honecus no. 559958. Other specimens are: Santiago de las Vegas, Tracy 9116; Habana, Tracy 9068; Wright 3860 in Gray Herbarium; Cienfuegos, Combs 259 in Gray Herbarium. ie the herba- rium of the New York Botanical Garden are: Santiago de Cuba, Hamilton 230; Alto Cedro, Underwood & Earle 1611; Madruga, Britton & Shafer 745; Eggers 5406.

Wright’s 758 is listed in Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana as P. rudgei Roem. & Schult., which species apparently does not occur in Cuba. The two specimens of Wright 758 in the Sauvalle Herbarium are labeled ‘‘In low ground beside rivulets, savannas of Guamaroca, July 25,’’ and ‘‘In fields, Retiro, Oct. 11.’’ The Grisebach speci- men of this species is fecbecea 281 and was collected in 1865.

This species differs from P. hirsutum Sw. in its smaller culms, hirsute blades, more diffuse panicle, and larger spikelets.

22. Panicum lancearium Trin. Clav. Agrost. 234. 1822. Panicum nashianum Scribn. U. 8. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Bull. 7: 79. 1897. Wright 3460; Wright 3461 in part. Wright’s 3460 and*3461 in part, in the Krug and Urban Herbarium belong to this species. There is a specimen of this in the Grisebach Herbarium from eastern Cuba,

numbered “101—3460” and labeled “‘Panicum dichotomum var. nodiflorum Lam.

forma glabresc.’’ Wright’s 3460 in the Gray Herbarium is labeled ‘‘Pinal. San Juan de Buenavista, Nov. 21.’’.

23. Panicum laxum Sw. Prod. 23. 1788.

Panicum agrostidiforme Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 1: 172. 1791.

Panicum tenuiculmum Meyer, Prim. Fl. Esseq. 58: 1818.

Panicum polygonatum Schrad. in Schult. Mant. 2: 256. 1824.

Panicum diandrum Kunth, Rev. Gram. 2: 323. 1829.

Panicum ramuliflorum Hochst.; Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 65. 1854.

Wright 759, 3856, 3862 in part, 3863 in part; Santiago de Las Vegas, Tracy 9114, Hitchcock in 1906; Guanabacoa, Leon 190; Las Acostas, Baker HC 5240; Province Santa Clara, Baker HC 2477, 2482; Isle of Pines, Palmer & Riley 1069, Taylor 37, Curtiss 464; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906, Tracy 9059, 9062, 9072, 9099, Caldwell & Baker 7136;

_ Pinar del Rio, Baker HC 1699; Cienfuegos, Combs 321 in Gray Herbarium. The follow-

ing are in the Herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Pinar del Rio, Shafer 323; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904; pague, Britton & Wilson 300; Guajay, Earle & Wilson 343.

Wright’s 759 in National Erwan is labeled ‘‘Savannas, Retiro, Oct. ah ”” There are four specimens in the Grisebach Herbarium: Western Cuba, collected in 1863, ‘‘893—759;” eastern Cuba, 1859, no. 759; ‘‘Hanabana; May 22, 1865, 189;”’ ‘‘Wet— among tall Cyperaceae, Hanabana, May 25, 1865,196.’’ Wright’s 3862 in the Gray Her- barium consists of two specimens, one of which is P. larum, the other P. condensum. Wright’s 759 in the Gray Herbarium has three printed blank labels, for the years 1856-

_ 57, 1859, and 1860-64,

994 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

The type of P. agrostidiforme Lam. was examined at the Lamarck Herbarium in the Museum at Paris; those of P. polygonatum Schrad. and P. diandrum Kunth at Halle, among specimens loaned to Professor Mez by the Berlin Herbarium. A specimen of

P.tenuiculmum from Meyer is in the Trinius Herbarium; the type of P. ramuliflorum ©

Hochst. (‘‘Pl. Kappler surin. nr. 1523’’) is in the Herbarium at Munich. All these agree with Swartz’s type.

24. Panicum leucothrix Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 24: 41. 1897.

Herradura, Mitchcock in 1906.

In the Grisebach Herbarium is a specimen of this from western Cuba, 1863, numbered ‘*923=3463.’’ For other species distributed as 3463, see P. ae P. tenue, and P. caerulescens.

25. Panicum maximum Jacq. Coll. 1: 76. 1786.

Panicum laeve Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 1: 172. 1791.

Panicum trichocondylum Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 74. 1854.

Santiago de las Vegas, Wilson 438, Baker & Wilson 682, Hitchcock in 1906; Madruga, Shafer; Guanabacoa, Leon 189; Guan, Palmer & Riley 816; San Diego de los Bafios, Palmer & Riley 542, 545; El Guama, Palmer & Riley 178; Pinar del Rio, Wilson 1770, Palmer & Riley 377; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906; Santiago de Cuba, Pollard, Palmer & Palmer 283; Cienfuegos, Combs 294 in Gray Herbarium; Guines, Leon 427. In the Herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden are: Santiago de Cuba, Underwood & Earle 162; Matanzas, Britton & Shafer 113.

The type of P. laeve Lam., labeled ‘‘de Ste. Dominique” in the Lamarck Herbarium and that of P. trichocondylum Steud., labeled ‘‘Ins. Guadaloup. Duchaissing”’ are in the Museum at Paris.

Cultivated for forage and frequently escaped into waste land.

26. Panicum megiston Schult. Mant. 2: 248. 1824. Panicum altissimum Meyer, Prim. Fl. Esseq. 63. 1818, not Brous. 1805. On tembladeros in lagunas, St. Cruz de los Pifios, July, Wright 3872.

27. Panicum neuranthum Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 232. 1866.

Wright 3453 in part.

The type specimen in the Grisebach Herbarium is from eastern Cuba, 1860, num- bered ‘‘103=3453.”’ The specimen in the Gray Herbarium is labeled, ‘‘Cuchillos de Baracoa, June 20.’’* This species is distinguished from others of the Angusti- folium group by the smooth culms and nodes, involute blades, and narrow panicles, and by spikelets 2mm. long. P. neuranthum also occurs in southern Florida: Sanibel Island, Simpson 298; Braidentown, Tracy 6711; Clearwater, Tracy 7166; Rugel 290; Miami, Hitchcock 705, 710; Alligator Harbor, Tracy 7176.

28. Panicum nitidum Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 1: 172. 1791.

Panicum subbarbulatumScribn. & Merr.U.S. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Cire. 29: 9. 1901.

Wright 3459.

The specimen in the Sauvalle Herbarium is fragmentary, but the specimen in the Kew Herbarium is more complete. Wright’s 3459 in the Gray Herbarium is partly this and partly P. parvifolium. ;

29. Panicum numidianum Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 1: 172. 1791.

Panicum barbinode Trin. Mem. Acad. Petersb. VI. 3%: 256. 1835.

Panicum equinum Salzm.; Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 67. 1854.

Wet places in savannas, Pinar del Rio, October, Wright 1545; Puentes Grandes, Leon 283; Cienfuegos, Pringle 26, Habana, Leon 568. The following are in the her- barium of the New York Botanical Garden: Santiago de Cuba, Underwood & Earle 163; Matanzas, Britton & Shafer 512; Eggers 4870. |

A PEL es TT eee ee a ee i nl

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA, 22.5

The Grisebach specimen is from eastern Cuba, 1859, no. 1545. This species has been referred to P. molle Sw., but the latter is a quite different Brazilian species. It may be that P. muticum Forsk.¢ is an older name for this species.

Salzmann’s specimen from Bahia, upon which Panicum equinum is based, is in the herbarium of Professor van Heurck at Antwerp; a duplicate isin the herbarium at Florence. The specimen from Reugger, Paraguay, also cited by Steudel, is in the her- barium of the Museum at Paris, and also belongs to this species.

30. Panicum parvifolium Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 1: 173. 1791.

Wright 3458; Herradura, Tracy 9060, 9079, Hitchcock in 1906, Shafer; Pinar del Rio, Shafer 430 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

The Grisebach specimens are from western Cuba, 1863, numbered, ‘‘901=3458”’ and **927=3458.’’ This is listed by Grisebach 5 as P. cyanescens. The type of P. parvi- folium is in the Lamarck Herbarium at Paris. Wright 3458 in the Gray Herbarium is ‘labeled ‘‘In lagunas (ponds) Los Almacigos, July 28,’’ and ‘‘On tembladeros in lagunas, Asiento Viejo de San Julian, Nov.”’

31. Panicum pauciciliatum Ashe, Journ. Elisha Mitch. Soc. 16: 87. 1900.

On crumbling banks, Loma Pelada, November 20, Wright 3876.

There is some material of this species mixed with Wright 3461 in the Krug and Urban Herbarium. This species occurs also in Porto Rico (Heller & Heller 982b, 639, Underwood & Griggs 955),and is common in the Atlantic coastal plain of the southern United States.

32. Panicum pilosum Sw. Prod. 22. 1788.

Panicum distichum Lam. Encycl. 4: 731. 1797.

Panicum pilisparsum Meyer, Prim. Fl. Esseq. 57. 1818.

Wright 3457; Herradura, Van Hermann HC 763, Tracy 9063; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 305, Taylor 36 in Gray Herbarium.

There seems to be an error in the number of the Wright specimen. It is published as 3451 in Grisebach’s catalogue and in Flora Cubana, and the specimen is so num- bered in the Kew and the Grisebach herbaria, but in the Sauvalle and the Berlin herbaria the number is 3457. The Grisebach specimen is from western Cuba, 1863, numbered ‘‘888=3451.”’

The hairs on the rachis are variable. Curtiss’s 305 in the National Herbarium is without hairs; the same number in the herbarium of the Cuba Experiment Station has hairs on some of thespikes. Wright’s 3451 in the Gray Herbarium is from “‘ Retiro, July 15, in woods (damp).”’

33. Panicum polycaulon Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 24: 200. 1897. Wright 3875 in National Herbarium; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906; Shafer 480 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.; Isle of Pines, Palmer & Riley 990.

34. Panicum repens L. Sp. PI. ed. 2. 87. 1762. Habana, Leon 296, 563.

35. Panicum reptans L. Syst. Nat. ed: 10. 2: 870. 1759.

Panicum grossarium L. op. cit. 871.

Panicum caespitosum Sw. Fl. Ind. Occ. 1: 140. 1797.

Panicum prostratum Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 1: 171. 1791.

Panicum insularum Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 160. 1854.

Wright 762, 763, 3857; Habana, Leon 276, 292, 297, 566, 576, Curtiss 691, Hitchcock in 1906; San Antonio, Hitchcock in 1906; Baracoa, Pollard, Palmer & Palmer 19; Madruga,

Curtiss 536; Colon, Baker HC 3588; Herradura, Tracy 9103; Cienfuegos, Pringle 73;

Combs 253 in Gray Herbarium; Yumury Valley, Rugel 1985in Gray Herbarium. The following are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: La Magdalena, Earle & Baker 2455; Baracoa, Underwood & Earle 1391; Yumury Mountains, Rugel 195.

«Fl. Aegypt. Arab. 20. 1775. 6 Cat. Pl. Cub. 233. 1866. 61170—vor 12, pr 6—09——4

226 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

The Grisebach specimen from eastern Cuba, 1860, is numbered ‘‘105=762.’’ The types of the above synonyms are all identical.¢ The West Indian grass commonly known as P. grossarium is P. adspersum Trin.

The type of Panicum insularum Steud. labeled ‘‘Antillae minores, Hohenacker” is in the Museum at Paris.

36. Panicum rugelii Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 233. 1866.

Shady woods, Valestina, September 27, Wright 3465; Pinar del Rio, Baker HC 3790; San Antonio, Hitchcock in 1906; Matanzas, Britton & Shafer 106 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

Creeping flat along the surface of the ground in shady woods, the leaves distinctly dorso-ventral, more or less pubescent. In the Grisebach Herbarium is Rugel 188 from Matanzas, the type specimen, and Wright 3465. A duplicate type is in the Gray Herbarium.

37. Panicum scoparium Lam. Encycl. 4: 444. 1797.

Panicum viscidum Ell. Bot. 8. C. & Ga. 1: 123. 1816. °

Wright 3467.

The specimen with this number in the Grisebach Herbarium is the same. The specimen in the Gray Herbarium is labeled ‘‘In loose bunches, road to Pinal Mayari, Aug. 4.”

38. Panicum sellovii Nees, Agrost. Bras. 153. 1829.

Panicum lasianthum Trin. Icon. 245. 1835.

Panicum valenzuelanum Rich. in Sagra, Hist. Cuba 11: 304. 1850.

Wet savannas, Hanabana, May 17, Wright 3462; Wright 3455; edge of thickets in pinales, Pinar del Rio, September, Wright 3855; Shafer 561 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.; Herradura, Tracy 9098, Hitchcock in 1906.

Grisebach’s specimen, which is from western Cuba, 1863, and is numbered ‘‘935= 3455,’ is the type of P. rugulosum hirtiglume Griseb.o Wright’s 3855 in the Sauvalle Herbarium has a second label which reads, ‘‘Low, wet ground beside rivulets, Pinar del Rio, Oct.’’ Wright’s 3455 in the Gray Herbarium is labeled ‘‘Pinales, La Catalina, Sept. 11,”’ and ‘‘Pinal, Rangel, Aug. 6.’ P.rugulosum Trin.¢ has glabrous spike- lets. This has not been found in Cuba. The type of P. sellovwi in the Berlin Her- barium agrees with the type of P. lastanthum in the Trinius Herbarium. In the latter herbarium is also a portion of the type of P. sellovw. The type of Richard’s species is at Paris. ;

39. Panicum sloanei Griseb. Fl. Brit. W. Ind. 551. 1864.

Hillsides, scandent or trailing, Valestina, September 27, Wright 3878; near Habana, Britton & Shafer 115, 759, Guanajay, Baker HC 4587, 4592; San Antonio, Hitchcock in 1906; Cienfuegos, Combs 55 in Gray Herbarium; Rugel 872 in Gray Herbarium. The following are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Matanzas, Britton & Wilson 121,393; Rugel 868; Santiago Cuba, Taylor 328; Madruga, Britton & Shafer 759; Isle of Pines, Taylor 22. )

Leaf blades larger and broader and panicle larger and more widely spreading than in P. divaricatum. In the Grisebach Herbarium are two specimens, ‘‘In sylvis densis, Matanzas, Rugel 872,’’ and ‘‘Woods, Hanabana, June 17, 1865,’’ Wright 269. A specimen in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden from Matanzas (Britton & Shafer 586) is doubtfully referred here.

a For a discussion see Contr. Nat. Herb. 12: 119. 1908. bCat. Pl. Cub. 233. 1866. ¢Gram. Pan. 195. 1826.

61170—09——15

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. OAT

40. Panicum stenodes Griseb. Fl. Brit. W. Ind. 547. 1864.

Low, wet pine woods, El Salado, August, Wright 3871; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906, Baker & Abarca HC 4192, Baker HC 2956, Habana, Leon 567; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard. eS -)

The Grisebach specimen is labeled ‘‘Sandy ground in the Cienaga, Hanabana, May 17,’’ no. 192. Two other specimens, 284 and 285, included by Grisebach in this cover, are P. distantiflorum. P. caricoides Nees@ differs in having larger spikelets (2 mm. long) with bristles at apex of pedicel, and flat blades, villous on upper sur- face, as shown by the type in the Munich Herbarium and a ioe in the Trinius Herbarium.

41. Panicum strigosum Muhl.; Ell. Bot. 8. C. & Ga. 1: 126. 1816.

Savannas around base of palms, Daganiguas, September, Wright 3875; El Guama, Palmer & Riley 213.

Wright’s 3875 in the National Herbarium is P. polycaulon.

42. Panicum swartzianum Hitchc. Contr. Nat. Herb. 12: 140. 1908. Panicum lanatum Sw. Prod. 24. 1788, not Rottb. 1776. Santiago de Cuba, Hamilton 218 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

43. Panicum tenerum Beyrich; Trin. Mem. Acad. Petersb. VI. 3: 341. 1835.

In dense bunches in dried-up ponds, Pinar del Rio, December, Wright 188; Her- radura, Baker & Dimmock HC 4837, Hitchcock in 1906, Tracy 9080; ‘‘a tall branching grass in deepish water of lagunas, Pinar del Rio, Sept.,’? Wright 3870 in National Herbarium. \

Wright’s 188 is mixed with P. distantiflorum and has, in addition to the label quoted, another, ‘‘Savannas of Guamaroca, July 28.’’ Wright’s 3870 is also mixed with P. distantiflorum. The Florida specimens of P. tenerum have been going under the name of P. stenodes. Wright’s 3860 in the Gray Herbarium is P. tenerum.

44, Panicum tenue Mub]. Gram. 118. 1817.

Panicum albomarginatum Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 24: 40. 1897.

Sandy pine woods, Pinar del Rio, September, Wright 3463 in part; Herradura, Shafer 560, Baker HC 2967, 2973, 2977, Hitchcock in 1906; Pinar del Rio, Shafer 320 in part; Isle of Pines, Taylor 32.

For other specimens distributed as Wright 3463, see P. caerulescens, Ne leucothriz, and P. wrightianum.

45. Panicum tricanthum Nees, Agrost. Bras. 210. 1829.

Wright 753; Habana, Curtiss 598; Vento, Leon 557.

No. 753 of Wright in the National Herbarium is labeled ‘‘In large, loose bunches beside the river Agabama Guinia, Trinidad, May 5.’’ The specimen in the Grise- bach Herbarium is from western Cuba, 1863, and is numbered ‘‘948=753.”’ In the Gray Herbarium there are two specimens, ‘‘Villa Clara, Macagua, Jan. 21,” 1860-64, and “‘Santa Isabel, along rivulets,’’ eastern Cuba, in 1856-57.

46. Panicum trichoides Sw. Prod. 24. 1788.

Prope villam Monte Verde dictam, Cuba Orientali, 1859, Wright 1538, in Gray Herbarium; Habana, Curtiss 714, Britton & Wilson 510; Guanabacoa, Leon 206.

A weed in cultivated soil. P. brevifolium L., to which our species has been referred, is India (P. ovalifolium Poir. as iacnpeds in Hooker’s Flora of British India).

47, Panicum virgatum cubense Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 233. 1866. Panicum virgatum obtusum Wood, Bot. & Flor. 392. 1874. Pamcum virgatum breviramosum Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 28: 150. 1896.

a Trin. Gram. Pan. 149. 1826.

228 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

Marshes, Hanabana, May 27, Wright 3873; Batabano, Baker HC 2763, Hitchcock in 1906, Palmer & Riley 1134.

Wright’s specimen in the Sauvalle Herbarium has also the secondary number 183. In the Grisebach Herbarium this occurs with the number 183 and is labeled Panicum virgatum variety cubense, ‘‘Low savannas, Hanabana, May 19.’’ This form is characterized by the more obtuse spikelets, narrower panicle, and culms solitary or few in a clump.

48. Panicum wrightianum Scribn. U. 8. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Bull. 11: 44. 1898.

Panicum minutulum Desv. Opusc. 87. 1831, not Gaud. 1826.

Wright 3463.in National Herbarium.

There is a specimen of this species in the Grisebach Herbarium from western Cuba, 1863, numbered ‘‘895=3463,’’ and bearing the note ‘‘Spiculis puberulis.”” Wright’s 3463 in the Boissier and in the Kew Herbarium consists of this species and P. leu- cothriz. It is to be noted that P. tenue and P. caerulescens are also distributed in various herbaria as Wright 3463. Wright’s 3463 in the Gray Herbarium is labeled ‘‘Lagunas, Vueltabajo, July 24.’ The sheet also bears asmall plant of P. leucothriz.

49. Panicum zizanioides H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 1: 100. 1816. Panicum oryzoides Sw. Prod. 23. 1788, not Ard. 1764. Wright 3466; Laguna Castellano, Baker HO 4335. Grisebach’s specimen of Wright 3466 is also without locality.

33. ICHNANTHUS Beauv. Agrost. 56. pl. 12. f. 1. 1812.

Blades, especially those of sterile shoots, contracted into petiole-like

bases, as much as 1 cm. long...............--.----------------+-4. L. wrighii. Blades not contracted into petiole-like bases. First glume as long as spikelet; stem creeping, blades ovate. .... 2. I. nemorosus. First glume one-half to three-fourths as long as spikelet; stem ascending. Blades narrowly linear-lanceolate, thick and firm........... Lf mayarensis.

Blades ovate-lanceolate, thin, usually 10 to 15 mm. wide...3. J. pallens.

1. Ichnanthus mayarensis (Wright).

Panicum mayarense Wright, Anal: Acad. Cienc. Habana 8: 206. 1871; aay, FI. Cub. 197.

Pinales de Mayari, July 24, and Mayari Abajo, August 2 (1860-64), Wright 3468 in Gray Herbarium.

This species is represented by two sheets, as noted above, the second of which, marked Mayari Abajo, is the type, as this locality agrees with that published. This number has been found in no other herbarium. The fertile lemma is slightly over 2 mm. (2.2 mm.) long, and the margins do not meet except at the tip, thus exposinga narrow strip of the palea. The scars at the base are small and the wings are wanting.

2. Ichnanthus nemorosus (Sw.) Doell in Mart. Fl. Bras. 2*: 289. 1877.

Panicum nemorosum Sw. Prod. 22. 1788.

In dense woods, Retiro, November 20, Wright 3881; damp woods near ‘the Mogote de Mono, October 8, Wright 3882; shady banks of Rio Sico in Arroyo Hondo, Pinar del Rio, December, Wright 3858.

3. Ichnanthus pallens (Sw.) Munro; Benth. Fl. Hongk. 414. 1861.

Panicum pallens Sw. Prod. 23. 1788.

Wright 750; El Guama, Palmer & Riley 130,.218; Baracoa, Pollard, Palmer & Palmer 15. The following are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Santiago de Cuba, Taylor 385, 526, Hamilton 215; Baracoa, Underwood & Earle 267; El }gual, Eggers 4661.

