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Alaska alkali grass

Habit Plants perennial, 10–90 cm tall; cespitose, sometimes rooting at the nodes of buried stems and appearing rhizomatous or stoloniferous.
Leaves

blades flat to involute, 1.5– 6 mm wide when flat.

Inflorescences

panicles compact to open at maturity, 5–30 cm; lower branches erect to ascending, occasionally spreading to descending, spikeletbearing from near the base, sometimes the spikelets confned to the distal half;

pedicels sparsely to densely scabrous, often subtended by a small bract;

epidermal cells often tumid.

Spikelets

3.5–12 mm, 3–7 florets.

Glumes

rounded over the back;

veins obscure;

tips acute to truncate;

lower glumes 1–1.6 mm;

upper glumes 2–3 mm.

Lemmas

(2.2)2.8–4(5) mm, 5-veined;

veins obscure, not extending to the margins;

midveins smooth distally;

margins near the tips uniformly and densely scabrous;

tips usually acute to obtuse, sometimes acuminate; entire.

Anthers

0.5–1.4 mm.

2n

=42, 56.

Puccinellia nutkaensis

Distribution
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Coastal salt marshes. 0–50m. Est. CA, WA; north to AK, most of Canada east to Greenland. Native.

Similar Puccinellia pumila lacks the dense scabrules along the lemma margins near the tip. Larger P. nutkaensis plants, with more open panicles, can be confused with P. nuttalliana, which is rare at the coast. Puccinellia nuttalliana lacks tumid cells on the pedicels, tends to be more strongly scabrous on inflorescence branches and pedicels, with the pedicels scabrous very nearly to the top, and has lemma margins that are entire except for the dense scabrules.

Source Flora of Oregon, volume 1, page 472
Barbara Wilson, Richard Brainerd, Nick Otting
Sibling taxa
P. distans, P. lemmonii, P. nuttalliana, P. pumila, P. simplex
Synonyms Puccinellia grandis, Puccinellia lucida
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