The Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States Part 204

You’re reading novel The Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States Part 204 online at LightNovelFree.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit LightNovelFree.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy!

C. DaCTYLON, Pers. Spikes 3--5; flowering glume smooth, longer than the blunt rudiment.--Penn., and southward, where it is cultivated for pasturage. (Nat. from Eu.)

43. CTeNIUM, Panzer. TOOTHACHE-GRa.s.s. (Pl. 9.)

Spikelets densely imbricated in two rows on one side of the flat curved rhachis of the solitary terminal spike. Glumes persistent; the lower (interior) much smaller; the other concave below, bearing a stout recurved awn, like a horn, on the middle of the back. Flowers 4--6, all but one neutral; the one or two lower consisting of empty awned glumes, and the one or two uppermost of empty awnless glumes; the perfect flower intermediate, its glume membranaceous, awned or mucronate below the apex and densely ciliate toward the base, 3-nerved. Stamens 3. Stigmas plumose. (Name ?te????, _a small comb_, from the pectinate appearance of the spike.)

1. C. Americanum, Spreng. Culm (3--4 high from a perennial root) simple, p.u.b.escent or roughish; larger glume warty-glandular outside, conspicuously awned.--Wet pine-barrens, S. Va. and southward.--Taste very pungent.

44. GYMNOPGON, Beauv. (Pl. 9.)

Spikelets of one perfect flower, and the rudiment of a second (consisting of an awn-like pedicel mostly bearing a naked bristle), sessile and remotely alternate on long filiform rays or spikes, which form a crowded naked raceme. Glumes lance-awl-shaped, keeled, almost equal, rather longer than the membranaceous flowering glume, which is cylindrical-involute, with the midrib produced from just below the 2-cleft apex into a straight and slender bristle-like awn; palet nearly as long, with the abortive rudiment at its base. Stamens 3. Stigmas pencil-form, purple.--Root perennial. Leaves short and flat, thickish, 1--3' long. (Name composed of ?????, _naked_, and p????, a _beard_, alluding to the reduction of the abortive flower to a bare awn.)

1. G. racemsus, Beauv. (Pl. 9, fig. 1, 2.) Culms cl.u.s.tered from a short rootstock (1 high), wiry, leafy; leaves oblong-lanceolate; _spikes flower-bearing to the base_ (5--8' long), soon divergent; awn of the abortive flower shorter than its stalk, equalling the _pointed glumes_, not more than half the length of the awn of the fertile flower.--Sandy pine-barrens, N. J. to Va., and southward. Aug., Sept.

2. G. breviflius, Trin. Filiform _spikes long-peduncled, i.e.

flower-bearing_ only above the middle; flowering glume ciliate near the base, short-awned; _awn of the abortive flower obsolete or minute; glumes acute_.--Suss.e.x Co., Del., and southward.

45. SCHEDONNaRDUS, Steud. (Pl. 11.)

Spikelets small, ac.u.minate, 1-flowered, appressed-sessile and scattered along one side of the slender rhachis of the distant sessile and divaricately spreading spikes. Empty glumes persistent, narrow, ac.u.minate, more or less unequal, the longer usually a little shorter than the rather rigid ac.u.minate flowering one. Stamens 3. Styles distinct. Grain linear.--A low slender annual, branching from the base, with short narrow leaves. (Name from s?ed??, _near_, and _Nardus_, from its resemblance to that genus.)

1. S. Texa.n.u.s, Steud. Stem (6--20' long) naked and curved above, bearing 3--9 racemosely disposed thread-like and triangular spikes 1--3' long; spikelets 1" long. (Lepturus paniculatus, _Nutt._)--Open grounds and salt-licks, Ill. to Mont., Col., and Tex. Aug.