HITCHCOCK—-GRASSES OF CUBA. 229

There are four specimens of. this in the Grisebach Herbarium: No. 750 labeled ‘Prope villam Monte Verde dictam. Cuba orientali;”” another numbered 750 from eastern Cuba, 1856-57; a Wright specimen without number or locality collected in 1860-64; and a specimen with proliferous spikelets, numbered 887, ‘‘Cuba occ. Wr. 1863.’ This species not infrequently occurs with proliferous spikelets, as in Palmer & Riley 130 cited above. The spikelets then consist of many sterile lemmas and the plants appear as if belonging to the tribe Festuceae.

4. Ichnanthus wrightii sp. nov.

Culms slender, prostrate-spreading, more or less rooting at the nodes, glabrous

or sparsely villous, 20 to 30 cm. long; sheaths mostly less than half the length of the internodes, striate-nerved, villous on the margins, otherwise glabrous or nearly so; blades ovate-lanceolate, striate-nerved, faintly 3 to 5-ribbed, glabrous, 12 to 30 mm. long, 2 to 8 mm. wide on the sterile shoots, somewhat larger and thicker on the ascending flowering culms, all abruptly or cordately narrowed into a slender stalk 1 to 5 mm. long on the fertile culms, or as much as 15 mm. long on the sterile shoots; panicles 4 to 8 cm. long, consisting of a few spike-like racemes, 0.5 to 2. cm. long; spikelets 3 mm. long, glabrous, the pedicel minutely pubescent; lower glume about half the length of the spikelet, 3-nerved; second glume and sterile lemma equal, acuminate, strongly 5-nerved; fertile lemma scarcely 2 mm. long, the edges meeting and covering the palea, except at the very base, the outer margin of the base of the lemma bearing 4 scar at each side, but no wings. _ Wright’s 3880. U.S. National Herbarium no. 559959 of this collection is the type. The specimen in the Sauvalle Herbarium is labeled, ‘‘Under overhanging rocks (damp) and around base of palms beside the Rio Seco in Arroyo Honda, Pinar del Rio, Dec.”’ The Grisebach specimen consists of a single spikelet in a packet, labeled “‘Kchinolaena Sp.’’ no. 760. In the Kew Herbarium there are four specimens num- bered 2, 23, 244, 760. Nos. 760 and 3880 are also in the Gray Herbarium: This species is alien to I. mayarensis.

384. TRICHOLAENA Schrad. in Schult. Mant. 2: 163. 1824.

1. Tricholaena rosea Nees, Cat. Sem. Hort. Vratisl. 1835. Britton, Britton & Shafer 533. Sparingly introduced.

35. OPLISMENUS Beauv. Fl. Owar. 2: 14. t. 58. 1804.

‘1. Oplismenus hirtellus (L.) Roem. & Schult. Syst. 2: 481. 1817.

Panicum hirtellum L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 870. 1759.

Panicum setariwm Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 1: 170. 1791.

Woods, Hanabana, June 1, Wright 1543; damp woods, Monte Verde, March, Wright 751; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 5051, Hitchcock in 1906; San Antonio, Hitch- cock in 1906; Guanajay, Baker HC 3461; Habana, Curtiss 593, Leon 556; Matanzas, Palmer & Riley 12; Cienfuegos, Pringle 76; Combs 667 in Gray Herbarium; El

“Guama, Palmer & Riley 146; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 268; Matanzas, Rugel 189 in Gray

Herbarium. In the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden are the follow- ing: Matanzas, Britton & Shafer 221; Santiago de Cuba, Taylor 422, 481. .

Wright’s numbers 751 and 1543 in the Grisebach Herbarium are from eastern Cuba, 1859. The latter is numbered 1593 in Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana.

+ It is quite possible that the specimens here included may be referred to distinct

species. The type of Panicum setarium Lam. at Paris resembles Wright’s 1543. The blades are short and the clusters of spikelets globose and few-flowered: Wright 751 and Curtiss 268 and 593 have larger and longer blades and spikes, but some of the

_ other specimens are intermediate.

0 atenis Lon 4/59

230 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

36. CHAETOCHLOA Scribn. U.S. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Bull. 4: 38. 1897.

Bristles retrorsely barbed; plant annual.............-.....-..... 6. C. verticillata. Bristles antrorsely barbed; plants perennial. | » Colas pilose: soc Soot SS ie ks Bes 2s ee bet eh 1. C. hispida.

Culms glabrous. Inflorescence dense and spike-like; involucral bristles 5

or more. Bristles scarcely exceeding the spikelets; racemes Blender: ress bout eer BEEN nS giclee ee eae 4. C. purpurascens. Bristles 2 to 4. times as long as spikelets; racemes ri Sb (tan ay oe See Ne arena la te, Bi a gl wi 2. C. wmberbis. Inflorescence comparatively loose; involucral bristles 1 to 3. First glume 5-nerved, second 9 to 1l-nerved......... 3. C. onurus. First glume 3-nerved, second 5-nerved.......-...--- 5. C. setosa. 1. Chaetochloa hispida Scribn. & Merr. U.S. Dept. as Div. Agrost. Bull. 21: 25. 1900. Sandy pine woods, La Grija, Nueva Filipina, J anuary, Wright i in 1865, in the Gray Herbarium. 2. Chaetochloa imberbis (Poir. ) Scribn. o S. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Bull. 4: 39. 1897.

Panicum imberbe Poir. Encycl. Suppl. 4: 272. 1817.

Savannas, Chirigote, June 13, Wright 3472, 3473; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 518, 561, 636, 1358, Hitchcock in 1906; Habana, Curtiss 749, Leon 269, Tracy 9112; San Diego de los Bafios, Palmer & Riley 546; Herradura, Baker HC 2965, Hitchcock in 1906; Isle of Pines, Taylor 45. The following are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Matanzas, Britton & Wilson 170, Britton & Shafer 244; Sagua, Britton & Wilson 319; Madruga, Shafer 454.

The species of Givetechian here considered are accepted as defined by Scribner and Merrill. I have not seen the type of Panicum imberbe Poir. nor of Panicum genicu- latum Lam., which may be an older name for the same. :

In the Grisebach Herbarium are the following Wright specimens: 1. “‘Wet ground around lagunas, Hanabana, May 16,’’ no. 199 of 1865, a prostrate bunch with culms 15 to 20 cm. long. The bristles are only a little longer than thé spikelets, the spikes about 1 cm. long, the blades without the scattered long hairs on the upper surface found in most of the specimens. 2. No. 200 of 1865, which Grisebach has labeled Setaria glauca a. This also has short bristles. 3. No. 3472, 1860-64, bristles short. 4. No. 3473, 1860-64, bristles about 5 mm. long.

2a. Chaetochloa imberbis penicillata (Nees) Scribn. & Merr. U. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Bull. 21: 11. 1900. Panicum pencillatum Nees, Agrost. Bras. 242. 1829. Matanzas, July 7, Wright 3888; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker 522, 1276; Guines, Leon 428. This differs from C. imberbis seuieAlya in having longer piatled

3. Chaetochloa onurus (Witld.) Scribn. & Merr. U.S. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Bull. 21: 27. 1900. » Panicum onurus Willd.; Nees, Agrost. Bras. 251. 1829, as synonym. Setaria onurus Griseb. Fl. Brit. W. Ind. 555. 1864. } Wright 3474; Wright 182; Wright 3887 in National Herbarium (3487 in Sauv. Fl. Cub.); ; Triscornia, Tracy 9090; Cienfuegos, Combs 264 in Gray Herbarium. The following are

a@U.S. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Bull. 21: 10. 1900.

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. ep

in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Santiago de Cuba, Taylor 232; Madruga, Shafer 453; Matanzas, Britton & Wilson 29.

In the Grisebach Herbarium are two Wright specimens of this species, ‘‘Savannas of Guanacaro, July 28,”’ no. 287 of 1865, and no. 3474 of 1860 to 1864.

4. Chaetochloa purpurascens (H. B. K.) Scribn. & Merr. U. S. Dept. Agr. Div Agrost. Bull. 21: 13. 1900. Setaria purpurascens H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 1: 110. 1816. Batabano, Shafer 487; Jaguey, Eggers 5320 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

5. Chaetochloa setosa (Sw.) Scribn. U. S. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Bull. 4: 39. 1897. Panicum setosum Sw. Prod. 22. 1788. Isle of Pines, Palmer & Riley 1000 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.; Santiago de Cuba, Taylor 13, 71; Matanzas, Rugel 880. We. 9677 Pp. vn Mat. He,

6. Chaetochloa verticillata (L.) Scribn. U. S. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Bull. 4: 39. 1897. Panicum verticillatum L. Sp. Pl. ed. 2. 82. 1762. Habana, Curtiss 693, Hitchcock in 1906, Baker, HC 2675, Leon 555. A weed in the Botanical Garden.

37. CENCHRUS L. Sp. Pl. 1049. 1753.

Blades crowded, short, stiff, conspicuously distichous ES Sahn 2. C. distichophyllus. Blades not crowded, stiff, nor distichous. eed Monisites. Om OU SOUL 222. c es 2 Yosh e ei Dc el. 32 1. C. carolimanus. Basal bristles of burs numerous, slender. Burs 12 mm. or more wide, lobes erect...........------ 3. C. echinatus. <f Burs not over 8 mm. wide, lobes interlocking. ......... 4. C. viridis. ae ¢*

1. Cenchrus carolinianus Walt. Fl. Car. 79. 1788. Cenchrus tribuloides L. err. det. Griseb. Fl. Brit. W. Ind. 556. 1864. . Cojimar, Hitchcock in 1906; Triscornia, Hitchcock in 1906; Guanajay, Palmer & Riley 781; Habana, Palmer & Riley 1146; Wright 3476 in Gray Herbarium.

2. Cenchrus distichophyllus Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 234. 1866.

Wright 3475.

The Grisebach specimen, which is the type of this species, is from western Cuba, 1863, numbered ‘‘916=3475.’’ Wright’s 3475 in the Gray Herbarium is from ‘‘ Pinales, Guanes, Remates, Dec.”

3. Cenchrus echinatus L. Sp. Pl. 1050. 1753. Santiago de las Vegas, Hitchcock in 1906; Guanajay, Palmer & Riley 679; Isle of Pines, Taylor 24; Santiago de Cuba, Taylor 24 j in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

4. Cenchrus viridis Spreng. Syst. 1: 301. 1825. _ Wright 3889; Guanajay, Palmer & Riley 665; Santiago de Cuba, Millspaugh 1110, Pollard, Palmer & Palmer 284; Wright 3476 in Grisebach Herbarium; Cienfuegos, Combs 597 in Gray Herbarium. The following are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Matanzas, Britton & Shafer 127; Santiago de Cuba, Underwood & Earle 168. Wright 3889 is listed in Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana as ‘‘Andropogon Sp.?”’ It would seem that there must be some error in numbering, but this number in the Gray Herbarium is also Cenchrus.

Cenchrus viridis may be distinguished from C. echinatus by the smaller burs and more incurved involucre lobes.

| GL

232 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

38. PENNISETUM Rich. in Pers. Syn. I: 72. 1805.4

Spike loose; buistlesiall maked':9.). 010 i sen vase ee ee ae 1. P. domingense. Spike narrow, dense; some of the bristles plumose................- 2. P. setosum.

1. Pennisetum domingense (Spreng.) Spreng. Syst. 1: 302. 1825. Gymnothriz domingensis Spreng.; Schult. Mant. 2: 284. 1824. Eastern Cuba, Wright 1547 in 1857 in the Grisebach and Gray herbaria.

2. Pennisetum setosum (Sw.) Rich. in Pers. Syn. 1: 72. 1805.

Cenchrus setosus Sw. Prod. 26. 1788.

In thickets skirting pine woods, Pinar del Rio, Wright 3471.

The Grisebach specimen is from eastern Cuba, numbered ‘‘111=3475.”” Wright’s 3471 in the Gray Herbarium is labeled ‘‘Edge of savannas, San Juan de Buenavista, Nov. 24.”’

39. CHAETIUM Nees, Agrost. Bras. 269. 1829.

1. Chaetium cubanum (Wright).

Perotis? cubana Wright, Anal. Acad. Cienc. Habana 8: 288.1871; Sauv. FI. Cub. 202.

Wright 735 in Gray Herbarium.

The locality is not indicated except that the collection was made in eastern Cuba in 1856-57. This is referred by Doell® to Panicum chaetium Steud. (Chaetium festucoides Nees), but it differs in many respects. The blades are short and narrow, mostly involute; the inflorescence is loose, the spikelets few and distant, narrowed to a pedicel 1.5 mm. long, strongly bearded at the base; first glume very narrow, 22 mm. long including awn, 3-nerved at base; second glume 5-nerved, 18 mm. long, including awn; sterile lemma and fertile lemma thin, 3-nerved, awnless, 4.5 mm. long.

40. PARATHERIA Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 236. 1866.¢

1. Paratheria prostrata Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 236. 1866. Panicum leptochyrvum Doell-in Mart. Fl. Bras. 27: 150. 1877. Wright 3906; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 461.

The Gretacn specimen, which is the type, bears the secondary number 207, and - was collected in 1865. This is listed in Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana as Chamaeraphis parvigluma Munro, a nomen nudum, and the Wright number is misprinted 3909. In the Gray Herbarium is a specimen of this species from Santarem, Para, collected by Spruce, which agrees with Curtiss 461 in being more pubescent than the Wright specimen. This appears to bea duplicate type of Panicum leptochyrium Doell, though the specimen is not numbered.

41. STENOTAPHRUM Trin. Fund. Agrost. 175. 1820.

1. Stenotaphrum secundum (Walt.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 794. 1991. Ischaemum secundum Walt. Fl. Car. 249. 1788. | Wright 3490; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 443, 794, 3649; Matanzas, Britton &

Shafer 140; Guanabacoa, Baker & Hasselbring 7200; San Antonio, Hitchcock in 1906;

Habana, Palmer & Riley 822; Cape Corrientes, Millspaugh 1459; Cabafias, Palmer & ©

Riley 759; Isle of Pines, Palmer & Riley 1008, Rowlee 49; Cienfuegos, Combs 535 in

Gray Herbarium. The following are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical

Garden: Batabano, Shafer 158; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904.

The Grisebach specimen was collected in 1860-64.

an this genus I have followed Leeke, Zeitschr. Naturw. 79. 1907.

bIn Mart. Fl. Bras. 27: 150. 1877.

eThis genus is referred to Chamaeraphis R. Br. by Hackel (Engl. & Prantl, Pflan- zenfam.) but seems sufficiently distinct.

HITCHCOCK——GRASSES OF CUBA. TS8

42. OLYRA L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 1261. 1759.

1. Olyra latifolia L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 1261. 1759.

Retiro, February 27, Wright 746; Las Acostas, Baker HC 5239; Vento, Baker HC 584; Lomas de Candelaria, Baker HC 1624; Madruga, Shafer; Baracoa, Pollard, Palmer & Palmer 53; Cienfuegos, Pringle 70; El Guama, Palmer & Riley 115, 216; Herradura, Baker HC 2940, Hitchcock in 1906; Isle of Pines, Palmer & Riley 1058, 1066, Curtiss 293, Taylor 26, 27, in Gray Herbarium; Yumury Mountains, Rugel 186 in Gray Herbarium; Cienfuegos, Combs 210 in Gray Herbarium; Marianao, Leon 583. The following are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: .Cedro, Underwood & Earle 1538; Yumury Mountains, Rugel 873; SantiagodeCuba, Hamilton 209; Matan- zas, Britton & Wilson 457; Madruga, Britton & Shafer 315, 736; Eggers 4639.

There are two Wright specimens of this in the Grisebach Herbarium, no. 162 of 1865 and no. 746 from eastern Cuba, 1859.

43. LITHACHNE Beauv. Agrost. 135. t. 24. f. 11. 1812.

Bea Onabe, I tO 2 CM Wider sees 0e Jide se leuk bes 1. L. pauciflora. Biadedeblone, less than:omm. wide: 0... .2..2.....5.6-.-6-1 222224 2. L. pinet.

1. Lithachne paucifiora (Sw.) Beauv.; Poir. Dict. Sci. Nat. 27: 60. 1823.

Olyra pauciflora Sw. Prod. 21. 1788.

Olyra axillaris Lam. Encycl. 4: 547. 1797.

Lithachne axillaris Beauv. Agrost. 166. ¢. 24. f. 11. 1812.

Wright 732; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 4148, 5049, Hitchcock in 1906; San Antonio, Hitchcock in 1906; Cienfuegos, Pringle 54, Combs 319 in Gray Herbarium; Madruga, Curtiss 661; El Guama, Palmer & Riley 105; Herradura, Baker HC 2941, Hitchcock in 1906; Habana, Leon 584. In the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Santiago de Cuba, Hamilton 210; Eggers 5356.

There are three specimens of this in ilie Grisebach Herbarium, two fein eastern Cuba, 1856-57 and 1859, both numbered 732, and one from western Cuba numbered “*1133=732.”’ One sheet of Wright 732 in fine Gray Herbarium is from ‘‘ Banks of river, Santa Cruz, San José, Apr. 8.”’

2. Lithachne pineti (Wright) Chase, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 21: 182. 1908.

Olyra pineti Wright; Griseb. Mem. Amer. Acad. n. ser. 8: 532. 1862.

Eastern Cuba in 1859, Wright 1536 in Grisebach Herbarium. There is a duplicate type in the Gray Herbarium.

44. MNIOCHLOA Chase, Proc. Biol. Soc: Wash. 21: 185. 1908.

Flowering culms much exceeding sterile ones; fruit glabrous. ..--. 1. M. pulchella. Flowering and sterile culms about equal in height; fruit pubescent.2. M. strephioides.

1. Mniochloa pulchella (Griseb.) Chase, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 21: 186. 1908. Digitaria pulchella Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 231. 1866. Strephium? pulchellum Wright, Anal. Acad. Cienc. Habana 8: 202. 1871; Sauv. HL Gab< 193. Crece al borde de precipicios en el Yunque de Baracoa Wright 3448.

2. Mniochloa strephioides (Griseb.) Chase, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 21: 186. 1908. Olyra strephioides Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 229. 1866. Wright 3435; San Diego de los Bafios, Caldwell & Baker 7011. The Grisebach specimen, which is the type, is from western Cuba, 1863, num- bered ‘‘942—3435.”’

234 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM. 45. PHARUS L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 1269. 1759.

Culms ‘creepime ab base sree 3 2 ett ei ele a eee 3. P. parvifolius. Culms not creeping at base. Fruit pubescent only at the tip, slightly exceeding the PUIMIO Ne wh hE 2 ee ke Bal ee giles aaa ae © ge pe 2. P. latifolius. Fruit pubescent all over, 2 to 3 times as long as the glume..... 1. P. glaber.

1. Pharus glaber H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 1: 196. 1816.

Dense woods, Valestina, September 27, Wright 733; Managuas, Baker HC 455; El Guama, Palmer & Riley 123, 260; San Aomiee Mitchcock in 1906; Yumury Mouue tains, Rugel 871 in Gray Herbarium; Canes cs Combs 363 in Gry Herbarium.

The Wright specimens in the Grisebach Herbarium are no. 268 of 1865, no. 733 from eastern Cuba, 1856-57, and no. 733 from eastern Cuba, 1859. The following are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Santiago de Cuba, Taylor 40, 275, 284, 479; Matanzas, Britton & Wilson 66, 227; Madruga, Britton & Shafer . 789; Eggers 4708. .

2. Pharus latifolius L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 1269. 1759. Santiago de Cuba, Taylor 217, Hamilton 211, both in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

3. Pharus parvifolius Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 35: 301. 1908. Jaguey, Eggers 4939, Maxon 4155, in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard. This species, which also occurs in Haiti, differs in having stems with creeping | bases. 46. LUZIOLA Gmel. Syst. Nat. 1: 636. 1791.4

1. Luziola bahiensis (Steud.)

Caryochloa bahiensis Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 5. 1854. 3

Luziola alabamensis Chapm. Fl. So. U. 8. 584. 1860.

Luziola longivalvula Doell in Mart. Fl. Bras. 2?: 17. 1871.

In rivulets, the panicles just above the surface of the water, pinales, Pinar del Rio, December, Wright 3813. -~

In the National Herbarium are: Duplicate type of L. alabamensis Chapm., col- | lected by J. F. Beaumont, Brooklyn, Alabama, in 1859; duplicate type of Cary- = ochloa bahiensis Steud., and also of Luziola longivalvula Doell (Bahia, Salzmann; Brazil, Prov. Minas Geraes, Henschen ap cited by Doell). “|

2 . = 47. ORYZA L. Sp. Pl. 333. 1753. . ;

Ls Oryza sativa L. Sp. Pl. 333. 1753. a Wright 3838. . : In the National Herbarium is another specimen numbered 191.

48. HOMALOCENCHRUS Mieg. Act. Helvet. Phys.-Math. 4: 307. 1760. ;

Bpicelets:3. mm. long... kee oe = ee 1. H. hexandrus. : Spikelets 2 mim. long... .i2. 005.2 Soe 2 Ree cee ee ea 2. H. monandrus.

| .

1. Homalocenchrus hexandrus (Sw.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 777. 1891.

_ Leersia hexandra Sw. Prod. 21. 1788. : Wright 3434, 3837; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906. » ; The Grisebach specimen is from eastern Cuba, 1860, numbered ‘‘118=3434.” .

In Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana this number is misprinted 3484. ve 3434 in the

Gray Herbarium is from ‘‘San Mateo, in water 3 feet deep.”

a Juss. Gen. Pl. 33. 1789, without citation of species.

HITCHCOCK——-GRASSES OF CUBA. 235

2. Homalocenchrus monandrus (Sw.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 777. 1891.

Leersia monandra Sw. Prod. 21. 1788.

Wright 731; Yumury Mountains, Rugel 200 in Gray Herbarium.

