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giant cane, giant reed

Habit Plants usually perennial; cespitose or not, sometimes rhizomatous, sometimes stoloniferous.
Culms

(2)3-10 m, in large tussocks or hedges.

15-1000 cm, annual, herbaceous to somewhat woody, internodes usually hollow.

Leaves

distichous;

ligules 0.4-1 mm;

blades 30-100 cm long, 2-7(9) cm wide, with a wedge-shaped, light to dark brown area at the base.

usually mostly cauline, often conspicuously distichous;

sheaths usually open;

auricles usually absent;

abaxial ligules usually absent (of hairs in Hakonechloa);

adaxial ligules membranous or of hairs, if membranous, often ciliate;

blades without pseudopetioles, sometimes deciduous at maturity;

mesophyll usually non-radiate (radiate in Amnio);

adaxial palisade layer absent;

fusoid cells absent;

arm cells usually absent (present in Phragmites);

Kranz anatomy absent;

midribs simple;

adaxial bulliform cells present;

stomatal subsidiary cells low dome-shaped or triangular;

bicellular microhairs usually present, usually with long, narrow terminal cells;

papillae usually absent.

Panicles

30-60 cm long, to 30 cm wide.

Inflorescences

usually terminal, ebracteate, usually paniculate, occasionally spicate or racemose.

Spikelets

10-15 mm, with 2-4 florets.

laterally compressed, with 1-several bisexual florets or all florets unisexual and the species dioecious;

florets 1-several, terete or laterally compressed, distal florets often reduced;

disarticulation above the glumes.

Glumes

subequal, as long as the spikelets, thin, brownish or purplish, 3-veined, long-acuminate;

lemmas 8-12 mm, 3-5-veined, pilose, hairs 4-9 mm, apices bifid, midvein ending into a delicate awn;

paleas 3-5 mm, pilose at the base;

anthers 2-3 mm.

2, from shorter than the adjacent lemmas to exceeding the distal florets;

lemmas (3)5-7-veined, lanceolate to elliptic, acute to acuminate, sometimes awned;

awns 1 or 3, if 3 not fused into a single basal column;

paleas subequal to the lemmas;

lodicules 2, usually free, occasionally joined at the base, fleshy, usually glabrous, not, scarcely, or heavily vascularized;

anthers (1)2-3;

ovaries glabrous;

styles 2, usually free, bases close together.

Caryopses

3-4 mm, oblong, light brown.

usually punctate (long-linear in Molinia);

endosperm hard, without lipid;

starch grains compound;

haustorial synergids absent;

embryos usually large compared to the caryopses, waisted or not;

epiblasts absent;

scutellar cleft present;

mesocotyl internode elongate;

embryonic leaf margins usually meeting (overlapping in Hakonechloa).

x

= 6,9, 10, 12.

2n

= 24, 100, 110.

Arundo donax

Poaceae subfam. arundinoideae

Distribution
from FNA
AL; AR; AZ; CA; DE; FL; GA; IL; KS; KY; LA; MD; MO; MS; NC; NM; NV; OK; SC; TN; TX; UT; VA; WV; HI; PR; Virgin Islands
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Discussion

Within the Flora region, Arundo donax grows in the southern half of the contiguous United States, being found along ditches, culverts, and roadsides where water accumulates. It has been used extensively as a windbreak, and planted for erosion control on wet dunes. It is also grown for the ornamental value of its tall, leafy culms and large panicles, but its tendency to spread is sometimes a disadvantage. Cultivars with striped or unusually wide leaves, e.g., 'Variegata' and 'Macrophylla', are of horticultural interest but do not merit taxonomic recognition.

Arundo donax has been used for thousands of years in making musical instruments, the stems being used for pipes and the tough inner rind for reeds in a wide variety of woodwind instruments. It is one of the species referred to as 'reed' in the Bible. It is still used in many parts of the world for house construction, lattice-work, mats, screens, stakes, walking sticks, and fishing poles.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

The Arundinoideae are interpreted here as including only one tribe, the Arundineae. The tribe used to be interpreted more broadly (e.g., Watson et al. 1985; Clayton and Renvoize 1986; Kellogg and Campbell 1987), but the broader interpretation was generally acknowledged to be somewhat artificial. Hsiao et al. (1998) showed support for inclusion of the Danthonieae, Aristideae, and Amndineae in a more broadly interpreted Arundinoideae, but other studies (e.g., Hilu et al. 1990; Barker et al. 1995, 1998; Grass Phylogeny Working Group 2001) have failed to support such a treatment.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Source FNA vol. 25, p. 11. FNA vol. 25, p. 6. Author: Grass Phylogeny Working Group; Kelly W. Allred;.
Parent taxa Poaceae > subfam. Arundinoideae > tribe Arundineae > Arundo Poaceae
Subordinate taxa
Synonyms A. donax var. versicolor
Name authority L. Burmeist.
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