46. BOUTELOuA, Lagasca. MUSKiT-GRa.s.s. (Pl. 9.)

Spikelets crowded and closely sessile in 2 rows on one side of a flattened rhachis, comprising one perfect flower below and one or more sterile (mostly neutral) or rudimentary flowers. Glumes convex-keeled, the lower one shorter. Perfect flower with the 3-nerved glume 3-toothed or cleft at the apex, the 2-nerved palet 2-toothed; the teeth, at least of the former, pointed or subulate-awned. Stamens 3; anthers orange-colored or red.--Rudimentary flowers mostly 1--3-awned. Spikes solitary, racemed or spiked; the rhachis somewhat extended beyond the spikelets. (Named for _Claudius Boutelou_, a Spanish writer upon floriculture and agriculture.)

-- 1. CHONDRSIUM. _Spikes pectinate, of very many spikelets, oblong or linear, very dense, solitary and terminal or few in a raceme; sterile flowers 1--3 on a short pedicel, neutral, consisting of 1--3 scales and awns._

1. B. oligostachya, Torr. Glabrous, perennial (6--12' high); _leaves very narrow_; spikes 1--5, the rhachis glabrous; _glumes all sparingly soft-hairy_, the lobes awl-pointed; _sterile flower copiously villous-tufted_ at the summit of the naked pedicel, its 3 awns equalling the larger glume.--N. W. Wisc. to Dak., and south to Tex. and Mex.--Glumes obscurely if at all papillose along the keel, the middle lobe of the flowering one 2-cleft at the tip. Sterile flowers often 2, the second mostly a large awnless scale, becoming hood-like and coriaceous.

2. _B. hirsuta_, Lag. Tufted (8--20' high), perennial; _leaves flat, lance-linear_, papillose-hairy or glabrous; spikes 1--4; _upper empty glume hispid_ with strong bristles _from dark warty glands; flowering glume p.u.b.escent_, 3-cleft into awl-pointed lobes; _sterile flower and its pedicel glabrous, the 3 awns longer than the glumes_ and fertile flower.--Sandy plains, Ill., Wisc., Minn., and southwestward to Mex.

-- 2. ATHEROPGON. _Spikes short, numerous in a long and virgate one-sided spike or raceme, spreading or reflexed, each of few (4--12) spikelets; sterile flowers neutral, rudimentary._

3. B. racemsa, Lag. (Pl. 9, fig. 1, 2.) Culms tufted from perennial rootstocks (1--3 high); sheaths often hairy; leaves narrow; spikes '

or less in length, nearly sessile, 20--60 in number in a loose general spike (8--15' long); flowers scabrous; glume of the fertile with 3 short awl pointed teeth; sterile flower reduced to a single small awn, or mostly to 3 awns shorter than the fertile flower, and 1 or 2 small or minute scales. (B. curtipendula, _Gray_.)--Dry hills and plains, southern N. Y. to Minn., and south to Tex. and Mex. July--Sept.--Pa.s.ses by transitions into var. ARISTSA, with spikes shorter; sterile flower of a large saccate glume, awned at the 2-cleft tip and from the lateral nerves, the middle awn exserted, and with a rudiment of a palet.--Ill.

(_Geyer_), and southward.

47. ELEUSNE, Gaertn. CRAB-GRa.s.s. YARD-GRa.s.s. (Pl. 9.)

Spikelets 2--6-flowered, with a terminal imperfect flower or naked rudiment, closely imbricate-spiked on one side of a flattish rhachis; the spikes digitate. Glumes membranaceous, shorter than the flowers; flowering glume and palet awnless, the glume ovate, keeled, larger than the palet. Stamens 3. Pericarp (utricle) containing a loose wrinkled seed.--Low annuals, with flat leaves, and flowers much as in Poa. (Name from ??e?s??, the town where Ceres, the G.o.ddess of harvests, was wors.h.i.+pped.)

E. iNDICA, Gaertn. (DOG'S-TAIL or WIRE GRa.s.s.) (Pl. 9, fig. 1--6.) Culms ascending, flattened; spikes 2--5 (about 2' long, greenish); glumes pointless; terminal flower a mere rudiment.--Yards, etc., chiefly southward. (Nat. from Ind.?)