There are two Wright specimens in the Grisebach Herbarium, both numbered 731, one collected in 1856-57, the other in 1859. Wright’s 731 in the Gray Herba- rium is labeled ‘‘In small tufts on precipitous hillsides, Loma de Rangel, July 11.”

49. ACHLAENA Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 228. 1866.

1. Achlaena piptostachya Griseb. Cat. PI. Cub. 229. 1866. Wright 205; Pinar del Rio, Baker HC 3747; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 236, Palmer & Riley 913; Wright 3487 in National Herbarium.

The Grisebach specimens are no. 205 of 1865 and no. 3487 of 1860-64 (type).

50. REYNAUDIA Kunth, Rev. Gram. 1: 195. pl. 9. 1829.

1. Reynaudia filiformis (Spreng.) Kunth, Rev. Gram. 195. 1829.

Polypogon cubensis Rich. in Sagra, Hist. Cub. 11: 313. 1850.

Wright 3428; Herradura, Baker HC 4825, Tracy 9070, Hitchcock in 1906; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 371; Cienfuegos, Combs 579 in Gray Herbarium. The following are in the herbariu the New York Botanical Garden: Sagua, Britton & Wilson 334; Madruga, Britton & Shafer 687.

There are two Wright specimens in the Grisebach Herbarium, one from eastern Cuba in 1860, no. ‘‘ 116=3428,’’ and another from western Cuba in 1863, no. ‘‘937= 3428.”’ Wright’s 3428 in the Gray Herbarium is from ‘‘ Savannas, Chirigote, July 11.”

The type of Polypogon cubensis is at Paris.

51. ARISTIDA L. Sp. Pl. 82. 1753.

Paerrayusminite OF wanting... 2.2.2.2. ile ede. e cee ence eee ees 5. A. scabra. Lateral awns about as long as central awn. Awns united into a twisted base about 3 mm. long; blades involute, Pye OvreMb One: s- kee es Pl Te es ee 3. A. mohrit. Awns not united at base. Central awn 2 to 3 cm. long; blades elongated, 60 to 90 cm. OTR Zo sc ld eee a yee eS cae ee 2. A. erecta. Central awn about 1 cm. long; blades short and stiff. Awns recurved at base at maturity; glumes about 6 mm. Pane weniml blades scattered 0.002... 2 doe. Le 4. A. refracta. Awns ascending at base; glumes 8 to 9 mm. long; culms rigid and rush-like, the blades often only 1 to2cm. long, commonly approximate. im pairs... 52J5-2..5.2.-22- 1. A. curtifolia.

1. Aristida curtifolia sp. nov.

Culms cespitose, from a perennial base, slender, stiffly erect, somewhat compressed, smooth, 20 to 30 cm. high, the alternate internodes often shortened, thus bringing the leaves together in approximate pairs; sheaths smooth, striate, short, 5 to 10 mm. long, sometimes slightly villous at throat; blades short, thick, stiffly spreading, flat, folded or involute, glabrous, 5 to 20 mm. long and 0.5 to 1 mm. wide, or the upper reduced to mere awns 2 to 3 mm. long; inflorescence a narrow nearly simple panicle, 5 to 10 em. long, the spikelets subsessile or occasionally terminating short erect branches about 5 mm. long; glumes nearly equal, 8 to 9 mm. long, 1-nerved, smooth, except the scabrous upper part of the keel of the lower glume; lemma 5 to 6 mm. long with

a minutely hairy callus 0.5 mm. long, scabrous toward apex; awns about equal, 10

to 12 mm. long, scabrous, spreading but not recurved or twisted at base. Type, Wright 736, 1865, no. 559960 in the U. 8. National Herbarium, which also bears

the secondary numbers .282 and 286. Other specimens are: Wright 736 in eastern

ell ae ime j

236 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

Cuba, 1856-57 in Sauvalle Herbarium; Jata Hills at Guanabacoa, Hitchcock in 1906; Baker & Hasselbring HC 7208, 7211; Madruga, Britton & Shafer 658 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

There are two Wright specimens of this in the Grisebach Herbarium, ‘‘Savannas of Guanacaro, July 28, in small tufts,’’ no. 282 of 1865, and no. 736 from eastern Cuba, 1856-57. °

This species is readily recognized by its stiff, rush-like culms and short sharp- pointed blades. On the Jata Hills it occurs on dry, grassy slopes.

2. Aristida erecta sp. nov.

Culms erect, rather stout, from a perennial root, about 1.5 meters high, glabrous; sheaths glabrous, longer than the internodes; blades glabrous beneath, scabrous on the nerves above, elongated, convolute, much attenuated at the tip, 3 to 5 mm. wide, as much as 1 meter long; panicles 50 cm. long, the numerous scabrous branches ascend- ing below, spreading above, the lower as much as 20 cm. long, all spikelet-bearing to the base; spikelets crowded, the pedicels erect, stout, 2 to 3 mm. long, glumes gla- brous, the first 12 to 15 mm. long, scabrous on the keel, abruptly cuspidate or awn- tipped, 3-nerved, one of the lateral nerves somewhat indistinct, second glume 2 to 3 mm. shorter, acuminate, 1-nérved, smooth on the keel, lemma 12 to 13 mm. long, glabrous, the callus about 1 mm. long, bearded, awns spreading, the central 2 to 3 cm. long, the lateral somewhat shorter.

The type specimen was collected by Wright in Cuba in 1865, no. 41161, in the U.S. National Herbarium. This specimen is numbered in pencil 2432, which is an error for 3432. The corresponding specimen in the Grisebach Herbarium was collected in ~ western Cuba in 1863 and is numbered ‘‘928=3432.’’ The only other specimen seen is: Herradura, Tracy 9076. :

This species resembles A. palustris (Chapm.) Vasey, but differs in having taller culms, larger and more spreading panicles, and longer glumes and lemma. In A. palustris the panicle is narrow and strict, the glumes are about 10 mm. long and nearly equal, and the lemma is only 7 to 8 mm. long.

3. Aristida mohrii Nash, . |N. Y. Bot. Gard. 1: 436. 1900.

In roads Hanabana, January 16, Wright 737; Wright 3433 in part; Wright 742 in National Herbarium; Jata Hills at Guanabacoa, Hitchcock in 1906; La Caimanera, Eggers 5389.

The Grisebach specimen is from eastern Cuba in 1856-57, no. 737. Another Grise- bach specimen, Wright ‘‘931=3433” from western Cuba, 1863, is doubtiully referred here. It appears to be the same as the fragmentary specimen no. 742, en ae above. «

4. Aristida refracta Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 228. 1866.

Aristida gyrans Chapm. Bot. Gaz. 3: 18. 1878.

Dry savannas, Chirigote, October 26, Wright 3431; dry savannas, Chirigote, October 31, Wright 3832; in dense bunches along rivulets in sandy soil, Pinar del Rio, October, Wright 3834; in small densé tufts, sandy pine woods, Coloma, Pinar del Rio, October, Wright 3833; Wright 3430, 3831; Jata Hills at Gacnaneens Hitchcock in 1906; Herra- dura, ioonea in 1906; Isle of Pines, Palmer. & Riley 995, Taylor 20.

In the Grisebach en eapha are three Wright ppeeaneee of this: Western Cuba, 1863, no. ‘‘926=3431;” eastern Cuba, 1860, no. *'122=3430;” western Cuba, 1863, no. “908=3430.” X= wap ‘alts Leon ters

5. Aristida scabra (H. B. K.) Kunth, Rev. Gram. 62. 1829.

Streptachne scabra H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 1: 124. 1816.

Streptachne cubensis Rich.; Sagra, Hist. Cub. 11: 311. 1850.

Pebbly pinales in small banehon) Pinar del Rio, October, Wright 3835; Puentes Grandes, Leon 280; Triscornia, Hitchcock in 1906; Cojimar, Hitchcock in 1906.

The type of Strenttichne cubensis is at Paris.

np ahi ge

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 237

52. MUHLENBERGIA Schreb. Syst. Nat. ed. 13. 2: 87. 171. 1791

1. Muhlenbergia capillaris (Lam.) Trin. Gram. Unifl. 191. 1824. Stipa capillaris Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 1: 158. 1791. In dense tufts, Guinamar, October, Wright 3836. Hote e~- Pen 20l/

53. SPOROBOLUS B. Br. Prod. Fl. Nov. Holl. 169. 1810.

Plants producing long rhizomes; blades conspicuously distichous .5. S. virginicus. Plants cespitose not producing rhizomes; blades not distichous.

iawipie acnseignd spike-lke. 5... 0/22... 2-5-5 22-32 - be <2 3. S. indicus. Panicle open. Spikelets about 1.5 mm. long; panicle pyramidal........ 1. S. argutus. Spikelets 2.5 to 4 mm. long; panicle elongated-oblong. Spikelets 2.5mm. long; basal sheaths not felty........ 4. S. purpurascens. Spikelets 3.5 to 4 mm. long; basal sheaths copiously de pent o eres Se eee ao eee eae 2. S. cubensis.

1. Sporobolus argutus (Nees) Kunth, Enum. 1: 238 1833.

Vilfa arguta Nees, Agrost. Bras. 295. 1829.

Wright 3828; Habana, Baker HC 1799, Leon 285; Batabano, Shafer 484, Hitchcock in 1906; Triscornia, Hitchcock in 1906. The following are in the Roane of the New York Botanical Garden: Habana, Baker 1818; Guantanamo, Earle 86.

The type of Nees’s species is at Munich. It is not the same as Vilfa domingensis Trin., to which it has sometimes been referred. The Grisebach specimen of this, no. 300 os 1865, consists of two plants with two labels, ‘‘Saline grounds, in tufts, Matanzas, J uly 17,”’ and, ‘‘Sand banks by the Senne: Palma Sola, sae 6 @

2. Sporobolus cubensis sp. nov. , = > , #< Ard

Culms cespitose, glabrous, slender; erect, 40 to 60 cm. high; leaves of innovations numerous, the sheaths copiously felty-ciliate on the margins, with white, yellow, or brown hairs, which extend upward along the margins of the blade for a ae distance; basal blades very long and narrow, flat, or involute, nearly as long as the culms, 1 to 2 mm. wide, smooth except for the basal hairs, strongly striate-nerved, the two or three upper blades short, 2 or 3 cm. long; panicle slender-pyramidal, glabrous throughout, 8 to 10 cm. long, branches verticillate, lowermost 5 to 8 in a whorl, slender and stiffly spreading, 1.5 to 3 cm. long; spikelets glabrous, tawny, 3.5 to 4 mm. long, appressed, on pedicels 0.5 to 1 mm. long; lower glumes rather broad, one-third to one-half the

length of the spikelet, l-nerved, the upper glume and lemma about equal, weakly I-nerved; palea as long as or longer than the lemma; grain oval, flat, 2 mm. long.

Type specimen, Isle of Pines, Curtiss 392, U.S. National Herbarium no. 522010. Other specimens are: Herradura, Mitchcock in 1906; Wright 3427 in Sauvalle

Herbarium.

Wright’s 3427 in the National Herbarium consists of this species, together with S. purpurascens. SS. cubensis is distinguished from S. purpurascens by its larger spikelets, 3.5 mm. long, the elongated blades, and the ferruginous-silky basal sheaths. Heller’s 4590 from Porto Rico is S. cubensis. In the Grisebach Herbarium are three specimens of this from Wright: No. 3427a of 1860-64; no. ‘‘922—3422” from western Cuba, 1863; and no. ‘'945=3422” from western Cuba, 1863. (No. 3422 as published in Grisebach’s Catalogue, is Eragrostis sudans). It will be noted that nos. 3427 and 3427a are the reverse of what they are in the Sauvalle Herbarium. Wright’s 3427 in the Gray Her- barium is from ‘‘High pine woods, pinales, Mar. 1;’’ another sheet of this number is part S. cubensis and part S. purpurascens.

3. Sporobolus indicus (L.) R. Br. Prod. Fl. Nov. Holl. 170. 1810.

Agrostis indica L: Sp. Pl. 63. 1753. Sporobolus jacquemontii Kunth, Rev. Gram. 2: 427. 1831.

@ Gen. Pl. 44. 1789, without citation of species.

238 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

Savannas, San Cristobal, August, Wright 2829; Wright 3426; Cojimar, Baker HC 5197, 5334; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 537, 5111, Hitchcock in 1906; Triscornia, Tracy 9081; Guanabacoa, Leon 186; Puentes Grandes, Leon 275, 282; Habana, Baker HC 1279; Madruga, Shafer 67; Matanzas, Britton & Wilson 473; Batabano, Shafer 486; Herradura, Tracy 9064, 9066, Hitchcock in 1906; Consolacion del Sur, Palmer & Riley 473; San Diego de los Bafios, Palmer & Riley 627; Coloma, Palmer & Riley 349; El Guama, Palmer & Riley 404; Isle of Pines, Palmer & Riley 1121, Taylor 48, Curtiss 323; Arroyo Apolo, Leon 586; Cienfuegos, Combs 261 and 263 in Gray Herbarium. The following are in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Santiago de Cuba, Taylor 91; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904; Madruga, Britton & Shafer 721; Leggers 5361.

The three Wright specimens in the Grisebach Herbarium are: Eastern Cuba, 1860, no. ‘119=3426;” no. 299 of 1865; and eastern Cuba, 1859, no. 1637. In Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana the number appears as 3829 instead of 2829. The specimen in the Gray Herbarium is numbered 3829. ;

4. Sporobolus purpurascens (Sw. ) Hamilt. Prod. Fl. Ind. Occ. 5. 1825.

Agrostis purpurascens Sw. Prod. 25. 1788.

Vilfa grisebachiana Fourn. Mex. Pl. 2: 98. 1886.

Sandy pine woods in large tufts, Pinar del Rio, October, Wright 3427a.

The two Wright specimens in the Grisebach Herbarium are: no. ‘‘907=3427” from western Cuba, 1863, and no. ‘885=3427 1863. The type of Swartz’s species is ‘at Stockholm; the apikelet are2.5mm. long, Fournier noticed the difference between the two species (S. cubensis and S. purpurascens) distributed by Wright under 3427,

« but described as new the one already named. Wright 3427a in the Gray Herbarium is from ‘‘savannas, Chirigote, July 11.”

5. Sporobolus virginicus (L.) Kunth, Rev. Gram. 1: 67. 1829.

Agrostis virginica L. Sp. Pl. 63. 1753.

Wright 291; Wright 2830 in National Herbarium; Habana, Baker HC 1810, Leon 284; Mariel, Palen & Riley 736; Isle of Pines, Palmer & Riley 955, 1122; Matawan

Betiton & Wilson 151 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

The Grisebach specimen is no. 291 in 1865, ‘‘Seashore, Matanzas, July 8.”’ .In Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana this is numbered 3830, which is probably correct, as the specimen in the Gray Herbarium is also numbered 3830.

54. CAPRIOLA Adans. Fam. Pl. 2: 31, 532. 1763.4 a Capriola dactylon (L.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 764. 1871. Panicum dactylon L. Sp. Pl. 58. 1753. Cynodon dactylon Pers. Syn. 1: 85. 1805. Wright 3814; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HO 386, Hitchcock in 1906; Habana, Leon 290; ficutnesae Combs 540 in Gray Herbarium.

55. CHLORIS Sw. Prod. 25. es

Spikelets awnless; spikes dark brown.............-...-....:..--6. €. fe Spikelets awned; spikes green or yellow. Spikelets Tau diverging; spikes delicate, scarcely Losier: 2. C. cruciata. Spikelets contiguous; spikes not delicate, conspicuously 1-sided.

a There is some question as to the standing of Capriola as a genus, since it is based upon ‘‘Gramen dactylon offic.’”’ (Adans. Fam. 2:31 and 532. 1763.) But since Linneeus cites under Panicum dactylon ‘‘Gramen dactylon, radice repente, S. offi- cinarum Scheuch. Gram. 104” we may assume that Adanson wished to base his genus on this species, though he does not quote a definite author.

«

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 239

4 Upper floret truncate-dilated.

Awns 1 to 2 mm. long; lower lemma long-ciliate on

the keel and lateral veins, but not at apex........ EC: clare: Awns, or some of them, 5 mm. long or more; lower

lemma ciliate on the upper part of marginal nerves,

MUUHMONE eee ae ata te i VENA bee ly a 5. C. paraguaiensis.

Upper floret narrowed toward apex.

Lower lemma strongly ciliate at apex with tuft of

Dihs. oom Recta tre Nee PD Gee Se ee 3. C. elegans. Lower lemma only pubescent at apex.

Lower lemma 3 mm. long; blades short and flat,

abrupily rounded at apex. 2-1 201222 esos 7. C. radiata. Lower lemma 2 mm. long; blades mostly invo- lute-pornted .2... ..- Seria hs tue te Cots US ea O Clouseoides-

1. Chloris ciliata Sw. Prod. 25. 1788.

Trinidad, May 17, Wright 743; Vento, Baker HC 1184, Curtiss 600; Guanabacoa, Leon 185 in part; Santiago de las Vegas, Tracy 9115, Hitchcock in 1906; Triscornia 9085; Habana, Tracy 9106; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906; Arroyo Apolo, Leon 574.

2. Chloris cruciata (L.) Sw. Prod. 25. 1788.

Agrostis cruciata L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 873. 1759.

Chloris brevigluma Wright, Anal. Acad. Cienc. Habana 8: 200. 1871; Sauv. Fl. Cub. 191. | Bushy savannas, Hanabana, May 16, Wright 1549; Punta Brava, Baker HC 4067;

Guanabacoa, Baker HC 2927, Curtiss 584, Haan in oar Madruga, Britton &

Shafer 604 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

There are three Wright specimens of this species in the Grisebach Herbarium: Nos. “‘917=1548” and ‘‘932=1548” from western Cuba, 1863, and no. 1549 from eastern Cuba, 1859. The type of C. brevigluma is in the Gray Herbarium with printed label for 1860-64, no. 1548. In Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana the type is mis- printed ‘‘1848 p. p.”’ Wright seems to have distinguished his species from C. eleu- sinoides mounted on the same sheet (Wright 1549), which he regarded as the true C. cruciata. Wright’s type matches his no. 1549 in the National Dobe

3. Chloris elegans H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 1: 166. 1816. al A wor cate. Vento, Shafer 483, Baker HC 1183; Madruga, Britton & Shape 725; “Mazarra, Baker HC 4023. ~The type of this has not been examined, but the specimens eited above agree _ well with the plate accompanying the original description.¢ ;

4. Chloris eleusinoides Griseb. Fl. Brit. W. Ind. 539. 1864. Chloris eleusinoides vestita Greenman in Combs, Trans. Acad. St. Louis 7: 477. 1897. Sandy pine woods, La Griza, January, Wright 3819; Wright 3818; Wright 1548; _ Baker HC 4067; La Magdalena, Baker Pl. Trop. Am. 4; Mavens, Leon 287: Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906; Cienfuegos, Combs 631 in Gray eee

The Grisebach specimen is from eastern Cuba, 1859, no. 1548. Nos. 1548 and 1549, in the Engelmann Herbarium, both from eastern Cuba, 1860, are Chloris eleusinoides. No. 1549 in the Gray Herbarium is also this species (Monte Verde, eastern Cuba in 1859).

Combs’s 631, from Cienfuegos, in the Gray Hecterinatia is the type of C. eleusinoides variety vestita. It differs from Grisebach’s type in being somewhat more pubescent.

a Op. cit. pl. 49.

240 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

5. Chloris paraguaiensis Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 204. 1854. Andropogon barbatum L. Mant. 2: 302. 1771, not L. 1759. Chloris barbata Sw. Fl. Ind. Occ. 1: 200.:1797 (based on Andropogon barbatum L. Mant.), not C. barbata Nash, Bull. Torr. Club 25: 443. 1898 (based on Andropogon ~ barbatum L. Syst.). a Habana, Baker HC 3388, Tracy 9113, Palmer & Riley 1150; Triscornia, Tracy 9084, | Hitchcock in 1906, Baker HC 1864; Matanzas, Britton 491; Regla, Shafer; Vedado, . Baker HC 1441; Playa de Cojimar, Hitchcock in 1906; Santiago de Cuba, Millspaugh 1064;. Mariel, Palmer & Riley 725; Herradura, Hitchcock in 1906. In the herbarium of the New York Botanical Gorden: Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904; Santiago de Cuba, Underwood & Earle 101.

6. Chloris petraea Sw. Prod. 25. 1788..

Eustachys petraea (Sw.) Desv. Nuov. Bull. Soc. Philom. 2: 189. 1810.

Wright 293; Wright 3817 in National Herbarium; Cojimar, Baker HC 2867, Hitchcock in 1906; Habana, Liebmann 235; Isle of Pines, Palmer & Riley 969. Inthe herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Matanzas, Britton & Shafer 16; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904.

The specimen in the Grisebach Herbarium is numbered 293, 1865. The number 3719, listed in Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana under this species, is probably an error. Doell changes the name of C. petraea Sw. to C. swartziana® because of the’ different C. petraea Thunb.

7. Chloris radiata (L.) Sw. Prod. 26. 1788.

Agrostis radiata L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 873. 1759.

Eastern Cuba, 1856-57, Wright 742; Santiago de las Vegas, Tracy 9110, Hitchcock in 1906; Playa de ie Hitchcock in 1906; Triscornia, Hitchcock in 1906; Habana, loa 508.

56. BOUTELOUA Lag. Var. Cienc. 24: 134. 1805.¢

Primary racemes few, distant on the main axis (5 to 15 mm. apart);-

ilades tto-2 1am? widess. 00 2 oo. een ee 1. B. americana. . Primary racemes numerous, secund, approximate (1 to 5 mm. apart); istadies 3to, Oma, wale ee es ine oo ee iat tae 2. B. disticha.

1. Bouteloua americana (L.) Scribn. Proc. Acad. Phila. 1891: 306. 1891. Aristida americana L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 879. 1759.

