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panic veldt grass, upright veldt grass

Habit Plants perennial; weakly cespitose. Plants annual or perennial.
Culms

(20)30-100(200) cm, erect or ascending from a decumbent base, sometimes rooting at the lower nodes.

annual, sometimes woody, hollow or solid.

Sheaths

finely striate, glabrous or shortly pubescent;

auricles ciliate;

ligules to 3 mm, lacerate, glabrous;

blades 5-15 cm long, 2-15 mm wide, flat, lax, usually glabrous, smooth or minutely roughened, margins often wavy.

Leaves

distichous;

sheaths open;

auricles sometimes present;

abaxial ligules absent;

adaxial ligules membranous, scarious, or of hairs;

pseudopetioles sometimes present;

blades rarely cordate or sagittate at the base, venation parallel;

mesophyll not radiate;

adaxial palisade layer usually absent;

fusoid cells sometimes present;

arm cells absent or present;

Kranz anatomy not developed;

midribs simple or complex;

adaxial bulliform cells present;

stomates with dome-shaped or triangular subsidiary cells;

bicellular microhairs present, terminal cells tapered;

papillae sometimes present.

Panicles

5-21 cm, erect or nodding, open to contracted;

pedicels usually straight, sometimes curved.

Inflorescences

panicles, racemes, or spikes, rarely with bracts other than those of the spikelets;

disarticulation usually above the glumes, sometimes beneath the spikelets or at the base of the primary branches.

Spikelets

3-5 mm, oval, greenish.

bisexual or unisexual, with 1 pistillate or bisexual floret, sometimes with 1-2 sterile florets below the functional floret.

Glumes

unequal, membranous to chartaceous;

lower glumes 1-2 mm, 1/3 – 2/3 the length of the spikelets, 3-5-veined;

upper glumes 2-2.5 mm, to 3/4 the length of the spikelets, wider than the lower glumes, 5-veined;

sterile lemmas 2.5-4.5 mm, indurate, glabrous or sparsely hispidulous, unawned, lower sterile lemmas often with a basal appendage, upper sterile lemmas transversely rugose distally;

bisexual lemmas 2.5-3.5 mm, firm, glabrous, obscurely 5-7-veined, often cross veined, unawned;

anthers 6, 0.7-1.2 mm.

absent or 2;

lemmas without uncinate hairs, sometimes terminally awned, awns single;

paleas well-developed, lacking in sterile florets;

lodicules 2, usually membranous, rarely fleshy, heavily vascularized;

anthers (1)3-6(16);

ovaries glabrous, without an apical appendage;

styles 2, free to the base to fused throughout, 2-branched.

Caryopses

about 2 mm.

Fruits

caryopses or achenes;

hila long-linear;

endosperm without lipid, usually containing compound starch grains, rarely with simple starch grains;

embryos to 1/3 the length of the caryopses;

epiblasts usually present;

scutellar cleft usually present;

mesocotyl internode absent or very short;

embryonic leaf margins usually overlapping.

x

=12 (10,15,17).

2n

= 24.

Ehrharta erecta

Poaceae subfam. ehrhartoideae

Distribution
from FNA
CA; HI
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Ehrharta erecta was introduced to California from South Africa. It prefers shady, somewhat moist locations, and is best known from the eastern San Francisco Bay area, San Diego, and the campus of the University of California at Riverside. In Australia, it is considered to be a weed of moist, shady places (Jacobs and Hastings 1993). Three varieties have been described; they are not treated here.

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

The Ehrhartoideae encompasses three tribes, one of which, the Oryzeae, is native to the Flora region; the Ehrharteae is represented by introduced species. The third tribe, Phyllorachideae C.E. Hubb., is native to Africa and Madagascar. It was included in the subfamily on the basis of its morphological similarity to the other two tribes. There are approximately 120 species in the Ehrhartoideae. They grow in forests, open hillsides, and aquatic habitats.

Molecular data provide strong support for the close relationship of the Oryzeae and Ehrharteae (Grass Phylogeny Working Group 2001). Morphologically, they are characterized by spikelets that have a distal unisexual or bisexual floret with up to two proximal sterile florets, and the frequent presence of six stamens in the staminate or bisexual florets.

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

Key
1. Spikelets with 2 sterile florets below the functional floret, both well-developed, at least the upper sterile floret as long as or longer than the functional floret; glumes from 1/2 as long as the spikelets to exceeding the florets; culms not aerenchymatous; plants of dry to damp habitats
Ehrharteae
1. Spikelets with 0-2 sterile florets below the functional floret, when present, sterile florets 1/8 - 9/10 as long as the functional floret; glumes absent or highly reduced; culms aerenchymatous; plants of wet habitats
Oryzeae
Source FNA vol. 24, p. 34. FNA vol. 24, p. 32. Author: Grass Phylogeny Working Group;.
Parent taxa Poaceae > subfam. Ehrhartoideae > tribe Ehrharteae > Ehrharta Poaceae
Sibling taxa
E. calycina, E. longiflora
Name authority Lam. Link
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