Home

The Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States Part 196

The Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States - novelonlinefull.com

You’re read light novel The Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States Part 196 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.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

[*][*][*] Glume 3-nerved, the nerves (at least the mid-nerve) excurrent; spikelets few, in the axils of floral leaves.

54. Munroa. Low or prostrate much-branched annual.

[*][*][*][*] Glume 3- (rarely 1-) nerved, obtuse or acute, awnless; rhachis and flower naked.

55. Kleria. Panicle contracted. Spikelets 2--4-flowered. Glumes compressed-keeled, acute or mucronate.

56. Eatonia. Panicle slender, more or less dense. Spikelets 2-flowered.

Glumes very dissimilar, usually obtuse, the upper empty one enclosing the flowers.

57. Eragrostis. Spikelets flattened, 2--many-flowered. Glumes acute or acutish. Palet persistent.

[*][*][*][*][*] Glume 3--5-nerved, obtuse or abrupt-cuspidate; spikelet 3--5-flowered; upper sterile flowers convolute around each other.

58. Melica. Glumes 5-nerved or more, scarious, obtuse. Panicle simple or nearly so.

59. Diarrhena. Glumes 3-nerved, coriaceous, the flowering one abruptly cuspidate. Panicle loosely few-flowered.

[*][*][*][*][*][*] Flowering glume 5-nerved or more (sometimes obscurely so). Only the terminal flower abortive, or none.

[+] Glumes more or less strongly compressed and carinate (ventricose in n. 63).

60. Uniola. Spikelets broad, flat and 2-edged, in usually loose panicles. Glumes coriaceous, acute, the 3--6 lower ones empty.

61. Distichlis. Dicious. Spikelets large, flattened, in a close panicle. Empty glumes 2, acute.

62. Dactylis. Panicle contracted in 1-sided cl.u.s.ters. Glumes herbaceous, awn-pointed, rough-ciliate on the keel.

63. Briza. Spikelets heart-shaped, in lax panicles. Glumes roundish, ventricose, scarious-margined.

64. Poa. Spikelets small, flattened, ovate to lance-ovate, in a loose panicle. Flowering glumes membranous and scarious-margined, pointless, usually webby or p.u.b.escent toward the base.

65. Graphephorum. Spikelets compressed, in a loose panicle, the hairy jointed rhachis produced into a hairy pedicel. Glumes thin-membranous, faintly nerved, entire.

[+][+] Glumes convex on the back, not carinate (or somewhat so in n. 70).

66. Scolochloa. Spikelets subterete, in a lax panicle, the rhachis villous at the base of the flowers, ending in a naked pedicel. Glumes coriaceous, prominently 7-nerved, toothed at the apex. In water.

67. Glyceria. Spikelets terete or flattish. Flowering glumes scarious at the usually blunt summit, prominently 5--7-nerved.

68. Puccinellia. Mainly as Glyceria, but the glumes obsoletely 5-nerved.

69. Festuca. Spikelets terete or flattish. Flowering glume acute, pointed or awned at the tip, few-nerved. Styles terminal.

70. Bromus. Glume rounded or keeled on the back, mostly awned below the 2-cleft tip, 5--9-nerved. Styles scarcely terminal.

Tribe X. HORDEae. Spikelets 1--several-flowered, sessile on opposite sides of a zigzag jointed channelled rhachis, forming a spike. Empty glumes sometimes abortive or wanting. Uppermost flower imperfect or abortive.

[*] Spikelets single at each joint of the solitary spike.

71. Lolium. Spikelets many-flowered, placed edgewise on the rhachis of the spike, with one empty glume.

72. Agropyrum. Spikelets 3--several-flowered, placed flatwise on the rhachis. Empty glumes 2, right and left.

73. Lepturus. Spikelets small, 1--2-flowered; empty glumes 1 or 2. Spike very slender.

[*][*] Spikelets 2 or more at each joint of the solitary spike; the empty glumes side by side in front of the spikelets (none or rudimentary in n. 76.)

74. Hordeum. Spikelets 1-flowered, 3 at each joint, the lateral ones usually sterile.

75. Elymus. Spikelets 1--several-flowered, all perfect and similar.

76. Asprella. Spikelets few-flowered, somewhat pedicelled, 1--3 at each joint. Glumes none or small and deciduous.

Tribe XI. BAMBUSEae. Tall woody reeds, the flat leaves with a short petiole jointed upon the sheath. Spikelets few--many-flowered, flattened, in panicles or racemes.

77. Arundinaria. Flowering glumes rounded on the back, many-nerved, ac.u.minate or bristle-pointed; empty glumes very small.