Wright 165, 166, 3816; Wright 3815 and 734 in Gray Herbarium; Triscornia, Baker HC 1873, Tracy 9088, Hitchcock in 1906; Habana, Curtiss 546, Leon 293; Colima, Baker HC 1978; La Magdalena, Baker HC 3621, Regla, Shafer 489; Guanabacoa, Leon 38; Marianao, Leon 231; Cojimar, Hitchcock in 1906. } The Grisebach specimens are Wright 161 of 1865, ‘‘ Bushy savannas, Hanabana, June 1,”’ and 739, from eastern Cuba, 1859. The specimens cited above agree with the Linnzan type, which is not Aristida dispera Trin. as stated by Munro.@

a a - Bouteloua litigiosa Lag. Gen. & Sp. Nov. 5. 1816.

- Bouteloua humboldtiana Griseb. Mem. Amer. Acad. n. ser. 8: 532. 1862. Bouteloua porphyrantha Wright, Anal. Acad. Cienc. Habana 8: 201. 1871; Sauv.

Fl. Cub. 192.

:

2. Bouteloua disticha (H. B. K.) Benth. Journ. Linn. Soc. 19: 105. 1882. Polydon distichus H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 1: 175. 1816. Maint be Curtiss 5387; Habana, Leon 299.

a1n Mart. Fl. Bras. 23: 68, 1878. ¢ Botelua in the original. b Prod. 20. 1794. @ Proc, Linn, Soc. Bot. 6: 49. 1862.

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 941

57. ELEUSINE Gaertn. Fruct. & Sem. 1: 7. pl. 1. 1788.

1. Eleusine indica (L.) Gaertn. Fruct. & Sem. 1: 8. 1788.

Cynosurus indicus L. Sp. Pl. 72. 1758.

Saline flats, Matanzas, July 4, Wright 744; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 513, 1139, Hitchcock in 1906; Puentes Grandes, Leon 278; Habana, Leon 294; Guanajay, Palmer & Riley 817; Santiago de Cuba, Millspaugh 1111; Cienfuegos, Combs 260 in Gray Herbarium; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904 in Herb. 'N. Y. Bot. Gard.

The Grisebach specimen is no. 277 of 1865. The Sauvalle specimen also bears the secondary number 277.

58. DACTYLOCTENIUM Willd. Enum. 1029. 1809.

1. Dactyloctenium aegyptium (L.) Richt. Pl. Eur. 1: 68. 1870.

Cynosurus aegyptius L. Sp. Pl. 72. 1753.

Pine woods, Nueva Filipina, Wright 3821 (misprinted 3831 in Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana); Habana, Leon 289, 554, Baker HC 1795, Curtiss 636; Puentes Grandes, Leon 273; Triscornia, Hitchcock in 1906; Cojimar, Hitchcock in 1906; Batabano, Baker HC 3919; Cienfuegos, Combs 513 in Gray Herbarium.

59. LEPTOCHLOA Beauv. Agrost. 71. pl. 15. f. 1. 1812.

Spikelets 2 to 4-flowered, imbricated, on one side of the panicle branches. Upper glume as long as lower lemma; sheaths papillose-hispid...2. ZL. mucronata.

Upper glume shorter than lower lemma; sheaths smooth..-.....- 4. L. virgata. ‘Spikelets several-flowered; inflorescence not conspicuously 1-sided. malmiiorescence aisingle spike. 20. 22.0.0 252. 4.0. 22 ee eee 3. L. spicata. Inflorescence of several spike-like racemes..............-----.- 1. L. fascicularis.

1. Leptochloa fascicularis (Lam.) Gray, Man. 588. 1848.

Festuca fascicularis Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 1: 189. 1791.

In tufts, ditches, Matanzas, July 6, Wright 303; Wright 3822; Wright 3812 in National Herbarium; Batabano, Baker HC 2762, Hitchcock in 1906. In the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Matanzas, Britton & Wilson 176; Batabano, Shafer 488.

' The Grisebach specimen collected in 1865 is numbered 303.

2. Leptochloa mucronata (Michx.) Kunth, Rev. Gram. 1: 91. 1829.

Eleusine mucronata Michx. Fl. Bor. Amer. 1: 65. 1803.

In fields, Punta de Palma, September, Wright 740; Habana, Britton & Wilson 509, Hitchcock in 1906; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 508; Chaise Leon 580.

In the Mabea! Herbarium are two Waeht specimens of this, numbered 740 and 741. The latter number is probably an error, the label fe been interchanged with that of a specimen of L. fascicularis. Inthe Gray Herbarium there are two sheets _ numbered 741, of which one is L. filiformis from ‘Cultivated ground, Valestina, Nov. - 12,”’ 1865, the other L. virgata.

The type of Festuca filiformis Lam.¢ ‘‘ex Amer. merid. Comm. D. Richard” upon which Leptochloa filiformis Beauv. is presumably based, has not been examined, and the description is insufficient for identification. This name may be found to apply to this species.

3. Leptochloa spicata (Nees) Scribn. Proc. Acad. Phila. 1891: 304. 1891.

Bromus spicatus Nees, Agrost. Bras. 471. 1829.

Triscuspis simplex Griseb. Mem. Amer. Acad. n. ser. 8: 532. 1862.

Wright 1551.

There are two Wright specimens in the Grisebach Herbarium, both from eastern Cuba, no. 114 of 1860 and no. 1551 of 1859. Wright s 1551 is represented in the Gray

a Tabl. ee he TOT: 1791. oii vou 12, 21 6 _09—__o

} ' : ~"} : .f ay L Caste, ) | Pom MALI CAAALA eho. CG re

» . . mt 242 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM. Herbarium by two specimens, one of 1860-64, labeled ‘‘Savannas, Hoto del Medio, Aug. 25,” the other, Monte Verde, 1859, labeled ‘‘On rocks exposed to the sun, covered with a thin stratum of earth, on the brink of the Farallones, Oct. 11.”

4. Leptochloa virgata (L.) Beauv. Agrost. 166. 1812.

Cynosurus virgatus L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 876. 1759.

Leptochloa perennis Hack. Inf. Anal. Est. Agr. Cuba 1: 411. 1906.

_ Wright 283, 741, 3436; Habana, Tracy 9108, Curtiss 607; La Magdalena, Baker HC 3635; Weenies: Britton 543; Santiago de 1s Vegas, Hitcheock in 1906; Herradura, Baker HC 765, 2786, Tracy 9061, Hitchcock in 1906; Cayamas, Baker HC 4617; Cien- fuegos, Pringle 62, Combs 256 in Gray Herbarium; San Diego de los Bafios, Palmer & Riley 543; Santiago de Cuba, Pollard, Palmer & Palmer 273; Marianao, Leon 560; Yumury Mountains, Rugel 193 in Gray Herbarium. In the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden are: Santiago de Cuba, Palmer 273; Baracoa, Underwood & Earle 1397; Madruga, Britton & Shafer 746.

Wright’s 741 in the Sauvalle Herbarium has also the secondary number 278. In the Grisebach Herbarium are three specimens of this: ‘‘In roads, probably intro- duced, La Ferruina, June 24,’’ no. 278 of 1865; no. 3436 of 1860-64; no. “‘117=740” from eastern Cuba, 1860. One of the Wright specimens bearing the number 741 in the Gray Herbarium (eastern Cuba, 1856-57) is L. virgatas the other is L. mucro- nata. Wright’s 3436 in the Gray Herbarium is from Mayari Abajo, Aug. 2. Another specimen in the Gray Herbarium without number is from ‘‘Savannas, Retiro, Cert

60. OPIZIA Presl, Rel. Haenk. 1: 293. t. 41. f. 1. 1880.

1. Opizia stolonifera Presl, Rel. Haenk. 1: 293. 1830. Cojimar, Baker HC 2898, 5076, Hitchcock in 1906; Pinar del Rio, Shafer 482; Ha- bana, Curtiss 571, Leon 274, 288.

61. PAPPOPHORUM Schreb.; Vahl, Symb. Bot. 3: 10. 1794.4

ww | 1. Pappophorum laguroides Schrad. in Schult. Mant. 2; 342. isa 2 Wee? Yk A :

Triscornia, Hitchcock in 1906. Boswil? oe (0 = iP ne, P Le

62. GYNERIUM H-B- K. Pl. Aequin. 2: 112. ¢. 115. 1809.

1. Gynerium sagittatum (Aubl.) Beauv. Agrost. 138. 1812.

Saccharum sagittatum Aubl. Pl. Guian. 1: 50. 1775.

I of: Gynerium saccharoides H-B--K. Pl. Aequin. 2: 112. 1809. ial Retiro, Wright 224; Wright 3477; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 1297, 5017,

Wilson 237; San Diego de los Bafios, Palmer & Riley 616. In the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden are the following: Matanzas, Britton & Shafer 265, Britton & Wilson 205; Santiago de Cuba, Taylor 145; Calvario, Leon 569.

In the Grisebach Herbarium are Wright 3477, 1860-64, and 1560 of 1859. Wright’s 1560 in the Gray Herbarium is from Monte Verde; no. 3477 is labeled ‘‘10-15 it. panicle 4-6 ft. On stony ledges in the river Tacotaco, Sept. 13.”

63. ERAGROSTIS Host, Icon. Gram. Austr. 4: 14. pl. 14. f. 11. 1809.0

Flowers dicecious; creeping annuals ..............------- Rs Phe? 7. E. hypnoides. Flowers perfect, stems not creeping. Palea prominently ciliate; annuals. Panicle contracted, spike “like. 2.42 2. a See ee 2. EL. ciliaris. Pamicle 10960 i592 -22 tee ee ee aes os mired oe ne ee 8. E. plumosa.

aSchreb. Gen. 2: 787. 1791, without citation of species. b Until the genus Eragrostis is monographed the Cuban species must remain some-

Tek uncertain. Meggee tegen l: Ctnxe Fone,

oly,

HITCHCOCK—-GRASSES OF CUBA. 243

Palea not prominently ciliate. Annual; blades flat; panicle open but not very diffuse ..9. E. tephrosanthes. Perennial. Plants low, 10 to 20 cm. high; blades involute, pan- icle not diffuse. , Spikelets 3 to 5-flowered; pedicels glutinous;

pales, somewhat ciliate: 2255.2) s52. 55 le: 6. E. glutinosa. Spikeletsmany-flowered; pedicels not glutinous; palea-only minutely ciliate. 2. 2... 22.22. 2. 3. LH. cubensis.

Plants tall; blades flat; panicles very diffuse. Spikelets less than 2 mm. long, 1 or 2-flowered..1. E. airoides. Spikelets 5 to 10 mm. long, several-flowered. Spikelets lanceolate; pedicels shorter than spikelets; panicle branches lax; culms 1 Hebe OnemMObe walle. o oie ee a wee sek aoe 5. E. excelsa. Spikelets linear; pedicels mostly longer than spikelets; panicle branches stiffly spread- ing; culms rarely over 60 cm. tall........ 4. H. ellootti.

1. Eragrostis airoides Nees, Agrost. Bras. 509. 1829. = She vent . UN\fene Q, In savannas, Chirigote, November 2, Wright 3827.

2. Eragrostis ciliaris (L.) Link, Hort. Berol. 1: 192. 1827.

Poa ciliaris L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 875. 1759.

Wright 155; Wright 1550; Cojimar, Httchcock in 1906; Batabano, Baker HC 3912; Guines, Baker HC 3561; Robles, Shafer 40; Guanabacoa, Leon 196; Puentes Grandes, Leon 281; Herradura, Baker HC 2778; Matanzas, Palmer & Riley 13; El Guama, Palmer & Riley 185; Santiago de Cuba, Millspaugh 1062; Cienfuegos, Combs 480 in Gray Herbarium. In the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden are the following: Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904; Matanzas, Britton & Shafer 555; Santiago de Cuba, Underwood & Earle 172.

The Wright specimen in the National Herbarium bears the secondary number 305. In the Grisebach Herbarium are two Wright specimens of this, no. 305 of 1865 and no. 1550 from eastern Cuba, 1859. In the Gray Herbarium are two speci- mens of Wright 1550, one of 1860-64, the other from Josephina, near Monte Verde, 1859.

3. Eragrostis cubensis sp. nov.

Culms cespitose from a perennial base, numerous, slender and wiry, smooth, erect or spreading, 10 to 20cm. long, or occasionally decumbent and as much as 30 cm. long; sheaths smooth, striate; blades filiform-convolute, glabrous, or very sparsely pilose, the base and mouth of sheath pilose, 2 to 3 cm. long, or those on the innovations as much as 10 cm. long; panicles nearly simple, 2 to 4 cm. long, the branches 1 to 2 mm. long, bearing a single spikelet, or the lowermost as much as 1 cm. long, bear- ing 2 to 4 spikelets; spikelets linear, 5 to 15 mm. long, 1 mm. wide, as much as 40- flowered; glumes smooth, nearly equal, about 1 mm. long; lemma acute, 3-nerved, glabrous, keel smooth; palea minutely ciliate.

Isle of Pines, Curtiss 420 (type U. S. National Herbarium no. 522037); Wright 3424, 3825; Vedado, Baker HC 3456; Madruga, Shafer 68; La Magdalena, Baker Pl. Trop. Amer. 3; Herradura, Tracy 9097, Baker HC 2938, 4876, 4877, Mitchcock in 1906; Sagua, Britton & Wilson 382 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Cant chen) Pe

This has been confused with Z. Cs “which is a eres Ane 60 cm. or more tall. £. berteroiana (Schult.) Kunth with lemmas scabrous on the keel, as shown by a specimen from Kunth in Trin- ius’s herbarium. The Grisebach specimen from Wright is numbered ‘‘938=3424,”’ and is from western Cuba, 1863, ‘‘bushy swamps, Hanabana, May 16.’’, Another

“Cn. perrele clue, aero SLL 683

eg

anto Domingo, has smaller spikelets °

°

244 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

is from western Cuba, 1863, and is numbered 903. Wright’s 3424 in the Gray Her- barium is from ‘‘savannas, Chirigote, July 13.”’

This is described and figured by Sloane,@ and is cited as a synonym by Swartz under Poa glutinosa © and by Grisebach;¢ but Poa glutinosa Sw. is Eragrostis sudans Griseb., while Wullschlaegel’s specimen from Jamaica, cited by Grisebach under Eragrostis glutinosa, is E. elliottu S, Wats.

4. Eragrostis elliottii S. Wats. Proc. Amer. Acad. 25: 140. 1890.

Poa nitida Ell. Bot. S. C. & Ga. 1: 162. 1816, not Poa nitida Lam. 1791, nor Eragrostis nitida Link, 1827.

Eragrostis macropoda Pilger in Urban, Symb. Antill. 4: 106. 1903.

Savannas, Retiro, June, Wright 3423; without data, Wright; Cojimar, Baker HO 5332; Pinar del Rio, Baker & Abarca HC 3735, Palmer & Riley 441; Herradura, Tracy 9096, Hitchcock in 1906; Isle of Pines, Taylor 25. In the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden are: Sagua, Britton & Wilson 320; Isle of Pines, Curtiss in 1904. |

The Grisebach specimens are nos. 155, 155a, 155b, all of 1865. Wright’s 3423 in the Gray Herbarium is from ‘‘lagunas, Vueltabajo, July 24.”

Pilger @ states that EH. macropoda differs from EH. nitida (Ell.) Chapm. in having

long-peduncled spikelets. However, the type of Poa Loy ae has lo spikelets and is well matched by Wright 3423. . >a ead bus, 16 03 |

\

5. Eragrostis excelsa Cele [2 oes Cub, 227. 1866.

Wright 3425. J ‘3

The Grisebach specimen 1s no. 3425, 1860-64. Wright’s 3425 in the Gray Hepa a. is so cea beaches by the seaside, Dae ue Oct, 30,77

fe BG AACMng YAM

6. Eragrostis caaieeed (Sw.) Trin. Mern eae Peter. VI. 1: 397. 1831.

Poa glutinosa Sw. Prod. 26. 1788.

Eragrostis sudans Griseb. Cat. Pl. Cub. 227: 1866.

Wright 3422.

The Grisebach specimen is from eastern Cuba, 1860, numbered ‘112=3422.” The Sloane é figure cited by Swartz is Hragrostis cubensis Hitchc.

7

The type of Swartz’s species in the Stockhoim Herbarium is from Jamaica. In

the Trinius Herbarium is a duplicate from Swartz, which is the basis of Eragrostis glutinosa Trin.

7. Eragrostis hypnoides (Lam.) B.S. P. Prel. Cat. N. Y. 69. 1888.

Poa hypnoides Lam. Tabl. Encycl. 1: 185. 1791.

Poa reptans Michx. Fl. Bor. Amer. 1: 69. 1803.

Eragrostis reptans Nees, Agrost. Bras. 514. 1829.

Around lagunas, Hanabana, May 20, Wright 156; Wright 3826; Laguna de Castellano, Baker HC 1356; Isle of Pines, Curtiss 391. The following are in the

herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden: Habana, Baker 4328; Santiago

de Cuba, Hamilton 214; Baracoa, Underwood & Earle 1387. The Grisebach specimen from Wright is no. 156 of 1865.

Omistdam, 12/9. 71. fo. Mare @ Loc. cit. 6 Sw. Prod. 26. 1788. é Hist. Jam. 1: pl. 72. f- 2, ore c Fl. Brit. W. Ind. 532. 1864.

ae ee ee eee ee ee

a

ee

> 7

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 245

8. Eragrostis plumosa (Retz.) Link, Hort. Berol. 1: 192. 1827.4

Poa plumosa Retz. Obs. 4: 20. 1786.

Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 1030; Habana, Hitchcock in 1906; Puentes Grandes, Leon 277; Santiago de Cuba, Palmer 374, Underwood & Harle 173 in Herb. N. Y.

Bot. Gard. (Sore) iy 9. Eragrostis tephrosanthes Schult. Mant. 2: 316. 1824. be, an Urry .

Wright 745; Santiago de las Vegas, Baker HC 3666; Vento, Wilson 1182; Carduas, Britton & Balser 156a; Guanabacoa, Leon 205; Puertes Grandes, Leon 276; Habana, Leon 295, Hitchcock i 1906; Cojimar, ‘ilsebeotk in 1906; Herradura; ee 9057, Hitchcock in 1906; Cienfuegos, Combs 266 in Gray Herbarium; Matanzas, Britton & Shafer 557 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

The Grisebach specimen is from Wright, 1860-64, without number. In the Gray Herbarium is a Wright specimen without number, with an 1860-64 label, and two specimens numbered 745 from eastern Cuba, one collected in 1856-57, the other in 1859.

This species is similar to EL. pilosa (L.) Beauv., but the spikelets are larger and

broader. 64. UNIOLA L. Sp. Pl. 71. 1753.

Spikelets 15 mm. or more long, 7 to 10 mm. wide ..--.--.....-...- 1. U. paniculata. Sprkelets240 3 mm. long, 1 to. 20mm. wide... 2.2... 6.22. seen. 2. U. virgata.

1. Uniola paniculata L. Sp. Pl. 71. 1753. Wright 2823 [error for 3823]. The Grisebach specimen is labeled ‘‘Sandy need Cananova, July 15,”’ 280, 1865. In Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana this is numbered 3823, which is a ae correct. The specimen in the Gray Herbarium is numbered 3823. 2. Uniola virgata (Poir.) Griseb. Fl. Brit. W. Ind. 531. 1864. Poa virgata Poir. in Lam. Encycl. 5: 78. 1804. Punta Brava, Rugel 870 in Grisebach Herbarium; also in the Gray Herbarium and (505

oye of the N ey As ooh Garde Ske e ee a ke 4s Moe Frere. (0.

65. DISTICHLIS Raf. es Phys. 89: 104. 1819.

1. Distichlis spicata (L. ) Greene, Bull. Calif. Acad. Sci. 2: 415. 1887. Uniola spicata L. Sp. Pl. 71. 1753. Vedado, Baker HC 3455; Batabano, Shafer 117, Hitchcock in 1906.

66. ARTHROSTYLIDIUM Rupr. Mem. Acad. Petersb. VI. 5: 117. 1839.

Blagesscapillany 52.5.0 b 22s... - - Perris RM ei Rtat ley UCN ACTS acs 2. A. capillifolium. Blades flat. Blades less than 5 cm. long. Sheaths puberulent, bristles at summit inconspicuous. ..6. A. sarmentosum. Sheaths glabrous, bristles at summit elongated.

Blades about 5 mm. wide; spikelets reflexed....... 4. A. distichum. Blades about 2 mm. wide; spikelets appressed... -. 5. A. fimbriatum. Blades 10 cm. or more long. Blades puberulent beneath, often reflexed.............- 7. A. urbanii. Blades glabrous beneath, erect. Bigdes sho. WOAH Wide. 22.2 ve eke et ees eee ae 3. A. cubense. Blades about 2 mm. wide, elongated...........---- 1. A. angustifolium.

aTrimen (Fl. Ceylon 5: 291. 1900) considers this different from E. tenella (L.) Roem. & Schult. (Poatenella L., Poa amabilis L.) and includes it as EL. tenella plumosa (Retz. ) Stapf; Fl. Brit. Ind. 7: ‘315. 1896. can Oe : (rr Re lL Carre ie

Colescu~ Ls Pe eee ene 1S ©3 A H

CA, real teefecealae FO ee

246 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM: THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

1. Arthrostylidium angustifolium Nash, Torreya 3: 172. 1903. Baracoa, Underwood & Earle 941 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

2. Arthrostylidium capillifolium Griseb. Mem. Amer. Acad. n. ser. 8: 531. 1862.

Without data, Wrights Madruga, Shafer 11; Santiago de ieee Taylor 218, Hamilton 212, both in Herb N. Y. Bot. Gard.

The Wright specimen in the Grisebach Herbarium is no. 738 from eastern Cuba in 1856-57. Since the above specimen is the only Arthrostylidium in the Sauvalle Herbarium without number, it is probably the one listed under no. 2744 in Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana, ‘‘Arthrostylidium sp.? (sine numero).’’