E. aeGYPTACA, Pers. (Pl. 9, fig. 1--4, as Dactyloctenium.) Culms often creeping at base; leaves ciliate at base; spikes 4--5; lower glume awned and the flowering one pointed. (Dactyloctenium aegyptiac.u.m, _Willd._)--Cultivated fields and yards, Va., Ill., and southward. (Adv.

from Afr.?)

48. LEPToCHLOA, Beauv. (Pl. 16.)

Spikelets 3--many-flowered (the uppermost flower imperfect), loosely spiked on one side of a long filiform rhachis; the spikes racemed.

Glumes menbranaceous, keeled, rarely awned, nearly equal; flowering glume 3-nerved, sometimes simply awned, larger than the palet. Stamens 2 or 3. Seed closely enclosed.--Ours annuals. Leaves flat. (Name composed of ?ept??, _slender_, and ???a, _gra.s.s_, from the long attenuated spikes.)

1. L. mucronata, Kunth. Sheaths hairy; spikes numerous (20--40, 2--4' in length), in a long panicle-like raceme; spikelets small; glumes more or less mucronate, nearly equalling or exceeding the 3--4 awnless flowers.--Fields, Va. to Ill., Mo., and southward. Aug.

49. BuCHLOe, Engelm. BUFFALO GRa.s.s. (Pl. 16.)

Spikelets dicious (rarely moncious), very unlike; the staminate 2--3-flowered, sessile in 2 rows in short 1-sided spikes, the empty glumes blunt, 1-nerved, very unequal, the flowering larger, 3-nerved, a little exceeding the 2-nerved palet; fertile spikelets 1-flowered, in a contracted, capitate, 1-sided spike, the large outer glumes indurated, 3-fid at the apex, united at base and resembling an involucre, the inner (lower) much smaller and membranaceous, or in the lowest spikelet resembling the outer; flowering glume narrow, hyaline, bifid or nearly entire, enclosing the 2-nerved palet. Styles distinct. Grain ovate, free.--A perennial, creeping or stoloniferous, with narrow flat leaves; staminate spikes (2--3) in a pedunculate spike, the pistillate pair sessile in the broad sheaths of the upper leaves. (Name a contraction of _Bubalochloe_, from ??a???, _buffalo_, and ????, _gra.s.s_.)

1. B. dactylodes, Engelm. Low (3--8' high) and broadly tufted; sterile spikes 3--6" long, the fertile heads 3" long.--Plains of the Sask. to Minn., Kan., and Tex. One of the most valuable gra.s.ses of the plains.

50. TRIDIA, R. Br. (Pl. 10.)

Spikelets 3--12-flowered, somewhat terete, the rhachis with bearded joints; terminal flower abortive. Empty glumes unequal; flowering glumes membranaceous or somewhat chartaceous, much larger than the 2-toothed palet, convex, 2--3-toothed or cleft at the apex, conspicuously hairy-bearded or villous on the 3 strong nerves, of which the lateral are marginal or nearly so and usually excurrent, as is the mid-nerve especially, into a short cusp or awn. Stamens 3. Stigmas dark purple, plumose. Grain oblong, nearly gibbous.--Leaves taper-pointed; sheaths bearded at the throat. Panicle simple or compound; the spikelets often racemose, purplish. (Name from t??-, _three_, and ?d???, _a tooth_, alluding to the flowering glume.)

-- 1. TRIODIA proper. _Glumes shorter than the crowded flowers, the flowering one 3-cuspidate by the projection of the nerves, and usually with intermediate membranaceous teeth; palet naked._

1. T. cuprea, Jacq. (TALL RED-TOP.) Perennial; culm upright (3--5 high), very smooth, as are the flat leaves; panicle large and compound, the rigid capillary branches spreading, naked below; spikelets very numerous, 5--7-flowered, s.h.i.+ning, purple (4" long); the flowering glumes hairy toward the base, their points almost equal, scarcely exceeding the intermediate teeth, thus appearing 5-toothed. (Tricuspis seslerioides, _Torr._)--Dry or sandy fields, southern N. Y. to Mo., and southward. Aug.--A showy gra.s.s, with the spreading panicle sometimes 1 wide.