1. SPARTNA, Schreber. CORD or MARSH GRa.s.s. (Pl. 9.)

Spikelets 1-flowered, very much flattened laterally, jointed and sessile in 2 ranks on the outer side of a triangular rhachis. Glumes 3, unequal, lanceolate, strongly compressed-keeled, acute or bristle-pointed, mostly rough-bristly on the keel; palet thin, equalling or longer than the flowering glume. Stamens 3. Styles long, more or less united.--Perennials, with simple and rigid often reed-like culms, from extensively creeping scaly rootstocks, racemed spikes, very smooth sheaths, and long tough leaves (whence the name, from spa?t???, _a cord_, such as was made from the bark of the _Spartium_ or Broom).

[*] _Spikelets compactly imbricated, very rough-hispid on the keels; spikes (2--4' long) more or less peduncled; culm and elongated leaves rigid._

1. S. cynosurodes, Willd. (FRESH-WATER CORD-GRa.s.s.) _Culm rather slender_ (2--6 high); _leaves narrow_ (2--4 long, ' wide below or less), tapering to a very slender point, keeled, flat, but quickly involute in drying, smooth except the margins; _spikes_ 5--20, scattered, spreading; rhachis rough on the margins; _glumes awn-pointed_, especially the middle one (its awn about ' long), strongly serrulate-hispid on the keel, _the lower equalling the upper_, whose strong midrib abruptly terminates below the membranous apex.--Banks of rivers and lakes, or in rich soil, especially northward.

Aug.

2. S. polystachya, Willd. (SALT REED-GRa.s.s.) _Culm tall and stout_ (4--9 high, often 1' in diameter near the base); _leaves broad (--1'), roughish underneath_, as well as the margins; _spikes 20--50, forming a dense oblong raceme_ (purplish); _glumes barely mucronate, the lower half the length of the flowering one_, of which the rough-hispid midrib reaches to the apex.--Salt or brackish marshes, within tide-water, especially southward.

3. S. juncea, Willd. (RUSH SALT-GRa.s.s.) _Culms low_ (1--2 high) _and slender; leaves narrow and rush-like, strongly involute, very smooth; spikes_ 1--5, on very short peduncles, the rhachis smooth; _glumes acute_, the lower scarcely half the length of the middle one, not half the length of the upper.--Salt marshes and sea-beaches. Aug. (Eu.)

[*][*] _Spikelets loosely imbricated, or somewhat remote and alternate, the keels only slightly hairy or roughish under a lens; spikes sessile and erect, soft; leaves, rhachis, etc., very smooth; culm rather succulent._

4. S. stricta, Roth. (SALT MARSH-GRa.s.s.) (Pl. 9, fig. 1--3.) Culm 1--4 high, leafy to the top; leaves soon convolute, narrow; spikes few (2--4), the rhachis slightly projecting beyond the crowded or imbricated spikelets; glumes acute, very unequal, the larger 1-nerved, a little longer than the flower.--Salt marshes, Penn., etc.--Odor strong and rancid. (Eu.)

Var. glabra, Gray. Culm and leaves longer; spikes 5--12 (2--3' long); Spikelets imbricate-crowded.--Common on the coast.

Var. alterniflra, Gray. Spikes more slender (3--5' long), and the spikelets remotish, barely overlapping, the rhachis continued into a more conspicuous bract-like appendage; larger glume indistinctly 5-nerved; otherwise as in the preceding form, into which it pa.s.ses.--Common with the last; also Onondaga Lake, _J. A. Paine_.

2. BECKMaNNIA, Host. (Pl. 16.)

Spikelets jointed upon the pedicels, 1--2-flowered (only one fertile), obovate and laterally compressed, imbricated in 2 rows upon one side of the angled rhachis of a spike. Glumes 3 or 4, the 2 lower strongly concave and carinate, obtuse or acutish, the 1 or 2 flowering glumes narrower, lanceolate, acute or ac.u.minate and a little exserted, becoming rather rigid and with the thin palet enclosing the oblong grain.--A stout erect subaquatic perennial, with the short spikes erect and simply spicate or in a strict narrow panicle. (Named for _John Beckmann_, professor of botany at Goettingen.)

1. B. erucaeformis, Host, var. uniflra, Scribn. Glumes 3 and spikelets 1-flowered; spikes (6" long or less) panicled.--N. W. Iowa, W. Minn., and westward. The Old World form, which also is found in the far northwest, has 2-flowered spikelets.

3. PaSPALUM, L. (Pl. 13.)

Please click Like and leave more comments to support and keep us alive.

RECENTLY UPDATED MANGA

Ms. Doctor Divine

Ms. Doctor Divine

Ms. Doctor Divine Chapter 2673: Mission 59 Author(s) : 9000 Dreams View : 1,639,722
Legend of Swordsman

Legend of Swordsman

Legend of Swordsman Chapter 6252: Entering the Bandits' Nest Author(s) : 打死都要钱, Mr. Money View : 10,090,336
Cultivation Online

Cultivation Online

Cultivation Online Chapter 1710 Long Wu Qing's Mark Author(s) : Mylittlebrother View : 1,733,679

The Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States Part 196 summary

You're reading The Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): Asa Gray. Already has 655 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.

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