In the Gray Herbarium are two specimens of Wright 738, both from eastern Cuba, one with flowers, collected in 1856-57, the other sterile, ‘‘In dense woods, ascending on trees and bushes, 10-20 ft., Monte Verde, Aug. 22, 1859.”

3.. Arthrostylidium cubense Rupr. Mem. Acad. Petersb. VI. 5: 118. 1839. ‘Pendant on cliffs, pinales, Nov.,”’ ‘‘Banks of river San Sebastian, Pinar del Rio, Dec.,’’ Wright 3811; without locality, Wright 3809. The two Grisebach specimens are labeled ‘‘Subscandent, 10 ft., savannas of Guana- caro, near rivulets, Aug. 38,’’ no. 307, 1865, and ‘‘Savannas of Guanacaro, July eae? no. 288. The Wright specimens agree with the type in the Trinius Herbarium.

4. Arthrostylidium distichum Pilger in Urban, Symb. Antill. 2: 342. 1901. ‘Tn dense woods, Oct. 19,’’ ‘“Damp woods, Rangel, Nov. 14,’’ Wright 3808.

5. Arthrostylidium fimbriatum Griseb. Mem. Amer. Acad. n. ser. 8: 531. 1862.

Eastern Cuba in 1859, Wright 1554 in Grisebach Herbarium. This number in the Gray Herbarium is labeled, ‘‘In dense woods, 1-3 ft. high, Dec. 23,” from Monte Verde, 1859. A sterile specimen in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Gar- den from Santiago de Cuba, Taylor 415, appears to be this species.

6. Arthrostylidium sarmentosum Pilger in Urban, Symb. Antill. 4: 108. 1903. Santiago de Cuba, Hamilton 213 in Herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.

7. Arthrostylidium urbanii Pilger in Urban, Symb. Antill. 2: 339. 1901.

Wright 3810.

In the Gray Herbarium there are two sterile specimens of mae appear to be this species, numbered 41 and 288.

Gramen sp., Wright 3894. This number is represented by an unidentifiable frag- mentary specimen from which the spikelets have fallen. It is listed in Sauvalle’s Flora Cubana as ‘* Muhlenbergia spicata Munn.’’ /

\ Lo ¥ ; ——

GRASSES OF GRISEBACH’S CATALOGUE.*

. Arthrostylidium fimbriatum Gr. Wr. 1554. See p. 246.

. Arthrostylidium cubense Rupr. Wr. a. 1865 (307). See p. 246.

. Arthrostylidium capillifolium Gr. Wr. 738. See p. 246.

. Arundo saccharoides Gr. Wr. 1560, 3477. See Gynerium sagittatum, p. 242. . Uniola virgata Gr. Rug. 870. See p. 245.

. Uniola paniculata L. Wr. a. 1865 (280). See p. 245.

. Eragrostis excelsa Gr. Wr. 3425. See p. 244.

. Eragrostis prolifera Steud. Wr. a. 1865 (155a). See E. elliottii, p. 244.

. Eragrostis pilifera Benth. Wr. a. 1865 (156b). See E. elliottii, p. 244.

OMOADMT BK wD

@Catalogus Plantarum Cubensium, 1866.

6The numbers in parentheses refer to the secondary numbers on the labels in Grisebach’s herbarium. The other numbers and the names are as given by Grise- bach. The ‘‘a” stands for anno.

Beads + eh.) oe ae,

Se a

ihe ane Ls eS fers

eee >." «

10. ce 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Age 18. Wo) 20. zl, 22. 23.

24. 25. 26. Fel be 28. va Ie 30. ol. 32.

33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39.

40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53.

54. 50. 56. On:

58. 59.

ao. 4 HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 947

Eragrostis glutinosa Tr. Wr. 3423. See E. elliottii, p. 244.

Eragrostis pilosa P. B. Wr. 745. See E. tephrosanthes, p. 245.

Eragrostis bahiensis Schrad. Wr. 3424. See E. cubensis, p. 243.

Eragrostis reptans Ns. Wr. a. 1865 (156). See E. hypnoides, p. 244.

Eragrostis sudans Gr. Wr. 3422. See E. glutinosa, p. 244.

Eragrostis ciliaris Lk. Wr. 1550. See p. 243., iat

“*Festuca laxiflora Rich.’’ (Rich.) E. [No specimen found.|

Sporobolus virginicus Kth. Wr. a. 1865 (291). See p. 238.

Sporobolus domingensis Kth. Wr. a. 1865 (300). See Sporobolus argutus, p. 237.

Sporobolus purpurascens Ham. Wr. 3427. See p. 238, and 8. cubensis, p. 237.

Sporobolus indicus R. Br. Wr. 1537. See p. 237.

Sporobolus jacquemontii Kth. Wr. 3426. See Sporobolus indicus, p. 237.

Reynaudia filiformis Kth. Wr. 3428. See p. 235.

Aristida stricta Mich. Wr. 736. See Aristida curtifolia, p. 235. Wr. 737. See A. mohrii, p. 236. Wr. 3430. See A. refracta, p. 236.

Aristida refracta Gr. Wr. 3431. See p. 236.

Aristida purpurascens Poir. Wr. 3432. See Aristida erecta, p. 236.

Aristida interrupta Cav. Wr. 3433. See Aristida mohrii, p. 236.

‘‘Streptachne cubensis Rich.’’ See Aristida scabra, p. 236.

Milum lanatum R. 8. Wr. 3429. See Leptocoryphium lanatum, p. 207.

Leersia hexandra Sw. Wr. 3434. See Homalocenchrus hexandrus, p. 234.

Leersia monandra Sw. Wr. 731. See Homalocenchrus hexandrus, p. 234.

Achlaena piptostachya Gr. Wr. 3487. See p. 235.

Olyra latifolia L. Rug. 873; Wr. a. 1865 (162). Seep. 233. Variety arundi- nacea Tr. Wr. 746. See Olyra latifolia, p. 233.

Olyra pauciflora Sw. Wr. 732. See Lithachne pauciflora, p. 233.

Olyra pineti Wr. Wr. 1536. See Lithachne pineti, p. 233.

Olyra strephioides Gr. Wr. 3435. See Mniochloa strephioides, p. 233.

Pharus latifolius L. Wr. 733. See Pharus glaber, p. 234.

Pharus glaber Kth. Wr. 733b. See p. 234.

Bouteloua humboldtiana Gr. Wr. 734, 739. See Bouteloua americana, p. 240.

Leptochloa mucronata Kth. Wr.740. Seep.241. Wr.3436. See L. virgata, p. 242.

Leptochloa virgata P. B. Wr. 741. See p. 242. |

Leptochloa fascicularis As. Gr. Wr. a. 1865 (303). See p. 241.

Tricuspis simplex Gr. Wr. 1551. See Leptochloa spicata, p. 241.

Chloris cruciata Sw. Wr. 1548, 1549. See p. 239.

Chloris eleusinoides Gr. See p. 239.

Chloris radiata Sw. See p. 240.-

Chloris ciliata Sw. Wr. 743. See p. 239.

Chloris petraea Thunb. Wr. a. 1865 (293). See p. 240.

Dactyloctenium ‘‘aegyptiacum W.’’ See D. aegyptium, p. 241.

Eleusine indica G. Wr. 744. See p. 241.

Cynodon dactylon Pers. See Capriola dactylon, p. 238.

Reimaria acuta Fl. Wr. 3437. See Reimarochloa brasiliensis, p. 198.

Paspalum compressum Ns. Wr.a. 1865 (168). See Axonopus compressus, p. 207.

Paspalum platyphyllum Gr. Wr. 3441, Wr. a. 1865 (174). See Brachiaria plan- taginea, p. 212.

Paspalum conjugatum Berg. Wr. 767. See p. 201. -

Paspalum lindenianum Rich. Wr. 3445. See P. rupestre, p. 206.

Paspalum nanum Wr. Wr. a. 1865 (176). See p. 204.

Paspalum distichum L. variety vaginatum Sw. Wr. 1546. See P. distichum, p. 202, and P. vaginatum, p. 206.

Paspalum notatum Fl. Wr. 3438. See P. minus, p. 203.

Paspalum filiforme Sw. Wr. 769. See p. 202.

248 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

60. Paspalum alterniflorum Rich. Rug. 894, Wr. a. 1865 (167). See p. 200. 61. Paspalum pulchellum Kth. Wr. 3439. See p. 205. 62. Paspalum dissectum L. Wr. 3440. See p. 202. 63. Paspalum setaceum Mich. Wr. 3442. See P. rigidifolium, p. 205. 64. Paspalum caespitosum Fl. Wr. 3443. See p. 201, and P. arenarium, p. 201. Wr. 3444. See’p. 201, P. clavuliferum, p. 201, and P. rupestre, p. 206. 65. Paspalum glabrum Poir. Wr. a. 1865 (298). See p. 202. 66. Paspalum plicatulum Mich. Wr. 768. See p. 205. 67. Paspalum virgatum L. Wr. 3446. See p. 206. Variety stramineum Gr. Wr. a. 1865 (302). See P. virgatum, p. 206. q 4

~*~

68. Paspalum paniculatum L. Wr. 766. See p. 204. 69. Paspalum densum Poir. Wr. 3447. See p. 202. 70. Digitaria filiformis Muhlenb. Wr. 1544. See Syntherisma filiformis, p. 209, and §. leucocoma, p. 209. , 71. Digitaria pulchella Gr. Wr. 3448. See Mniochloa pulchella, p. 233. 72. Digitaria marginata Lk. Wr. 765. See Axonopus compressus, p. 207. Variety eriogona Lk. Wr. a. 1865 (178, 294). See Syntherisma sanguinalis, 105 CAUSE 73. Digitaria setigera Rth. Wr. 764. See Syntherisma digitata, p. 209. 74. Eriochloa punctata Ham. Wr. 1542. Seep. 208. 75. Stenotaphrum americanum Schrk. Wr. 3490. See Stenotaphrum secundum, p. 232. 76. Orthopogon “‘hirtellus R. Br.’’ See Oplismenus hirtellus, p. 229. ; 77. Orthopogon loliaceus Spreng. Wr. 751. See Oplismenus hirtellus, p. 229. 78. Orthopogon setarius Spreng. Wr. 1548. See Oplismenus hirtellus, p. 229. | . 79. Panicum lolium Ns. Wr. 3449. See Mesosetum rottboellioides, p. 211. : 80. Panicum paspaloides Pers. Wr. 761. See Panicum geminatum, p. 222. 81. Panicum colonum L. Wr. 752. See Echinochloa colona, p. 213. 82. Panicum crusgalli L. Rug. 889. See Echinochloa crusgalli, p. 213. 83. Panicum prostratum Lam. Rug. 195; Wr. 762. See P. reptans, p. 225. ; 84. Panicum grossarium L. Wr. a. 1865 (304). See P. adspersum, p. 217. we 85. Panicum distantiflorum Rich. Wr. 3452. See p. 220. 86. Panicum fuscum Sw. Wr. 754. See P. fasciculatum, p. 221. 87. Panicum molle Sw. Wr. 1545. See P. numidianum, p. 224. 88. Panicum oryzoides Sw. Wr. 3466. See P. zizanioides, p. 228. 89. Panicum stenodes Gr. Wr. a. 1865 (192). See p. 227. 90. Panicum neuranthum Gr. Wr. 3453. See p. 224. Wr. a. 1865. See P. chrys- opsidifolium, p. 218, and P. fusiforme, p. 222. ramosum. Wr. 3454. See P. chrysopsidifolium, p. 218, and P. fusiforme, p. 222. 91. Panicum proliferum Lam. variety pilosum. Wr. a. 1865 (186). See P. chloro- ticum, p. 218. Variety strictum. Wr. 3456. See P. chloroticum, p. 218. | 92. Panicum diffusum Sw. Wr. 1540. See p. 220. ; 93. Panicum durum Gr. Wr. 1539. See Alloteropsis dura, p. 211. - 94. Panicum laxum Sw. Wr. 759. See p. 223. Variety variegatum Gr. Wr. 3450. See P. exiguiflorum, p. 221. 95. Panicum distichum Lam. variety pilosum Sw. Wr. 3451. See P. pilosum, p. 225. 96. Panicum maximum Jacq. See p. 224. 97. Panicum virgatum L. variety cubense. Wr. a. 1865. (183). See p. 227. 98. Panicum rudgei R. 8. Wr. a. 1865 (281). See P. hirtivaginum, p. 223. 99. Panicum hirsutum Sw. Wr. a. 1865 (297). See p. 222. 100. Panicum lindenii Gr. See P. glutinosum, p. 222. 101. Panicum pallens Sw. Wr. 750. See Ichnanthus pallens, p. 228. 3468. See Ichnanthus mayarensis, p. 228. 750 posterius (887). See Ichnanthus pallens, p. 228.

Te A ne

102.

103. 104. 105. 106.

107.

108. 109. 110.

EL: 112.

113. 114. 115.

116. AY: Lis; LG?

120. 121. 122. 123. 124. 125. Be HOG:

Story 128. 129. 130. 131. 182. 133. 134. 135. 136. AS 138.

139. 140.

141. AD 143. 144.

HITCHCOCK——GRASSES OF CUBA. Q49

Panicum divaricatum L. Wr. 747. Seep. 220.

Variety puberulum Gr. Wr. 748. See P. divaricatum, p. 220.

Panicum rugelii Gr. Rug. 188; Wr. 3465. See p. 226.

Panicum sloanei Gr. Rug. 872; Wr. a. 1865 (269). See p. 226.

Panicum martinicense Gr. Wr. 3457. See P. grisebachii, p. 222.

Panicum glutinosum Sw. Wr. 757. See p. 222.

Panicum rugulosum Trin. variety hirtiglume Gr. Wr. 3455. See P. sellovii, p. 226.

Panicum cayennense Lam. Wr. (891). See p. 218.

Panicum brevifolium L. Wr. 1538. See P. trichoides, p. 227. ;

Panicum cyanescens Ns. Wr. 3458. See P. parvifolium, p. 225. Wr. 3459. See P. nitidum, p. 224.

Panicum tricanthum Ns. Wr. 753. See p. 227. _

Panicum dichotomum L. variety glabrescens Gr. Wr. 3462. See P. erectifolium, p. 221. Wr. 3463. See P. caerulescens, p. 219; P. leucothrix, p. 224; P. tenue, p. 227; P. wrightianum, p. 228.

Variety nodiflorum Lam. Wr. 3460. See P. lancearium, p.223. Wr.3461. See P. chrysopsidifolium, p. 218; P. fusiforme, p. 222; P. lancearium, p. 223; P. pauciciliatum, p. 225.

Panicum viscidum Ell. Wr. 3467. See P. scoparium, p. 226.

Panicum exiguiflorum Gr. Wr. a. 1865. See p. 221.

Isachne leersioides Gr. Wr. 755. See p. 208. Wr. 756. See Panicum exigui- florum, p. 221.

Hymenachne myurus P. B. Wr. 3469. See H. amplexicaulis, p. 212.

Hymenachne fluviatilis Ns. Wr. 3470. See Sacciolepis vilvoides, p. 213.

Hymenachne striata Gr. Wr. a. 1865 (198). See Sacciolepis striata, p. 213.

Setaria glauca P. B. Wr. 3472. See Chaetochloa imberbis, p. 230.

Variety imberbis R. 8. Wr. a. 1865 (199). See Chaetochloa imberbis, p. 230. Variety penicillata Gr. Wr. 3473. See Chaetochloa imberbis, p. 230.

Setaria onurus Gr. Wr. 3474. See Chaetochloa onurus, p. 230.

Setaria setosa P. B. Rug. 880; Wr. a. 1865 (287). See Chaetochloa onurus, p. 230.

Pennisetum setosum Rich. Wr. 3475. See p. 232.

Gymnothrix domingensis Spreng. Wr. 1547. See Pennisetum domingense, p. 232.

Cenchrus ‘‘myosuroides Kth.’’ [No specimen found. ]

Cenchrus echinatus L. Wr. 3476. See Cenchrus viridis, p. 231.

Cenchrus distichophyllus Gr. Wr. 3475. See p. 231.

Anthephora elegans Schreb. Wr. a. 1865 (308). See A. hermaphrodita, p. 196.

Echinolaena Sp. Wr. 760. See Ichnanthus wrightii, p. 229.

Arundinella martinicensis Tr. Wr. 3478. See p. 197.

Arundinella phragmitoides Gr. Wr. 3479. See A. deppeana, p. 196.

-Arundinella cubensis Gr. Wr. 1552. See A. peruviana, p. 197.

Tricholaena ‘‘insularis Gr.’’ See Valota insularis, p. 210.

Lappago aliena Spreng. Wr. 3489. See Nazia aliena, p. 196.

Manisuris granularis Sw. Wr. 1553. See Hackelochloa granularis, p. 191.

Rottboellia impressa Gr. Wr. a. 1865 (201). See Manisuris impressa, p. 191.

Andropogon secundus W. Wr. 1559. See Heteropogon contortus, p. 196.

Andropogon saccharoides Sw. Wr. 1556. See A. leucopogon, p. 193.

Andropogon ‘‘Ischaemum L. (Rich. Lind. 1818).’’ This specimen has not been examined.

Andropogon brevifolius Sw. Wr. 1558. See p. 192.

Andropogon tener Kth. Wr. 3482. See p. 194.

Andropogon gracilis Spreng. Wr. 1557, 3484. See p. 193.

Andropogon ‘‘scoparius Mich.’”’ Rich. See A. gracilis, p. 193.

Andropogon fastigiatus Sw. 3483, 3485. See p. 193.

Andropogon ‘‘nutans L.’’ See Sorghastrum, p. 195. [No specimen found.]

250

145. 146.

147. 148. 149. 150. 151. 152. 153. 154,

2721. 2722. 2129.

2724. 2725.

2726. 2727.

2728.

2729.

2730.

2731. 2732. 2733. 2734. 2739. 2736.

PAT EN ba

2738. 2739.

2740. 2741.

2742. 2743. 2744. 2745. 2746. 2747. 2748.

2749, 2750. 2751. 2752. 2753. 2754. 2755.

CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

Andropogon setosus Gr. Wr. a. 1865 (208). See Sorghastrum setosum, p. 195. Anatherum domingense R. 8S. Wr. a. 1865 (202). See Andropogon leucostachys, p. 193.

Anatherum bicorne P. B. Wr. 770. See Andropogon bicorne, p. 192. Anatherum macrurum Gr. Wr. 1555. See Andropogon glomeratus, p. 193. Anatherum spathiflorum Gr. Wr. 3481. See Andropogon spathiflorus, p. 194. Anatherum inerme Gr. Wr. 3480. See Andropogon spathiflorus, p. 194. Sorghum halepense Pers. Wr. 3488. See Holcus halepensis, p. 195.

Imperata caudata Tr. Wr. 3486. See I. brasiliensis, p. 190.

Triscenia ovina Gr. Wr. 756. See p. 198.

Paratheria prostrata Gr. Wr. a. 1865 (207). See p. 232.

GRASSES OF SAUVALLE’S FLORA CUBANA.¢

Leersia monandra Sw. 731. See Homalocenchrus monandrus, p. 235. Leersia hexandra Sw. 3484. See Homalocenchrus hexandrus, p. 234. Oryza sativa L. 3838. See p. 234.

Caryochloa bahiensis Steud. 3813. See Luziola bahiensis, p. 234. Uniola paniculata L. 3823. See p. 245.

‘‘Uniola virgata Gris” Rugel. See Uniola virgata, p. 245.

Eragrostis excelsa Gris. 3425. See p. 244.

Eragrostis nitida Chapm. 3423. See E. elliottii, p. 244.

Eragrostis sudans Gris. 3422. See E. glutinosa, p. 244.

Eragrostis ciliaris Link. 1550. See p. 248.

Eragrostis poaeoides Beauv. 745, 3824. See E. tephrosanthes, p. 245. Eragrostis reptans Nees. 3826. See E. hypnoides, p. 244.

Eragrostis bahiensis Schrad. 3424. See E. cubensis, p. 243. Eragrostis pilifera Benth. 3825. See HE. cubensis, p. 248.

Vilfa virginiana Beauv. 3830. See Sporobolus virginicus, p. 238. Vilfa indica Steud. 1537, 3829. See Sporobolus indicus, p. 237. Vilfa jacquemontii Kth. 3426. See Sporobolus indicus, p. 237.

Vilfa arguta Nees. 3828. See Sporobolus argutus, p. 237.

Vilfa purpurascens Beauv. 3427. See Sporobolus cubensis, p. 237, and 8. pur-

purascens, p. 238. Poa airoides Kth. 3827. See Eragrostis airoides, p. 243. Arthrostylidium cubense Rupr. 3809, 3811. See p. 246. Arthrostylidium sp.? 3810. See A. urbanii, p. 246. Arthrostylidium sp.? 3808. See A. distichum, p. 246. Arthrostylidium sp. (sine numero). See A. capillifolium, p. 246. Arthrostylidium fimbriatum Gris. 1554. See p. 246. Arthrostylidium capillifolium Gris. 738. See p. 246. Gynerium saccharoides Kth. 1560, 3477. See G. sagittatum, p. 242. Leptochloa fascicularis Gray. 3812, 3822. See p. 241. Leptochloa virgata Beauv. 741, 3436. See p. 242. Leptochloa mucronata Kth. 740. See p. 241. Muhlenbergia spicata Munn. 3894. See Gramen sp., p. 246. Muhlenbergia capillaris Trin. 3836. See p. 237. Aristida scabra Kth. 3835. See p. 236. Aristida purpurascens Poir. 3432. See A. erecta, p. 236.

Aristida dispersa Trin. 737. See A. mohrii, p. 236. 736. See A. curtifolia, p. 235. 3480, 3431. See A. refracta, p. 236. 3343.9 See A. mohrii, p. 236.

a See footnote, page 184. 6 The discrepancies in numbers are doubtless due to typographical errors in Sauvalle’s list. |

2756. 2757. 2758. 2759. 2760. 2761. 2762. 2763. 2764. 2765. 2766. 2767. 2768. 2769.

