Lly less than 10 in pistillate plants in sexual populations. Sex-expression is apparently stable in the species of Poa sect. Madropoa, to which P. fendleriana belongs. The first author grew samples of the species in a common garden over several years and found that plants did not change sex. Individuals of P. fendleriana occasionally have a few perfect-flowered spikelets, and a few populations containing these unusual plants have been found in P. fendleriana subsp. fendleriana in New Mexico and Colorado. Poa fendleriana subsp. albescens is a tetraploid whereas the other two subspecies are principally octoploid (Soreng 2005). A specimen from 20 mi N of Durango, Oct 7 1955, B.Emery 334A (TEX), has one flowering culm of Poa fendleriana mixed in with vegetative parts of Trachypogon. The flowers are pistillate and the lemmas are glabrous to sparsely pubescent on the keel; so it appears intermediate between P. fendleriana subsp. albescens and P. fendleriana subsp. fendleriana. However, the habitat seems wrong (low spots in grassland of mesquite, Opuntia, and short grasses), making us wonder if the origin of the one culm stems from a collection sorting error. Key to the subspecies of Poa fendleriana 1 ?2 Lemmas glabrous; plants from the Sierra Madre Occidental ……………………. …………………………………………………. 8a. Poa fendleriana subsp. albescens Lemmas pubescent on the keel and marginal nerves ……………………………..2 Ligules of upper culm leaves 0.2-1(?.5) mm long, truncate to rounded, upper margin minutely ciliate fringed; PD98059MedChemExpress PD98059 GSK1363089 side effects collar margins usually distinctly scabrous; plants from the range of the species; Baja California, Chihuahua, Sonora, and Coahuila ………………….. 8b. Poa fendleriana subsp. fendleriana Ligules of upper culm leaves (1.5?1.8?1 mm long, obtuse to acuminate, upper margin without a ciliate fringe; collar margins usually smooth or sparingly scabrous; plants from Baja California ….8c. Poa fendleriana subsp. longiligula?Robert J. Soreng Paul M. Peterson / PhytoKeys 15: 1?04 (2012)8a. Poa fendleriana subsp. albescens (Hitchc.) Soreng, Great Basin Naturalist 45(3): 407 1985. http://species-id.net/wiki/Poa_fendleriana_albescens Fig. 8 A, B Poa albescens Hitchc. Contr. U.S. Natl. Herb. 17(3): 375 1913. Type: Mexico, Chihuahua, at Mi ca, 1 Apr 1908, J.N.Rose 11648 (holotype: US-454361!). Poa griffithsii Hitchc. Contr. U.S. Natl. Herb. 17(3): 375 1913. Type: Mexico, Sonora, Cananea, 7-8 Jul 1903, D.Griffiths 4865 (holotype: US-691228!; isotype: US3063989!). Description. Leaf collars often scabrous or hispidulous near the throat; ligules of middle cauline leaves 0.2?.5 mm long, not decurrent, abaxially smooth or scabrous, upper margin scabrous or ciliolate or glabrous, apices truncate; sterile shoot blades frequently glabrous adaxially. Spikelet rachilla internodes smooth, glabrous; lemma keels and marginal veins smooth or sparingly scabrous, glabrous or sparsely short villous to softly puberulent; palea keels glabrous, between keels glabrous. Lodicules 0.6?.7 mm long, broadly lanceolate to ovate, with or without a brief lateral lobe from below the middle. 2n = 28, 28+II. Distribution. The subspecies is endemic to southeastern Arizona, southwestern New Mexico, USA, and the northern Sierra Madre Occidental of Mexico (Chihuahua, Sonora). Ecology. The subspecies is found in canyons and rocky slopes in forests and is associated with: Cupressus, Juniperus, Pinus arizonica Engelm., P.Lly less than 10 in pistillate plants in sexual populations. Sex-expression is apparently stable in the species of Poa sect. Madropoa, to which P. fendleriana belongs. The first author grew samples of the species in a common garden over several years and found that plants did not change sex. Individuals of P. fendleriana occasionally have a few perfect-flowered spikelets, and a few populations containing these unusual plants have been found in P. fendleriana subsp. fendleriana in New Mexico and Colorado. Poa fendleriana subsp. albescens is a tetraploid whereas the other two subspecies are principally octoploid (Soreng 2005). A specimen from 20 mi N of Durango, Oct 7 1955, B.Emery 334A (TEX), has one flowering culm of Poa fendleriana mixed in with vegetative parts of Trachypogon. The flowers are pistillate and the lemmas are glabrous to sparsely pubescent on the keel; so it appears intermediate between P. fendleriana subsp. albescens and P. fendleriana subsp. fendleriana. However, the habitat seems wrong (low spots in grassland of mesquite, Opuntia, and short grasses), making us wonder if the origin of the one culm stems from a collection sorting error. Key to the subspecies of Poa fendleriana 1 ?2 Lemmas glabrous; plants from the Sierra Madre Occidental ……………………. …………………………………………………. 8a. Poa fendleriana subsp. albescens Lemmas pubescent on the keel and marginal nerves ……………………………..2 Ligules of upper culm leaves 0.2-1(?.5) mm long, truncate to rounded, upper margin minutely ciliate fringed; collar margins usually distinctly scabrous; plants from the range of the species; Baja California, Chihuahua, Sonora, and Coahuila ………………….. 8b. Poa fendleriana subsp. fendleriana Ligules of upper culm leaves (1.5?1.8?1 mm long, obtuse to acuminate, upper margin without a ciliate fringe; collar margins usually smooth or sparingly scabrous; plants from Baja California ….8c. Poa fendleriana subsp. longiligula?Robert J. Soreng Paul M. Peterson / PhytoKeys 15: 1?04 (2012)8a. Poa fendleriana subsp. albescens (Hitchc.) Soreng, Great Basin Naturalist 45(3): 407 1985. http://species-id.net/wiki/Poa_fendleriana_albescens Fig. 8 A, B Poa albescens Hitchc. Contr. U.S. Natl. Herb. 17(3): 375 1913. Type: Mexico, Chihuahua, at Mi ca, 1 Apr 1908, J.N.Rose 11648 (holotype: US-454361!). Poa griffithsii Hitchc. Contr. U.S. Natl. Herb. 17(3): 375 1913. Type: Mexico, Sonora, Cananea, 7-8 Jul 1903, D.Griffiths 4865 (holotype: US-691228!; isotype: US3063989!). Description. Leaf collars often scabrous or hispidulous near the throat; ligules of middle cauline leaves 0.2?.5 mm long, not decurrent, abaxially smooth or scabrous, upper margin scabrous or ciliolate or glabrous, apices truncate; sterile shoot blades frequently glabrous adaxially. Spikelet rachilla internodes smooth, glabrous; lemma keels and marginal veins smooth or sparingly scabrous, glabrous or sparsely short villous to softly puberulent; palea keels glabrous, between keels glabrous. Lodicules 0.6?.7 mm long, broadly lanceolate to ovate, with or without a brief lateral lobe from below the middle. 2n = 28, 28+II. Distribution. The subspecies is endemic to southeastern Arizona, southwestern New Mexico, USA, and the northern Sierra Madre Occidental of Mexico (Chihuahua, Sonora). Ecology. The subspecies is found in canyons and rocky slopes in forests and is associated with: Cupressus, Juniperus, Pinus arizonica Engelm., P.