. The Canadian field-naturalist. Mahony Lake Bracket! Lake Bulmer Lake . Can)"" FORT NORMAN NORMAN WELLS. Figure la. Norman Wells Pipeline, northern part. KP = Kilometer Post is a species native of Eurasia and apparently a recent introduction. It is being widely promoted in western North America as a forage. It differs from A. praten- sis L. in having acute glumes with divergent tips, lemmas obliquely truncate or tapering abruptly, and lemma awns rarely or only slightly exserted from the spikelets. In A. pratensis the glume tips are parallel or convergent, the lemmas are acute and gr


. The Canadian field-naturalist. Mahony Lake Bracket! Lake Bulmer Lake . Can)"" FORT NORMAN NORMAN WELLS. Figure la. Norman Wells Pipeline, northern part. KP = Kilometer Post is a species native of Eurasia and apparently a recent introduction. It is being widely promoted in western North America as a forage. It differs from A. praten- sis L. in having acute glumes with divergent tips, lemmas obliquely truncate or tapering abruptly, and lemma awns rarely or only slightly exserted from the spikelets. In A. pratensis the glume tips are parallel or convergent, the lemmas are acute and gradually tapering and the lemma awns are long and distinctly exserted from the spikelets. *Alopecurus pratensis L., Meadow Foxtail — 84-2A; : 85^3; 18: 86-130; 42: 84-16; 65 84-35, 85-130; 240: 85-80a; 391: 84-183; 430 86-111; 529: 85-110; 544: 85-117. This species has not previously been reported as growing in the Continental Northwest Territories. It is a species native of Eurasia that has been intro- duced widely across Canada and southward as a for- age crop but has not done well for this purpose except on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts (Dore and McNeill 1980). Avena fatua L., Wild Oats — 224: 85-149a; 287: 89-54. Porsild and Cody (1980) reported this introduced species as an occasional weed in waste places in the Continental Northwest Territories. Avena sativa L., Oats — 224: 85-149. Porsild and Cody (1980) reported this introduced widely cultivated species, as invading waste places in the Continental Northwest Territories. *Bromus commutatus Schrader, Hairy Chess — 240: 85-141. This is an annual weed of waste land which is introduced from Europe. To the south in Alberta it is rare along roadsides and in waste ground (Packer 1983). It has not previously been reported as occur- ring in the Continental Northwest Territories. *Bromus hordeaceus L. (5. mollis L.), Soft Chess — 65: 84-34; 527: 85-105; 529: 85-111. This species, which is naturalized from Eurasi


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