2770. 2771. 2772. 2773. 2774. 2775. 2776. PATA 2778. Zao: 2780. 2781.

2782. 2783. 2784. 2785. 2786. 2787. 2788. 2789.

= 2790.

2791. 2792. 2793. 2794. 2794. 2795. 2796. 2797.

2798.

2799. 2800. 2801.

2802.

2803. 2804,

a

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 251

Reimaria acuta Fliigge. 3437. See Reimarochloa brasiliensis, p. 198.

Reinaudia filiformis Kth. 3428. See Reynaudia filiformis, p. 239.

Eleusine indica Gaertn. 744. See p..241.

Dactyloctenium aegyptiacum Willd. 3831. See D. aegyptium, p. 241.

Cynodon dactylon Pers. (sine numero). See Capriola dactylon, p. 238.

Chloris ciliata Sw. 743. See p. 239.

Chloris petraea Thunb. 3719. See p. 240.

Chloris radiata Sw. 742. See p. 240.

Chloris brevigluma sp. nov. 1848 p. p. See Chloris cruciata, p. 239.

Chloris cruciata Sw. 1548 p. p., 1549. See C. eleusinoides, p. 239.

Chloris beyrichiana Kth. 3819. See C. eleusinoides, p. 239.

Chloris eleusinoides Gris. 3818. See p. 239.

Bouteloua humboldtiana Gris. 739 p. p., 3815. See B. americana, p. 240.

Bouteloua porphyrantha spec. nov. 739 p. p. 734, 3816. See B. americana, p. 240.

Achlaena piptostachya Gris. 3487. See p. 235.

Tricuspis simplex Gris. 1551. See Leptochloa spicata, p. 241.

Olyra strephioides Gris. 3435. See Mniochloa strephioides, p. 233.

Olyra pineti Wr. 1536. See Lithachne pineti, p. 233.

Olyra pauciflora Sw. 732. See Lithachne pauciflora, p. 233.

Olyra latifolia L. 746. See p. 233.

-Strephium? pulchellum sp. nov. 3448. See Mniochloa pulchella, p. 233.

Milium lanatum R. & Sch. 3429. See Leptocoryphium lanatum, p. 207.

Paspalum conjugatum Berg. 767. See p. 201.

Paspalum rupestre Nees. 3445. See p. 206.

Paspalum nanum Wr. 3842. See p. 204.

Paspalum distichum L. 3854? See P. vaginatum, p. 206.

Variety vaginatum 1546. See P. vaginatum, p. 206, and P. distichum, p. 202.

Paspalum alterniflorum Rich? 3841. See p. 200.

Paspalum filiforme Sw. 769. See p. 202.

Paspalum pulchellum Kth. 3439. See p. 205.

Paspalum notatum Fliigge. 3438. See p. 204 and P. minus, p. 203.

Paspalum dissectum L. 3440. See p. 202.

Paspalum setaceum Mx. 3442. See P. rigidifolium, p. 205.

Paspalum caespitosum Fliigge 3443, 3444. See p. 201.

Paspalum leucocheilum sp. nov. See P. virgatum, p. 206.

Paspalum papillosum Spr.? 3844, p. p. Seep. 204.

Paspalum clavuliferum sp. nov. 3444 p. p. See p. 201.

Paspalum decumbens Sw. 3851. See P. pedunculatum, p. 205.

Paspalum virgatum L. 3446. Seep. 206. 3840. See P. millegrana, p. 203.

Paspalum plicatulum Mx. 768, 3839. See p. 205. 3843. See P. elatum, p. 202.

Paspalum densum Poir. 3447. See p. 202.

Paspalum paniculatum L. 766. See p. 204.

Paspalum rottboellioides sp. nov. 3864. See p. 205.

Paspalum hemicryptum sp. nov. 3847. See p. 203.

Paspalum caudicatum sp. nov. 3866. See P. nanum, p. 204.

Paspalum swartzianum Fliigge? 3848. See Paspalum sp., p. 206.

Paspalum compressum Nees. 3849... See Axonopus compressus, p. 207.

Panicum filiforme L. 1544. See Syntherisma filiformis, p. 209, and S. leuco- coma, p. 209.

Panicum horizontale Meyer. 764. See Syntherisma digitata, p. 209, and 8. san- guinalis, p. 209. 3883. See Syntherisma sanguinalis, p. 209.

Panicum sclerochloa Trin? 3859. See Mesosetum wrightii, p. 211.

Panicum rottboellioides Kth, 3449. See Mesosetum rottboellioides, p. 211.

252

2805. 2806. 2807. 2808. 2809. 2810. 2811. 2812. 2813. 2814. 2815. 2816. 2817. 2818. 2819.

2820. 2821. 2822.

2823. 2824.

2825. 2826. 2827.

2828. 2829. 2830.

2831. 2832. 2833. 2834.

2835. 2836.

2837. 2838. 2839.

2840. 2841. 2842. 2843. 2844. 2845. 2846. 2847.

CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

Panicum platyphyllum Munro. 3441, 3867. See Brachiaria plantaginea, p. 212.

Panicum paspaloides Pers. 761. See Panicum geminatum, p. 222.

Panicum colonum L. 752. See Echinochloa colona, p. 213.

Panicum crus-galli L. 3879. See Echinochloa walteri, p. 213.

Panicum prostratum Lam. 762, 3857. See P. reptans, p. 225.

Panicum grossarium L. 3869. See P. adspersum, p. 217.

Panicum laxum Sw. 759, 3862. See p. 223. .

Panicum mayarense sp. nov. 3468 p. p. See Ichnanthus mayarensis, p. 228.

Panicum amphistemon sp. nov. 3464. See Alloteropsis amphistemon, p. 211.

Panicum distantiflorum Rich. 3452. See p. 220.

Panicum diffusum Sw. 1540, 3877. See p. 220. _

Panicum fuscum Sw. 754. See P. fasciculatum, p. 221.

Panicum molle Sw. 1545. See P. numidianum, p. 224.

Panicum oryzoides Sw. 3466. See P. zizanioides, p. 228.

Panicum stenodes Gris. 3860. See P. chloroticum, p. 218. 3870. See P. tenerum, p. 227. -3871. Seevp. 227.

Panicum proliferum Lam. 3456, 3861. See P. chloroticum, p. 218.

Panicum durum Gris. 1539, 3868. See Alloteropsis dura, p. 211.

Panicum distichum Lam. 3451. See P. pilosum, p. 225.

Panicum agrostoides Muhl. 3862. See P. condensum, p. 219.

Panicum maximum Jacq. See p. 224.

Panicum virgatum L. 3873. See P. virgatum cubense, p. 227.

Panicum altissimum Mey. 3872. See P. megiston, p. 224.

Panicum rudgei R. S.? 758. See P. hirtivaginum, p. 223.

Panicum divaricatum L. 747,748. See p. 220. 3465. See P. rugelii, p. 226.

Panicum sloanei Gris. 3878. See p. 226.

Panicum martinicense Gris. 749. See P. compactum, p. 219. 3457. See P. grisebachii, p. 222.

Panicum lasianthum Trin. 3455, 3855. See P. sellovii, p. 226.

Panicum glutinosum Sw. 757. Seep. 222. _

Panicum cayennense Lam? (Sine numero). See p. 218.

Panicum dichotomum L. 3460. See P.lancearium, p. 223. 3461.See P. chrys- opsidifolium, p. 218, P. fusiforme, p. 222, P. lancearium, p. 223, and P. pau- ciciliatum, p. 225. 3462. See P. erectifolium, p. 221. 3463. See P. leuco- thrix, p. 224, P. caerulescens, p. 219, P. tenue, p. 227, and P. wrightianum, p.228. 3874. SeeP.acuminatum,p.217. 3875. SeeP. polycaulon, p. 225. P. strigosum, p. 227. 3876. See P. pauciciliatum, p. 225. 3458. See P. fusiforme, p. 222, P. chrysopsidifolium, p. 218, and P. neuranthum, p. 224. 3454. See P. chrysopsidifolium, p. 218, and P. fusiforme, p. 222.

Panicum brevifolium L. 1538. See P. trichoides, p. 227. ,

Panicum cyanescens L. 3458. See P. parvifolium, p. 225. 3459. See P. nitidum, p. 224. .

Panicum microcarpum Muhl. 753. See P. trichanthum, p. 227.

Panicum viscidum Ell. 3467. See P. scoparium, p. 226.

Panicum pallens Sw. 750. See Ichnanthus pallens, p.228. 3882. See Ichnan- thus nemorosus, p. 228.

Panicum nemorosum Sw. 3858, 3881. See Ichnanthus nemorosus, p. 228.

Panicum stoloniferum Poir? 3880. .See Ichnanthus wrightii, p. 229.

Panicum amplexicaule Rudge. 3863. See Hymenachne auriculata, p. 212.

Panicum gibbum Ell. 3885. See Sacciolepis striata, p. 213.

Panicum vilvoides Trin. 3470. See Sacciolepis vilvoides, p. 213.

Hymenachne myurus Beauv. 3469. See H. amplexicaulis, p. 212.

Eriochloa punctata Hamilt. 1542. See p. 208.

Eriochloa annulata Kth? 3886. See Eriochloa ramosa, p. 208.

2848. 2849. 2850. 2851. 2852. 2853. 2854. _ 2855. 2856. 2857. 2858. 2859.

2860. 2861. 2862. 2863. 2864. 2865. 2866. 2867. 2868. 2869. 2870. 2871. 2872. 2873. 2874. 2875.

2876. 2877. 2878. 2879. 2880. 2881.

2882. 2883. 2884. 2885. 2886. 2887. 2888. 2889. 2890. 2891.

HITCHCOCK—GRASSES OF CUBA. 953

Chamaerhaphis parvigluma Munro. 3909. See Paratheria prostrata, p. 232.

‘‘Orthopogon hirtellus R. Br.’’ See Oplismenus hirtellus, p. 229.

Orthopogon setarius Spreng. 1598. See Oplismenus hirtellus, p. 229.

Orthopogon loliaceus Spreng. 751. See Oplismenus hirtellus, p. 229.

Setaria glauca Beauv. 3888. See Chaetochloa imberbis penicillata, p. 230.

Setaria setosa Beauv. 3474, 3487. See Chaetochloa onurus, p. 230.

Pennisetum setosum Rich. 3471. See p. 232.

Gymnothrix domingensis Spreng. 1547. See Pennisetum domingense, p. 232.

Stenotaphrum americanum Schrank. 3490. See 8. secundum, p. 232.

Isachne leersioides Gris. 1547. See p. 208.

Cenchrus viridis Spreng. 3889. See p. 231.

Cenchrus tribuloides L. 3476. See Cenchrus carolinianus, p. 231 and C. viridis, p. 231. !

Cenchrus distichophyllus Gris. 3475. See p. 231.

Anthephora elegans Schreb. 3870. See A. hermaphrodita, p. 196.

Lappago racemosa Willd. 3489. See Nazia aliena, p. 196.

Triscenia ovina Gris. 756. See p. 198.

Arundinella brasiliensis Radd. 1552. See A. peruviana, p. 197.

Arundinella phragmatoides Gris. 3479. See A. deppeana, p. 196.

Arundinella martinicensis Gris: 3478. See p. 197.

Tricholena insularis Gris. 1541. See Valota insularis, p. 210.

Rottboellia impressa Gris. 3904. See Manisuris impressa, p. 191.

Rottboellia filifolia. Sp. nov. 3905. See Manisuris loricata, p. 191.

Manisuris granularis Sw. 1553. See Hackelochloa granularis, p. 191.

Andropogon contortus L. 1559. See Heteropogon contortus, p. 196.

Andropogon saccharoides Sw. 1556. See A. leucopogon, p. 193.

Andropogon alopecuroides L. 3903. See Erianthus saccharoides, p. 190.

Andropogon halepensis Sibth. 3488. See Holcus halepensis, p. 195.

Andropogon nutans L. 3896. See Sorghastrum francavillanum, p. 195. 3897. See Sorghastrum setosum, p. 195. ;

Andropogon leucostachyus Kth. 3900. See p. 193.

Andropogon virginicus L. 3901. See p. 194.

Andropogon spathiflorum Kth. 3481. 3480. See p. 194.

Andropogon macrouros Mx. 1555. See A. glomeratus, p. 193.

Andropogon bicornis L. 770. See p. 192.

Andropogon tener Kth. 1558? Seep. 194, and A. brevifolius, p. 192. 3482. See p. 194.

Andropogon brevifolius Sw. 1558. See p. 192.

Andropogon gracilis Spreng. 3480. See p. 193.

Andropogon sp. 3898. See A. cubensis, p. 192.

Andropogon wrightii Munro, 293, 263, 3895. See Rhaphis pauciflora, p. 195.

Andropogon fastigiatus Sw. 3483. See p. 193.

Andropogon sp. 3889. See Cenchrus viridis, p. 231.

Andropogon sp. 3892, 3893. See Trachypogon filifolius, p. 191.

Andropogon sp. 3891. See A. semiberbis, p. 194.

Imperata caudata Trin. 3486. See I. brasiliensis, p. 190.

Perotis? cubana spec. nov. 735. See Chaetium cubanum, p. 232.

254

GRASSES COLLECTED IN CUBA BY WRIGHT, ARRANGED BY NUMBERS.

1539. 1540. 1541. 1542. 1543. 1544.

731. 732. 733. 734. 730. 736. 737. 738. 739. 740.

741. 742.

743. 744. 745. 746. 747. 748. 749. 750. 751. 752. 703. 704. -750.

756.

797. 708. 709. 760. 761. 762. 763.

764.

765. 766. 767. 768. 769. 770. 1536. 1537. 1538.

CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM,

Homalocenchrus monandrus. Lithachne pauciflora.

Pharus glaber.

Bouteloua americana. Chaetium cubanum. Aristida curtifolia.

Aristida mohrii.

Arthrostylidium capillifolium.

Bouteloua americana. Leptochloa mucronata.4 Leptochloa virgata. Leptochloa mucronata. Leptochloa virgata. Aristida mohrii.

Chloris radiata.

Chloris ciliata. Eleusine indica. Eragrostis tephrosanthes. Olrya latifolia. Panicum divaricatum. Panicum divaricatum. Panicum compactum. Ichnanthus pallens. Oplismenus hirtellus. Echinochloa colona. Panicum tricanthum. Panicum fasciculatum. Panicum exiguiflorum. Isachne leersioides. Triscenia ovina. Panicum exiguiflorum. Panicum glutinosum. Panicum hirtivaginum. Panicum. laxum. Ichnanthus wrightii. Panicum geminatum. Panicum reptans. Panicum reptans. Axonopus compressus. Syntherisma digitata. Syntherisma sanguinalis. Axonopus compressus. Paspalum paniculatum. Paspalum conjugatum.

-Paspalum plicatulum.

Paspalum filiforme. Andropogon bicornis. Lithachne pineti. Sporobolus indicus. Panicum trichoides.

1547.

1548.

1549.

1550. 1551. 1552. 1553. 1554. 1555.

1556. 1557. 1558.

1509.

1560. 1593. 1848. 2823. 2829. 2830. 3422.

3423. 3424. 3425. 3426. 3427.

3428. 3429. 3430. 3431. 3432. 3433. | 3434.

1545. 1546.

Alloteropsis dura. Panicum diffusum.

Valota insularis.

Eriochloa punctata. Oplismenus hirtellus. Syntherisma filiformis. Syntherisma leucocoma. : Panicum numidianum. Paspalum distichum. Paspalum vaginatum. Isachne leersioides. Pennisetum domingense. Chloris cruciata.

Chloris eleusinoides. Chloris cruciata.

Chloris eleusinoides. Eragrostis ciliata. “9 Leptochloa spicata. Arundinella peruviana. ~ Hackelochloa granularis. Arthrostylidium fimbriatum, Andropogon bicornis. Andropogon glomeratus. Andropogon leucopogon. Andropogon gracilis. Andropogon brevifolius. Andropogon tener. Alloteropsis dura. Heteropogon contortus. Gynerium sagittatum. Oplismenus hirtellus. Chloris cruciata.

Uniola paniculata. Sporobolus indicus. Sporobolus virginicus. Eragrostis glutinosa. Sporobolus cubensis. Eragrostis elliottii. Eragrostis cubensis. Eragrostis excelsa. Sporobolus indicus. Sporobolus cubensis. Sporobolus purpurascens. Reynaudia filiformis. Leptocoryphium lanatum. Aristida refracta.

Aristida refracta.

Aristida erecta.

Aristida mohrii. Homalocenchrus hexandrus.

4 Two or more species when here listed under one number were all distributed under this number by Wright.

3435. 3436. 3437. _ 3438.

3439. 3440. 3441. 3442. 3443.

3444.

3445. 3446.

3447. 3448. 3449. 3450. 3451. 3452. 3453.

3404.

3455. 3456. 3457.

3458. 3459. 3460. 3461.

3462.

3463.

3464. 3465. 3466. 3467. 3468. 3469. 3470.

HITCHCOCK—-GRASSES OF CUBA.

Mniochloa strephioides. Leptochloa virgata. Reimarochloa brasiliensis. Paspalum notatum. Paspalum minus. Paspalum pulchellum. Paspalum dissectum. Brachiaria plantaginea. Paspalum rigidifolium. Paspalum arenarium. Paspalum caespitosum. Paspalum caespitosum. Paspalum clavuliferum. Paspalum papillosum. Paspalum rupestre.. Paspalum rupestre. Paspalum virgatum.

Paspalum virgatum schreberianum.

Paspalum densum. Mniochloa pulchella. Mesosetum rottboellioides. Panicum exiguiflorum. Panicum pilosum. Panicum distantiflorum.

Panicum chrysopsidifolium.

Panicum fusiforme. Panicum neuranthum. - Panicum chrysopsidifolium. Panicum fusiforme. Panicum sellovii. Panicum chloroticum. Panicum erisebachii. Panicum pilosum. Panicum parvifolium. Panicum nitidum. Panicum lancearium.

Panicum chrysopsidifolium.

Panicum fusiforme. Panicum lancearium. Panicum pauciciliatum. Paspalum densum. Panicum erectifolium. Panicum sellovii. Panicum caerulescens. Panicum leucothrix.

_ Panicum tenue.

Panicum wrightianum. Alloteropsis amphistemon. Panicum rugelii.

Panicum zizanioides. Panicum scoparium. Ichnanthus mayarensis.

Hymenachne amplexicaulis.

Sacciolepis vilvoides.

3471. 3472. 3473. 3474. 3475.

3476.

3477. 3478. 3479. 3480.

3481. 3482. 3483. 3484. 3485. 3486. 3487.

3488. 3489. 3490. 3719. 3808. 3809. 3810. 38lt. 3812. 3813. 3814. 3815. 3816. 3817. 3818. 3819. 3821. 3822. 3823. 3825. 3826. 3827. 0828. 3829. 3830. 38el.

3832. 3833. 3834. 3835. 3836. 3837.

Pennisetum setosum.

-Chaetochloa imberbis.

Chaetochloa imberbis. Chaetochloa onurus. Cenchrus distichophyllus. Pennisetum setosum. Cenchrus viridis. Cenchrus carolinianus. Gynerium sagittatum. Arundinella martinicensis. Arundinella, deppeana. Andropogon gracilis. Andropogon spathiflorus. Andropogon spathiflorus. Andropogon tener. Andropogon fastigiatus. Andropogon gracilis. Andropogon fastigiatus. Imperata brasiliensis. Chaetochloa onurus. Achlaena piptostachya. Holcus halepensis.

Nazia aliena. Stenotaphrum secundum. Chloris petraea. Arthrostylidium distichum. Arthrostylidium cubense. Arthrostylidium urbanii. Arthrostylidium cubense. Leptochloa fascicularis. Luziola bahiensis. « Capriola dactylon. Bouteloua americana. Bouteloua americana. Chloris petraea.

Chloris eleusinoides. Chloris eleusinoides. Dactyloctenium aegyptium. Leptochloa fascicularis. Uniola paniculata. Eragrostis cubensis. Eragrostis hypnoides. Eragrostis airoides. Sporobolus argutus. Sporobolus indicus. Sporobolus virginicus. Aristida refracta. Dactyloctenium aegyptium. Aristida refracta.

Aristida refracta.

Aristida refracta.

Aristida scabra. Muhlenbergia capillaris. Homalocenchrus hexandrus.

255

256

3838. 3839.

3840. 3841. 3842. 3843. 3844. 3845. 3846. 3847. " 3848. 3849. 3850. 3851. 3852. 3853. 3854.

3855. 3806. 3857. 3858. 3809. 3860.

3861. 3862.

3863.

3864. 3865. 3866. 3867. 3868. 3869. 3870.

CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.

Oryza sativa.

Paspalum plicatulum. Paspalum pulchellum. Paspalum millegrana. Paspalum alterniflorum. Paspalum nanum. Paspalum elatum. Paspalum papillosum. Paspalum propinquum. Paspalum glabrum. Paspalum hemicryptum. Paspalum sp.

Axonopus compressus. Axonopus compressus. Paspalum pedunculatum. Panicum diffusum. Brachiaria plantaginea. Paspalum vaginatum. Reimarochloa oligostachya. Panicum sellovii. Panicum laxum. Panicum reptans. Ichnanthus nemorosus. Mesosetum wrightii. Panicum chloroticum. Panicum diffusum. Panicum hirtivaginum. Panicum tenerum. Panicum chloroticum. Panicum condensum. Panicum laxum. Hymenachne auriculata. Panicum condensum. Panicum laxum.° Paspalum rottboellioides.

‘Panicum cayennense.

Paspalum nanum. Brachiaria plantaginea. Alloteropsis dura. Panicum adspersum.

Anthephora hermaphrodita.

3870.

3871. 3872. 3873. 3874. 3875.

3876. 3877.