-- 2. TRIPLaSIS. _Glumes much shorter than the somewhat remote flowers; flowering glume and palet strongly fringe-bearded, the glume 2-cleft at the summit, its mid-nerve produced into an awn between the truncate or awn-pointed divisions._

2. T. purpurea, Hack. (SAND-GRa.s.s.) Culms many in a tuft from the same annual root, ascending (6--12' high), with numerous bearded joints; leaves involute-awl-shaped, mostly short; panicles very simple, bearing few 2--5-flowered spikelets, the terminal one usually exserted, the axillary ones included in the commonly hairy sheaths; _awn much shorter than the glume, seldom exceeding its eroded-truncate or obtuse lateral lobes_. (Tricuspis purpurea, _Gray_.)--In sand, Ma.s.s. to Va. along the coast, and southward; also L. Erie, near Buffalo, and Ill. Aug., Sept.--Plant acid to the taste.

51. DIPLaCHNE, Beauv. (Pl. 9.)

Spikelets several-flowered, narrow, erect and scattered along the slender rhachis of the long spicate spikes; flowers all perfect or the uppermost staminate. Empty glumes membranaceous, carinate, acute, unequal; flowering glume slightly longer, 1--3-nerved, 2-toothed, and mucronate or shortly awned between the teeth. Stamens 3. Styles distinct. Grain free.--Coa.r.s.e gra.s.ses, with narrow flat leaves, and several or many slender spikes sessile upon an elongated peduncle. (Name from d?p????, _double_, and ????, in the sense of _chaff_, with reference to the 2-lobed glume.)

1. D. fascicularis, Beauv. Smooth; leaves longer than the geniculate-dec.u.mbent and branching culms, the upper sheathing the base of the panicle-like spike, which is composed of many strict spikes (3--5' long); spikelets slightly pedicelled, 7--11-flowered, much longer than the lanceolate glumes; flowers hairy-margined toward the base, the glume with 2 small lateral teeth and a short awn in the cleft of the apex. (Leptochloa fascicularis, _Gray_.)--Brackish meadows, from R. I.

southward along the coast, and from Ill. southward on the Mississippi.

Aug.--Sept.

52. PHRAGMTES, Trin. REED. (Pl. 11.)

Spikelets 3--7-flowered; the flowers rather distant, silky-villous at base, and with a conspicuous silky-bearded rhachis, all perfect and 3-androus, except the lowest, which is either neutral or with 1--3 stamens, and naked. Glumes membranaceous, shorter than the flowers, lanceolate, keeled, sharp-pointed, very unequal; flowering glume and palet membranaceous, slender, the glume narrowly awl-shaped, thrice the length of the palet. Squamulae 2, large. Styles long. Grain free.--Tall and stout perennials, with long running root-stocks, numerous broad leaves, and a large terminal panicle. (F?a??te?, _growing in hedges_, which this aquatic gra.s.s does not.)

1. P. communis, Trin. Panicle loose, nodding; spikelets 3--5-flowered; flowers equalling the beard.--Edges of ponds. Sept.--Looks like Broom-Corn at a distance, 5--12 high; leaves 2' wide. (Eu.)

53. ARuNDO, L.

The Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States Part 204

You're reading novel The Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States Part 204 online at LightNovelFree.com. You can use the follow function to bookmark your favorite novel ( Only for registered users ). If you find any errors ( broken links, can't load photos, etc.. ), Please let us know so we can fix it as soon as possible. And when you start a conversation or debate about a certain topic with other people, please do not offend them just because you don't like their opinions.


The Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States Part 204 summary

You're reading The Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States Part 204. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Asa Gray already has 692 views.

It's great if you read and follow any novel on our website. We promise you that we'll bring you the latest, hottest novel everyday and FREE.

LightNovelFree.com is a most smartest website for reading novel online, it can automatic resize images to fit your pc screen, even on your mobile. Experience now by using your smartphone and access to LightNovelFree.com

RECENTLY UPDATED NOVEL