3878. 3879. 3880. 3881. 3882. 3883. 3884. 3885. 3886. Sge7: 3888. 3889. 3890. 3891. 3892. 3893. 3894. 3895. 3896. 3897. 3898. 3899. | 3900. 3901. 3902. oe Olean | 3904. 3905. 3906. 3909.

Panicum distantiflorum. Panicum tenerum.

Panicum stenodes.

Panicum megiston.

Panicum virgatum cubense. Panicum acuminatum.

Panicum polycaulon.

Panicum strigosum.

Panicum pauciciliatum. Panicum diffusum.

Panicum exiguiflorum.

Panicum sloanei. pn Echinochloa walteri. ace 2 Ichnanthus wrightii.

Ichnanthus nemorosus. Ichnanthus nemorosus. Syntherisma sanguinalis Syntherisma villosa.

Sacciolepis striata.

Eriochloa ramosa.

Chaetochloa onurus.

Chaetochloa imberbis penicillata. Cenchrus viridis. t Anthephora hermaphrodita. Andropogon semiberbis. Trachypogon filifolius. Trachypogon. filifolius. Unidentified.

Rhaphis pauciflora.

Sorghastrum francavillanum. Sorghastrum setosum. Andropogon cubensis. Andropogon nashianus. Andropogon leucostachys. Andropogon virginicus.

Rue

- Andropogon bicornis. |

Erianthus saccharoides. Manisuris impressa. Manisuris loricata. Paratheria prostrata. Paratheria prostrata.

«est

LIST OF NEW GENERA AND SPECIES AND NEW NAMES.

Page

Alioteropsis amphistemon (Wricht) Hitchc...-......-...-.-:-.-..--.---- O11 Panicum amphistemon Wright.

Pileueregsit dura (arisep.) ditch. . 2222-2. 02. 202.2 ese ieee ee ee eee ee 211 Panicum durum Griseb.

Piiaceropsia semiaiata(h. Br.) Hitche-.........2.--2.5.2..-02 2.2222 ose. 210 Panicum semialatum R. Br.

Andropogon nashianus Hitch. sp. nov......... SN Cages cera Rept rea as ns 193

Seer eUriolin LIteche. sp, NOV... Fs... 25.2). 5 uo eh ee eee de eee PES

PuMMieneOReCinwel ICCC. SD: WOW oe. 22S. 2. ese i eee ee 236

Bragtiatia plantapinea (link) Hitche:-.........2¢.2.2.-22.2. eee. 212 Panicum plantagineum Link.

Peer etibaium-(Wrieht) Hitch: .25..2..<.2.2-.5-:i2--)-20 2. ieee -e- Zee Perotis? cubana Wright. :

Eragrostis cubensis Hitchc. sp. nov........-- ee yn ee Sa , 243

Peaeeia ? aalirolia, Mitche, Sp; NOV... 22. «0 aa2- 25 ae Se es eee eee eee 207

Brigemoa sipeinbra CNash) Hitche.: 2.2 52.6220. s20ce 5 kee Ds ee yee 208 Monachne subglabra Nash.

febusatiis mayarensis (Wright) Hitchc..........-.....22 222 2..--22--2-+2- 228 Panicum mayarense Wright.

Pome weit Patehc..sp.. NOV... 2202222 -. bs 6 ee ee en 2 2 ee8

Martotasabiensis (Steud:) Hitehc-..-.. 4...-.22-.-2 5.222222 2.--.b lek. 234 Caryochloa bahiensis Steud.

' Mesosetum rottboellioides (H. B. K. Nels tt CHC eas = 2 Oe Cea ee ee ee PA

Panicum rottboellioides H. B. K.

Mesexetum scierochion (Urin,) Hitche.--.-....225.2..2:.202----6.-2bes ees 212 Panicum sclerochloa Trin.

Mesosetum wrightii Hitchc. sp. nov.............-. fee egen oie aaa Dl peauirum caerulescens Hack: in herb... .----- 22. 2-2-2--522--+-+-++-2ee--- 219 avmde tan atone LiL Cie? 2225S ean tk. 2 os ee ee ae See ee 222. Panicum neuranthum variety ramosum Griseb. 1866, not P. ramosum L. 1767. Panicum hirtivaginum enti ehiters SP re OVE thse ian) ae gee ee ee 223 Peeps ciuterum (Nash) Hitche.-:.--.......-. 20. 2522-2 eee eee ---- 201 ' -Dwmorphostachys cilivfera Nash. Reimarochloa Hitche. gen. nov. (type, Reimaria acuta Fliigge).....-....-..-- 198 Reimarochloa acuta (Fliigge) Hitchc...........,....-.22---- 222-2222 e eee 198 Reimaria acuta Fligge. . - Reimarochloa brasiliensis (Spreng.) Hitchc.................--222------0-- 198 Agrostis brasiliensis Spreng. = meimarochloa oligostachya (Munro) Hitchc...-.........--.....-.--..---- 199 Reimaria oligostachya Munro. Sorghastrum francavillanum (Fourn.) Hitchc...........-.----+---+---. Soeeoe C5 Andropogon francavillanus .Fourn. . 61170—vo.. 12, pr 6—09-—6 207

=

-

258 CONTRIBUTIONS ‘FROM THE NATIONAL

Sorghastrum setosum (Griseb.) HN tene 2c tee ee ae Andropogon setosus Griseb. . 2 Na Rs eae Sporobolus cubensis Hitche. sp. nov.....-..-.--. so eae f Sele ote eter Syntherisma aequiglumis (Hack. & Arech.) Hitche...-..- Bast as

Panicum aequiglume Hack. & Arech. J ar Trachypogon filifolius (Hack.) Hitchc.-............---.----------.

Trachypogon polymorphus 8 filifolius Hack.

INDEX OF SPECIES.

[Page number of principal entries in bold-face type.

Aehlaena piptostachiya .....-..-.2.-..s.2.3- 235 VAIGTOSEUSVONOSILIEN SIS > 22a s 28-5 ai sis ees 198 GHESHETIS stg OSE es ROR ae Teneo eee 239 DIRLTITEL EB ae eg Sone Se ee a ie ee 237 UMD IETIESCEIS x omer See ae 3 ay Se eae 238 ROLL OT A Ne i ee Be in A 9 ayaa oS ee 240 DERG UIC ES ene Ae itd Se Mee ec 238 Alloteropsis amphistemon...............--- 211 TEGO UE Se Sa SS See ie i ae 210 CDT aS OE ee eS Mey area NE a Ye OL a 211 SEAN Mier eee oe, es mate er 2 Pa 210 AGATA TOG SEE a ee ee 194 SALLI ORUND we a> k= SRO Sas es eee 194 Andropogon avenaceum .....-.-.------------ 195 [Rosie a UTI gy oe ce = Soe oe eo 240 ESLER EONS) ha es pl See i oe ea 192,193

Pe MOMUSE ra. fe Wc ce. | Ne 192,194 COMNORDIIS eee aaron ies oe eae, GE Shee 196 TID BEETS. Sse eee ee ee 192 OME ISIS cree Nate ey aoyten eee cee yale 193

REIS NOAA US eee tae ac WS re 2 isk oe oe: 193 SEP SEAT COD) eile aaa ee eae ee 195

“EP CTSPROT Ey FETS an is gees ee 192,193 ETP OTNGS 2 o A ne RI eRe Cova 193

I SELF GTS = EGRESS rece eo OS ie Hie aR 195 WESIUEUS ePe ye ann oe clk Steen eas ROT CTEM TIS 52 Oe) 5 ee ER Re RTE ore A 194 TPL Ds, Sos Oe OE Eo ERO IE 210 PCUCOPOLON eri er ee eases ee Baers 193 EEO 210 00). A ee a eed 193,194 TTC HOUT LIT Sore Aa ae ae Se Fs SoS 193 TAS TAT Se ta ee Hiern cd ete o/s ey 193 DLE DORs aes 5 ae ie eae ey Se ee ae eae 195 SCOPARIMMS Ss eee c a2 eo setee cesar eee 193 SHASTA UNTTIS) ree Pehl a at Me ee 196 SUMMBEL DIS ee = ees eek es gee ct 194 SCLOSIEG TSR an Nee oe RS Se 195 SPA OnuSear see ae aa, Reece 194 HOLA DSR A SR, as os A ee 194

SUG COMMIS fier ee rs hes a woe ST a 194 BERG Ip SMe inc alas 2 ee ea 192,194 WIT GUSS Res ce ne ae ene ene Bere a 194

OS FTI DIDS 5 eer oe Te ee 195 Anthephora elegans ...... Seek eels ss. 196 RETHIATMTOUUA = 2. aS. ee Lhe cian ee 196 ATIStIGAOINETICONG = sae fe So Ss Sc oe 240 CSUN GUTO ey rh oe ee See noe ee ee ya's 239

GIS POTS ae seme oF hts ee RE et ka 240

COLO Clas se athe Soe 2 2 ees Seen Se Ce 236 GUase SSR ES My ont neal 236 MONT ss ee ee eae. cee a ee otee 236 OAULISETIS 34 nee oo cme soe tet Sa eee 236 METRO UA Shas Aces see SR ne dear 236 SOO sen mai kul Sc av a OSE eo See 236

Synonyms in italics. ]

Page.

Arthrostylidium angustifolium.............. 246 Capullifolmimes sees a 5s oe 246 CuUbense sates sock se S05 aU ee pe RL 246 GISCCHEMBTE., a) Bs yA ee Re gy 246 ALIMVIO TAG UI ep Peres ort ers so eye, Ceres 246 SamMmentosuim se seen sak yeep 246

iD tte] OY oth ies eR alee AUR om eC Q CL pe ER ee 246 ArunGdinelaWnasiensise.c: 15 se- 2 ees 197 CHUN UE rie es SI epee RE A 197 CUDCTISIS ane oie gs Sat be Re dhe at ed LUE 197

(6 (2) 0} OLSON Hig Megs ee a Pens aera aay eae 196

US DULG Say eR eS Sealy sol es apne, «Se ta) 197 TIATUIMICENSISe2 ose os eS oe ae 197,198

/ DONIICIRTL SoS Pe hg OOS Bie Se ie etic Be 197 DCRUIVA AT Al saat eats au bey ee re ae 196, 197

PD RROGIIVILOTACS Serie aa hae reese anges ai 196 Aspérella digitaria.. 2... <-.. 22222-55122: 209, 210 INXOWODUS COMPECSSUSE: ~ = 22 oes -2\a Ween eae 207 BoubtelowaramerGanae: =. 4. > 425552 -- 42555. 240 CG DUSHIIUG) Bz ee papel ct Sa MONO aE, LIE ee ae a mea 240

AU NVOOLGLIO NG eae eae ne ad 240 WUELGLOS C2 ae et ea aes ee, poe, a 240 ADOC D UTA OUR le pee ea ers Bae 240 Brachiaria plantagineness.. sss. en2 2s osseee 212 OPER HEL OTA HIE Se re ee Se Are Re 212 STO NUS, S PUCHLULS eon Hal ene a eae a ee 241 Capniolaidactylonesaa..2 sae eae eee 238 CuryocklomDUnvensiss aay o- 2s eke ae 234 Cenchrus carolinianus=.:*. 22. -.-5.-s222--2s- 231 adistiechoph ylius: 2-22 22. ese. caeee 231 CCMINAGUS yer ees Nees se ae Sa 231 CQRONMATIS Ee Sener es ee ps ee 191 SCULOSUUS cee ee coe ne = Nate Rape ia 232 CEO OIG CS a Seeee 226 See cre 231 SALTER CLS eee re teat sooo seeded 231 Chaetium: Culbantimles 4:57 5. = Sheela eee 232 TEStIICOID Sera e ee oh Ro eee hae 232 Chaetochloaihispidaese: == {o=k2 sae he 230 ATID OTIS Sree ays se = Shae Sse nae ee 230 penicilla tases ma-se ae Cee eee 230

OMUMMUS A ae ee ee OE tel ae aes es 230 PULPULASCENS = 25 = eee hee eee 231 SOLOS Ret Pee ee ee Seren oe PR 231 ViErb CHARS aes at oe aie Serato tye res 231 Chamumerapiis parviguumt =... 2225-2 4---5--- 232 CinMloniSwarDUlaeee Spear ae te! ee ee 240 OREDIGULTI en ee SR Eo eee es oie 239

GIN ta Bee eee. ce eo eee Ae ee 239 Clu Ci abate eit Cees oo cee oe eaiaee 239 elegans. Ae ane Tai seen eee eee Sa aoe. Set 239 ClEUSINOIMES aa 55-2 sedestee ee Peet eee 239 DESTINO M es 8 Pe are cg He ee 239 PATARTIAIONSIS Hiss Rae one soe sel oe ee 240 Detraea eta cee oor eee note eo 240

VIII Page

Chiorissradiata‘s.. 32. scenes eee ees 240 SOD OF EBL TU se ie ae rt eee ee Seer 240 CINNO GLO ENGIG= 2 em ae ee ee ee eee 193 Colxlacryma-jODiS os soces noe as eee ee 190 Cynodon dactylon.......--- i te os ES 238 Cynosurus @egyplius. .. <2... be e- 222 241 GUL CMS Oey NOP ag oes 2 nh ae DUGULUS es eo. Sao hoe ese ee 242 Dactyloctenium aegyptium...........------. 241 Digit ania FOuOSa-~ fo. We me el tee ee 206 DULCWEUG 3). Sra e eee Syne ee ee eee 233 BELOSE Semele - Pleats Oo ener ie c= eet eeee 209 Dimorphostachys ciliifera.......------------- 201 DEGUNCULOLO = Bae nena ae Bee ee 205 MIstichlis spicata - sos cheeses eee eee 245 HMehinochloacolona.: 2... ..-2222-22- 26-455 213, 222 GruSpalllics foe se Nee Sone ee Se eee 213 WAtenie: 2. nore ace Ree REDE hs fe kos Si 213 EAeUSING INGICA do. 6.2 Asse Shee ee fee e eee 241 VU CT ONAL «50a e eae eae eee 241 Huraerostis:ainoides 22 <eas Saes oe = eee 243 aAhlenSis.. see ee Se es ne eee ee 243 berberoiamans S352 21 aoeee ein ae 243 CINATIS Sse 5h Set Eee eee ee ee 243 GWDENSIS..- Se asthe ut as eee ee 243, 244 SClMObE et Fie coe eee eee Be a eee 244 OxCelsae ie. Lar ecs pes a eee 244 PluUtinoSals 2c ete eee ee eer ee ee 244 HV PROMS Sees Nese ae eee Ree 244 MOCTOPOGG 2225 Ie ae ee OE 244 RUUD Sos, eit Ca rails SERS GO ae Ee 244 pilosa we eke hae eee eS ae ees 245 plumosateces oe pote see coe PGE MSs 245 FC DIGS. sags ae eee See 244 SUGDGIS ce srs Se aie hs Sates ee a Se 237, 244 tenellakcs 23.2% Snes ese eee eee 245 DUUYMOSES See eee Dees ee ee ee 245 tephrosanthes 4 a2~cnn 5 Soe ee 245 Erianthus saccharoides...........- act Sa Ne 190 Hriochloa annulata........ 2. ..2-222+222202-- 208 SAUD NR OS Fee ys tees eee ee 207 punetalao: sc. ite ee Se eee 208 SUD GLAD TG Bes a) Soe 5 oo ee 208 TAIMOS Ate Ate Se eee a eee 208 Stbelaloracyte sent ee ~ eee pee 208 EUStaehys Per QO. - 22-2 oc cece see eee 240 RESEUGE J CSCICULOTIS Ske eee ee eee ee 241 Goldbvachie micant= es = ee 197 Gymnothrix domingensis.............--------- 232 Gynerium saccharoides..........---.--..----- a2 Sael iba hiai St Sree ate eee eee eee 249 Hackelochloa granularis....................- 191 Heteropogon contortus..-..-.--- ee ee Oat 196 SCCUNGUSS So ces eee ee eee 196 itelcus halepensis. 222255. tse eee 195 SOBPMUM os ee we a otro eee 195 SUNRTOMUS nae ee eee oe re eee ec Es ae 213 Homalocenchrus hexandrus.....-....-:----- 234 TMONAMATUS 24 VIET SS ae ees 235 Hymenachnie amplexicaulis............----- 212 auriewmlatay joo. ee ee eee 212 UBTUNIS Sas eee ee ee 213 Hypogynium spathiflorwm.....-...----------- 194 Iehnanthus mayarensis.......-.--.------- 228, 229 NEM OFOSUS ses eS. Soe wee eee eee eas 228 Pallets Sore. ee ee ees 228 Witlglbitut | fates = sehen ia i cee oe ee

INDEX OF SPECIES.

Page Imperata brasiliensis...........-- ius eee 190 Isachne-leersigides >. 2.0.0... soo 823. ee 198, 208 Ischaenmmmn Taposame. 3.2.2. J. ee 191 SCCUMAUN soe tse es eS A. 232 Leppagoahenee. 2 196 TOCEMOS CB. Se is Sane a a ee 196 DLeersia henandra. 2.8 ee: eee 234 MONGNATA = 228 52 See ee 235 Leptochloa fascicularis................----.- 241 filiformis.....5. 25 15-2 3 ee eee 241 mucronata. 2.2.2 -- 5 EM ae ne 241, 242 PREREIVUIS eee ae veld oo. 242 Spleata...20. 04. ce eee ee 241 virgata. =. io wehbe 241, 242 Leptocoryphium lanatum................... 207 Lithachne axillaris 0.20. 0-2 eee ee 233 pauciflora.. 2... cnc). 02 8 oe 233 pineti......4.50 6.55.6 eee 233 Luziola alabomensis. .-. 52. -.2.22.. eee > 234 bahiensis.....i.2:...2 eS eee 234 - longivalvula......--... wi. ve eee 234 Manisunis, ¢ranulans. 52-5 191 IMIPTeSsSa). ss. ee 191 loricatacs: oo inet Se ee 191 Mesosetum cayennensé.....22..-. ese 211 rottboelloides.2... 254. eee 211 sclerochloa <2: 20... 2...6.2.2 2 eee 212 Wwightil. 22.2.3. eee 211 Milam compressum.. 2 eee 207 digitatwm . 2.05. 3.2 a eee 209 PUNCIOUUWIMN 52% 2a oo 208 TOMOSUAN 3 2 ae ioe ne ee, 208 Mniochloa pulchella...~...............- ee 233 strephiocides: =. see 233 Monachne:subglabra.= |. 22. 6 - 208 Mubhlenbergia capillaris.....................- 237. SDICQU oe ace eee andthe eee eee 246 Nazia-aliena.-.. 2c. 2.25. -s ee - 196 Olyra.anilaris...2 so... 364. 5 ee 233 latifolia .2s.5. G5... = eee 233 POU ONW oe eee eee 233 PUNCH = 2 se oi Se oe eee 233 Opizia stoloniferd.. .... 2... -.3e2aee eee 242 Oplismenus hirtellus:—... -.<. see eee 229 Oryza sativa. 22.22.0524 eee ‘234 Panicum acuminatum. . 252. =e 217 adSpersum ©. 225s eee eee 217, 226 wequiglume....2..<.-5-- ae eee 210 agrastidiferme....... 222 = eee 223, 224 albomarginatwms—. 2 2232. See 227 QUSSTMUM w. 5 on os Banc oo eee 224 amphistemon.....-.- ee 211 amplexicaule: ..=. Ss<o- he 212 APPIESSUM. 2:2 Sos lo oe ee 222 BYonobsis (00 00Gsge es eae ee ae oe 218 CUM CULAAUTI is Soe oe ee Be 2 Sar 212 bambusoides.........-- Aan oe Ce cn deee 220, 221 barbinode: 2. oc Ree 224 bartowense: <u... 2 cae es 218 brevifolium:. 2.02. 2.622 2 eee 227 briZz0ideS. Sl ei ee eee 222 - CaorilesGens s2.-) eee 219, 224, 227, 228 CAESPILOSUM =... 6 25d S3 2 ee 225 earicoides 2. 222 eee 227 cayennense..........-.- PAR anes 218 - ChOeUM 2.01 ice re 232. | ChAUUINIT 2 5 oe ok Eee eee 220

RV CR DAC URTIN oOS Lunn PAE ie t A 225

INDEX OF SPECIES. IX Page é Page. Panicum ChlOroticwmm eek ame. oss n'enane = PAS) APANICHIN MY UNOS. co ce secs ent wap leeoe 212, 213 CHFYSOPSIMIOMUU a se ak os Pile SS) ee EMESIS eee ee eRe 228 COBIAN ae at eS SS. ais Se ES rs MEMEAMEM UN. <== ae sos ee ee 219, 222,224 RIT NOT) Di Te ee, See ee Jose CAL MEMOSU MY ete Sete slid Ce ogee 222 CONT S210) SUNE0 eee eee oe Re Sa 219 BE LCUEL IN ee ere eee a ine eh ak 224 condensum......-.. BP eys aie s eae 212, 219, 223 TMUIMEGI ANIME eee ale ok ee ee 224 (EPG TH DSO ae i eee ae Pras Sean 213 QOLIES (LOT UTI U setae eee nds oy eh 222 CH ROLTFORUE He est i pe eR gees Sia ais Meas 209 OUP as cm Sere ces espace est eae eg ea 230 OAVE 1ST Ss Sh a et a ola Re 225 ORC DULES es Meche hg SEE ES ies 2. 3's 228 PCH iat ae ote es Sats eR a 238 Ona tplinemes oA tee oO RII DENS te near eee at Sok oie te 205 OLY CEI J ajc «vids oe ee eS 198, 199 diandrum........- sec Set otis ok a 223, 224 RACED Ss Se Rt 5 nS AN cen rete RS | 228 dichotomiflorum.......-..- eae ieee 218 PALO RNULMER easy ere ae eae mene 224, 225 dichotomum nodiflorum......------------ 219 POS DULODC SHA ee Mors ee) a oe two, th 222 nodifiorum forma glabrescens .....--- 228 Paveiewia tums ek ee 222,225 GI GUINING Bets ee Se eA ee Ee PoAe 220 penicilatwm. 2.2.2.0 2: Pam es Sep eA AP 230 ESS CELIUTIU SEO en Se) es lage vaca. ee ES 202 DIES POLST enn eee Ie cr ah a ore 225 GUStaMploniwM ose. =o. oe ee oe ee 220, 227 POTLOS UTNE sees fee rope eat Ca ante et eae 225 ESR ONLI Gone St Ee Boe PS a ee 225 FOTO PIDs pied sae Sh Le asa weboe one 212 Giv ARICA oa tase cece ee eee ee 220, 221, 226 DATTA LOU aera eles net Ree eae PA Oee 212 PIE CRILUIETT © PSO e Sela, = eo a SI aaa 220 polycaulon ........ oi iP eM eyelid Qu ‘, 225,227 GESTCTIOSLACIY (LT Dan Mee oo one eee 221 POV OTL UT anne See te Se eee 223 , 224 ULOHAISSUTG er oe te oy, vn A eee ae | 210 DEOMMER ine heen! el ee Lee Ts ne i 218 CRIT UN Oise: spb Bis ROO Oe EHC e AEROS, 211 ALLO S TENS mo certs eet NOSE bengal ans Ieee 218 PVE MULLUDESS ES oii eoe ne hele ee nea 218 SURLCLILII Ss ew 8 aide a age 218 CUUIVUN oer ose ths, 1s ies one BESS 224, 225 PNOSEMODILIY oa ee eye a ees ae 225 PREC UIOMMIINE epee sesh Nes a ne ee es ele 221 PU OSTMUM ES tae ere oe uke Eee nee ee 222 SxaPtMONUMs es Soe eas 208, 220, 221 LITLE ONUTTI = ees sincere ay yes etek 223 , 224 fasciculatum . ....- Re eee eee 204, 221 MEPRM Seer aes Cae ee Sa Se 225 JEL OT TES sel OR Cert a Ee NE 209 TE GTS 2 easy ee i oe tas AUR ot ota 225 flavescens.....-... i eae aha css eae 221 EOANOKGUSC eee se ore cree eros Se ere 219 ETAL is ee eg oe eee 221 ROUUBCNIOULES EN eter Sceopte ioe esos co SY 211 PCTS RE Me, BOER Re ES, See ae 221 0G U0 3) tayavae e ae Re, REN ERy Sech e eaa 223 UTS PORTO tet ge oe esa eee ee 2 ae 229 TOLD CGS) WA A pee hal Sa AS ee 226 POM GMs 5 Sey tem Me ete eyes 222 PUL UTL OS UNIT peers ke oat os om eS ss Lo 226 CLERC OLLI TED ee espe ae ce ae eee eee 230 RUTTIQUING TO 2 crt ae as i Set 226 - (UOT DR io 7 ee ee Se ee es a 213 SUTLG UL LIN Ce eterna Rete een 209 UIUIIOSHMM st re ae a ee ee, San cee eae 222 SUITED S OT De eet Wee ae ee Meh SPU 2 210 enisebacniles... 2.5256 sa PE abes EBON ES tg 202 SCLCT OCD I OU ik, ata a 0th a2 ete Oe ie et. 211 GTB SRORULET Vataaioes ec ete re ee ek eee 225, 226 SOP AUTUMN ee SNC mie a Re eit alan ae be 226 PESTO ULI Aese ee ae eee Co tae 222, 223 SOLOW oe remeron ane ace a he neal 2 226 TE ORL CULL TID ase Pek erage catia etre ete We 229 SCTIVULLOGU TI eet ey whe Cee oes 210 VAIO = 2 sae Sa eee: sae se 2238 RATT UD ca co Sed BEES Goebe 6 eke LSS 229 Naropa ee es 218 ATTN rap, aS ks eee 231 ATIVE LC ILIVOR ee MS ae By es cae 212 SUNLCTASTU= reer eretpees 6 in ot Aarne, em ee 3 220 WAL LOULICM S Cm ope ilic me Sythe i wes ee ey 221 SIG ATIC ieee a ete a She atte ene ee 226 CLERC DYES, St ag OS epee es ed EN hee aoe Sets 230 . sphaerocarpon floridanum......-........- 221 VECCET T(E aa ee SS i225 296 Spenpiecs epee LN eee 8 220,227 FD OE) Mins ae try WEN Nee: ego Sid DORM ee es My een Dat ah 227 [OTT H Dagens oe ge errr a eats ate 227 SULOUGT OULU UI ered al es te te i Gee 224 PAMCOAEIEIN 7.2 bape Ut te oe eae 219, 222, 223 SHUI MDILETTM eee ed? Ac es oe ee 227 VESUR TC UNN 22 aa 48 Bo oe BN el anemia 226 Ue) a1 E10 DO Se a ee eg Ce aS Aa 227 Raamannnd ye ea 2 a Se 212, 219, 228 ERIE IS erie: sek iat os eich 219,224,227, 228 PNR GOLD s ee ae a ce Ete Sa ee 221 HOT COMMON 8 SON es se NG ees Se as 223 , 224 W@D IS. sis SSS eee 212 tridhfithum Gt eg SIE ste aE 227 PEP OPP SRIIUND a8 Sete <2 2-12 Bias sean lan w 2s 232 PHICHOCONMY LUM occ oo fee on oe 224 PLGMEW PINBEM De eee aha = ove oe = edie « 210 ERE OIGES: Ss aoe et a cy eee ees ea ote a 227 feucothir. 5). /20205 22 Borer 219, 224, 227, 228 BICOLOR Sonat et Saree: Sees. Gtk ea AN 221 (EDO ER Tae sy as oo A Ae a LR 222 DLO TUL CML TALI goes ois s Smead hea 2 Os 220 TUMEUR TIAN ee ree ane ee pe ee ot 224 BRLON ZL CLL MUNT Saat ee eee Seen eee 226 TULUT ENR ER aah Saree Niel m eae ele Ie 228 CTEM LAT IS CL TN [eee cal eG RN Eke eR 231 BG DULY ANS HO \agetes Se peo Rey res BEES Soa aa ae 224 MEDNOTES ana a Pe a AO Teo eh Aw 213 MINOT UMN = oe ee ee ROIs Ec 221 virgatum breviramosum.........----.----- 227 TATU. ccioe see pe tee ur ls Sere ea 228 CIIDENSE Es ieee San coe 227,228 BMC coca) Sete eee Mice deel apna 225 OBIUSUNIS =o es ioe bie os oh te 227

viscidum.. Seabed heider ene tr aoe & 226

x _ INDEX OF Page

Panicum wwalien o1c-. sa saes esos 2c ee omer ae 213 WrightianUns- 6: .ce-m: 2. ... 219, 224, 227, 228 VIZANIGIGES sss ee eas ee ee ee 228 Pappophorum dapuroides.2.- 2... 25202 -.25.~ 242 Paratheniasprostratas-m-2+.- 42+ 6s. s 5+ 4 see 232 Paspalumyaltermmitlonumiss 252225225 sees 200 QNGUSHF OLB IM wee S52 se ons ee eee 203 OPDTESSUM cam scm a kae Nees ee ea te 222 UP PLOLIMAUIM 3-2 Sa eae Seam pe ee 202 ATEM ANU! 2 So See eee Soper eee 201 DOC. 2 Bes ae ae ee 202 CAPS PICOSUIM S332 eee ee ee 201, 202, 206 Cant gum: 5. See Ae ea eee ee 198 COU GICATUIT Se Re Re ke ae eee 204 Cihifer ume ee eos oe a a ee eee 201 clavuliferiimsss: S20 S05 2a. 5 ose Cee ee 201 CONMUPTESSWM Lees Sores St Be oases ee eee 207 CONjMeaAUIMN soe eee wees hoes eee 201 Gebiles sere A alee Ls Pe Se EE 201 CECWINDENS sae 2 Oe ES ne oe Es Se 205 GEMS UTI Sosa 5 ee ae eee oe 202 Centicularuin.. s22es..2 ake eee ee eee 203 Gissectumis: 275224522 hoe eee eae 202 GistiohWaMs., +. sss sass Bee 198, 199, 202 dolichopiaylliimesn == see eee eee 200 Cla Gini se se eed bas Pr aa 202 CLCEOONS Rea CN ee eae AC eek aS Sea ae 205 Clone a tums sk Ry oo wo ees Na a eee a 198 SUL CULLLEE Vite aie 2 ee ae ee eae 201 filiformess= oes ses tee Sessa fae o eee 202 clarinets = 25-5: e he eee set oe 202 helleniieeg soos scee 5) eee. eee en 203 hemicnyptuime <2 222 o tenes = sees 203 WOLTCOLE Rae os Benes em thes Alea oo 201 TNGIULUTUL Sore ee eee se ete ene 205 ANOS =. Peadied Faw se Sah. case eee 203 LONGUE Ee oe See es See 207 VENUGINOSWINE ae aes Heenan eee 203 leuchocheinine see eee eee 206 LingenianUM = ea Eee es ee eee ees 204, 206 LiNl@ are cereal Seen eee ee ea eee ee 203 igysiccl tray ese ee SE a Pi ee eee 203 Jongepedunculatumy 3224252. 2222S 201 MEMOTANACOU Ten aee tcl. 2 2 SMe eee 202 muillegramacs: sate Peek eee eee 203 PMMMUIS Soc ae Se OEE: = ADS eee 203, 204 LOTT OY(G 10 0 bees Ae gee ape ee ee ea, SR PR 204 WUCES Ieee tne or a tS A 5 ee ie ES 203 MoOtatWiMe: sos eee hee Scan 203, 204 PACA ta a hen era. Us ee See eee 204 papillosum. Si 2es se. Resse kets 201, 204, 205 pedunculavUm yes ae" ae eee ae 205 DUVET IEE wane yc 8 eta ee See Sees eee 204 DUA DRY Bacee tee een eae eae ee 212 plicatwlumi.. 20ies keener ee 202, 205 PLOpinquuMs=. A200 Cece eee oe 205 Ipulebellwmniye: tk New sess AG ee eee 198, 205 TIPI CUOMO se Moe eS haa pene Be ee 205 rotbboellioides=o=2 275 cee ae Be ee ene 205 TUPOSHEC le: SMe es ow a 2 ee ee ee 201, 206 SUNUPSON( a ee eee eee eee eae eee ee 201 SWOT ee a ve Dey ee eee 202, 207 taphrephyllinn ho ee ee ee * 204 trisiaehgots Sheet ees eee eee ee eae 207 MTU EN WOON IS. Ee eRe iat ten oe ee eee 203 WASINAUUEE ceteris isnactsdneoe 198, 199, 202, 206

SPECIES. Page. Paspalum vaginifiorum...............-- =e 05 DINOSISSHIMAIN a2 = =. Sass Se ee 201 VICSA Ui eee eee Oe ee eae See 206 GLADTUUSCHILI Ser oe a. ne 206 schreberiamumis se 21 Sc... ee 206 DULIONENS ee Eek oe ee 203 Paspatus onnulatus:: 22). 2.22222) see 208 Pennisetum domingense....................- 232 -=Setosumrs 2.521.205 2) 2 232 Perotis cuvon@.<- o2s5-2 322 oe ee 232 Pharus glaber: + .2.. 20 2) 2c 222 eee 234 La tifoliis 2 sy aee ee oe mee fa sie hetie she 234 parvifolius...:. 2/22: .2. 4. ee 234 Poe amavilis: c.2 asc. 52 ae 245 Ciharis..02. Jee e2 BS bee 243 glutinos@...2. 2S eee 244 hypnoides.. 2 2ccces sei ee eee 244 MUG: ben Sheek oss sas 244 PIUMOSH So ed ten ee er 245 TEPLONS «2 0 soko ss ae eee 244 tenella 20 ee ee eee 245 UUNGUO. 22-5. ee es ae eee 245 Polydon ‘distichus. . .....° 2 5222 eee 240 Polypogon cubensis: :........-..-. eee 235 POTAnthen Qe... Sel os Re eee 195 ReEINGria Gut. 2 (2 oo. Ek 198 brasiliensis .....2.... - ee 198 CLOGONS. 33224 oe ose ee eee 205 oligostachya:. 20.3... 2 199 Reimarochloa acuta. =2--. + 2-2-5) eee 198 brasiliensis ).2.25. 2282 fa42 2 eee - 198 oligostachiyac 2.222.225. sabes 199 Reynawudia filiformis. - - -. Regie es en 235 Rhaphis paucifiora.- =... -- - 2 eee 195 Rottbhoellia filifolia.... 2232-4. ¢5-2= eee 191 impressa.....----- repre y= os =: 191 lOTiCOIW =: 2 sah edo sse tee ee ee 191 Saccharumoiicinarum=s- =. 52555 -2ee ee 190 SQQILOLUM Soa. 2 25 eee ee 242 Sacciolepis MyULros 22 2a. 3225-55 eee ee 213° strlatas 22.326. ete oe = eee 213 vilvoideS. 2220222222 -id:24o3- ae ‘oye QR Schizachyniuwvm Onaciles. = 25. eee ee 193 semiberbe? ; 2.3 5-22 28k 3 194 tenerwimn.2 ms 1 Se oe ee “194 SGLONO GION Cine asses eee eee «is Se - 230 ONUTUS = oO. a5. 20082 S32 eee eee 230 PUT PUTASCENS. 222252. 2-2) 231 Sorghastrum francavillanum.............-.- 195 SeLOSUM :2..20.5 2s Se 195 Sorghum halepense 2 o2s222- 32 - eee 195 PUUCIPOTUMN | 2.6 hawk ae ee 195 Sporobolus argutuss.2 252-5) 222s sae ee 237 GubenSiSees ee aaeees Sete Se eee 237, 238 indieus-= 252-2 .sks 4b eee . 887 JOCQUeMONit A= eos. keer eee eee 237 ‘purpurascens.: i... 2:22.52. 237 , 238 VINGINICUSS, Ye ieee 238 Stenotaphrum secundum ...-.....---------- 232 SLEPAsCH PULONS n= eee see oss ae 237 | Sinepiium pulchclim. = 5. --2222- ee 233 Streptachne cubensis.....-.------+---+-+- peas SCOOT 2: .~ 02 cseh: 0 eee 236 Syntherisma aequiglumis.......-..-..------- 210 Gizitatacs!Us 2) seo: Saenes So oe 207,209 filiformis 30. o..<10s 05 sss eee eee 209

oe

INDEX OF SPECIES.

Syntherisma leucocoma.........-..-..-..--- 209° San euinalis eee esc eS et 209 SOLOS acre re eens inter eles. cape en asec 209 SMO OL eee frre aE aye Sra cease 210 UO SE. sod LN as a a eran Cape ey Ss 210

Thysanachne peruviana.....-.---22-------- 197,198 REDD cr Re a ee eet, Sha ae Net na 197

Brachypocon Jltohimsss2 "2-2 eee ee ees. 191 TO ULMT menses Sone mena ree Rene ed 191 polymorphus filifolius........2-0secee0--- 191

XI

Page.

Mricholaena roseas.<.0. 2) el ee eee 229 ART UCAS POSE SONUPLOL fo 22, oes re ce 241 Tripsacum hermaphroditum ..............--- 196 BIEBISEE LE ayO NIT tee eee ei oD 198 (Uimiolarpaniculatan a eC ee rae 245 WACO meaner eine Recep amis 2 0 in eae 245 Walotainsulans sole <. e 210 POOR OL OM nee aa cra tee ae 237 COMTUINOCISTSS ea ene es pee Sot 237 GHISCURCNUUNM Ee = nc Wes ce eeaee ts sok 238

es eta

Reprinted from the BOTANICAL GAZETTE, 51: pp. 300-302 No. 4, April, 1911

ADDITIONS TO THE GRASSES OF CUBA

Since the publication of the Catalogue of the grasses of Cuba,3 several additional species of grasses have been contributed to the National Herbarium by Brother LEON of the Colegio de la Salle, Habana. The following is a list of these:

MANISURIS EXALTATA (L. f.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 2:779. 1801.

Stegosia exaltata Nash, N. Amer. FI. 17:84. 1909.

This species is retained provisionally in Manisuris until the genera of Andropogoneae are more carefully examined.

Sancti Spiritus, Leén 847.

ANDROPOGON SQUARROSUS L. f. Suppl. 433. 1781.

Habana, Leén 1581. Introduced.

ANDROPOGON CARICOSUS L. Sp. Pl. ed. 2. 221480. 1763. Guanabacoa, Leén 2013. Introduced.

Sorghastrum agrostoides (Speg.).

Andropogon agrostoides Speg. Pl. Nov. Nonnul. Amer. Austr. Dec. 2:27. 1883.

Sancti Spiritus, Leon 895.

PASPALUM BLEPHAROPHYLLUM Nash, in Small Fl. Southeast. U.S. 71. 1903. 7 Marianao, Leén, 779. PAsPpALUM HELLERI Nash, Bull. Torrey Club 30:376. 1903. Santiago de Cuba, Leén 951.

PASPALUM MONOSTACHYUM (H. B. K.) Vasey, in Chapm. Fl. South. Wis: ed; 2..605.. 1830.

Zaza de Tunas, Santa Clara, Leén 947. ‘The spikelets are smaller than in the typical form.

Paspalum Leoninum Chase, sp. nov.—A low tufted perennial, with narrow leaves mostly crowded at the base, slender nearly naked culms and solitary usually purplish racemes. Culms 15-35 cm. high, very slender, wiry, compressed, ascending or spreading and more or less sinuous, glabrous, the nodes ascending-pubescent; lower sheaths overlapping and keeled, glabrous or sparsely pubescent on the scarious margin and with a few stiff hairs on the auricles,

3 Hitcucock, A. S., Contr. Nat. Herb. 12:183-258. 1909. 300

Igit| BRIEFER ARTICLES 301

usually but a single leaf about midway on the culm, the sheath with a few scattered long hairs or glabrous; ligule membranaceous, about o.5 mm. long; blades flat or somewhat involute from a folded base narrower than the summit of the sheath, 3-7 cm. long, 1-2 mm. wide, more or less curled, glabrous on both surfaces or minutely puberulent on the upper, a few stiff hairs on the margin and rarely on the upper surface, the blade of the uppermost leat reduced to a. mere tip; raceme 2—3.5 cm. long, slightly curved, a few long hairs at the base; spikelets solitary, on very short, flattened, scabrous pedicels, closely imbricated, almost concavo-convex, I.3-1.5 mm. long, about o.7 mm. wide, oval, glabrous; second glume 3-nerved, the sterile lemma with a nerve near either margin, the midnerve suppressed or apparent only at the summit; fruit nearly as large as the spikelet.

Type U.S. National Herbarium no. 618,754; collected August 30, 1909, on “Obispo hill, near Sancti Spiritus,” by Brother Leén (no. 950).

This species is most nearly related to Paspalum rupestre Trin., from single- spiked specimens of which it may be distinguished by the more delicate culms and the more closely imbricated, glabrous spikelets, the second glume with the midnerve suppressed.

Paspalum Leoninum is named in honor of Brother LEON, of the Colegio de la Salle, Vedado, Habana, whose collections have added greatly to our knowledge of the grasses of Cuba. .

A second collection of this species was made on the Jata Hills, Guanabacoa,

September 12, 1909, Leén 940.

CENCHRUS MYOSUROIDES H. B. K. Nov. mae & Sp. E241 5. 1816. Santiago de Cuba, Leén 835. bi

Gournta potycama Fourn. Mex. Pl. 2: TO2, LOS. Cojimar, Leén 2014.

ARUNDO Donax L. Sp. PI. 81. 1753. Marianao, Leén 1523. Escaped from cultivation.

LOLIUM TEMULENTUM ARVENSE (With.) Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. 377. 1843. Habana, Leon 1583. Introduced. !

It may be well to record here certain changes in the names of a few species of Panicum listed in the EIS: as shown by the recent revi- sion of this group.4

Panicum aquaticum Poir. This is a synonym of P. dichotomiflorum Michx. The Cuban species is P. elephantipes Nees. Panicum compactum Sw.=Lasiacis compacta (Sw.).

4HitcuHcock and CHASE, Contr. Nat. Herb. 15:1-396. 1910.

302 BOTANICAL GAZETTE [APRIL

Panicum distantiflorum Rich. To this species was referred Panicum utowanaeum Scribn. (P. Sintenisii Nash), which proves to be a distinct species. It is represented by two specimens from Tris- cornia, near Habana, Hitchcock 141 and Tracy go8o.

Panicum divaricatum L.= LASIACIS DIVARICATA (L.) Hitchce.

Panicum Grisebachii Nash= Lasiacis Grisebachii (Nash).

Panicum hirtivaginum Hitche. This species appears to be the same as P. Ghiesbreghtit Fourn. of Mexico.

Panicum laxum Sw. To this was referred P. polygonatum Schrad. which, however, proves to be distinct, and is easily recognized by its pubescent nodes, and by the lack of the swollen sterile palea which characterizes P. laxum and P. pilosum.

Panicum numidianum Lam. This species appears to be confined to the North African area and, though not well known, is sufficiently distinct from P. barbinode Trin. of Cuba and tropical America.

Panicum Rugellii Griseb.=Lasiacis Rugellii (Griseb.).

Panicum Sellovii Nees. An earlier name is P. millegrana Poir.

Panicum Sloanei Griseb.=Lasiacis Sloanei (Griseb.).

Panicum Swartzianum Hitchc.=Lasiacis Swartziana (Hitchc.).

To these may be added the following two corrections in genera allied to Panicum:

Mesosetum rottboellioides (H. B. K.) Hitche. A comparison of the type specimens shows that the Cuban species is Mesosetum loliiforme (Hochst.) Chase (Panicum loliiforme Hochst. 5).

Hymenachne auriculata (Willd.) Chase. The specimen mentioned, | Wright 3863 in part, is H. patula Fourn.°—-A. S. Hircucock, U.S.

Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C.

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